[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
Sdn Bhd vs branch Malaysia tax

Sdn Bhd vs Branch in Malaysia: Tax, Liability and Which to Choose (post‑2026 Budget)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: June 22, 2026, confirm all rates with LHDN and MOF before relying on the figures in this article.

Every foreign company entering Malaysia faces the same threshold question: incorporate a local Sdn Bhd (private limited company) or register a branch office? The answer turns on Sdn Bhd vs branch Malaysia tax treatment, liability exposure and how quickly you need to repatriate profits. Budget 2026 moved several of the goal‑posts, adjusting stamp‑duty exemptions and preserving the SME preferential corporate‑tax rate that only an Sdn Bhd can access, making it essential to re‑run the numbers before committing to a structure. This article delivers a lawyer‑led, dimension‑by‑dimension comparison and a concrete decision framework so that CFOs, general counsel and foreign founders can choose with confidence and know exactly when to engage counsel.

What Is an Sdn Bhd, and Who Does It Suit?

A Sendirian Berhad (Sdn Bhd) is a private limited company incorporated under the Companies Act 2016. It is a separate legal person: it can own assets, incur debts and sue or be sued in its own name. Shareholders’ liability is limited to unpaid amounts on their shares, which gives foreign investors a ring‑fence that insulates the parent company’s global balance sheet from Malaysian operational risk.

Because an Sdn Bhd is a Malaysian‑resident company for tax purposes, it can access the SME preferential corporate tax rate of 17% on the first RM600,000 of chargeable income, provided it meets the paid‑up capital and gross‑income thresholds set by LHDN. The remainder is taxed at the standard 24% rate. Dividends distributed under Malaysia’s single‑tier system are not subject to further Malaysian tax, making profit repatriation clean once declared.

The trade‑off is compliance cost. An Sdn Bhd must appoint a licensed company secretary, maintain a registered office in Malaysia, file annual returns with SSM and have its accounts audited. For many investors committed to a long‑term Malaysian presence, those costs are modest relative to the tax savings and liability protection gained. The main disadvantages include the administrative overhead, the time required to declare and distribute dividends (versus direct remittance), and the requirement for at least one resident director. Explore commercial transactions practice guidance for broader structuring context.

Set‑Up Steps and Timeline

  • Name reservation. Apply via SSM’s MyCoID portal; approval typically within one working day.
  • Incorporation filing. Submit the constitution (or adopt the model), director and shareholder particulars, and registered‑office address. SSM normally processes incorporation within 3–10 working days.
  • Post‑incorporation. Appoint a licensed company secretary within 30 days, open a local bank account (allow 1–3 weeks), register for tax with LHDN, and obtain any sector‑specific licences.

Overall lead time from name search to trading readiness is typically two to four weeks.

Typical First‑Year Costs

Cost Item Indicative Range (RM)
SSM incorporation fees 1,000 – 3,000
Company secretary retainer (annual) 1,200 – 3,600
Statutory audit 1,000 – 8,000 (revenue‑dependent)
Registered‑office address 500 – 2,400

Tax Basics, SME Relief Eligibility

An Sdn Bhd qualifies for the SME preferential rate when its paid‑up capital for ordinary shares does not exceed RM2.5 million and its annual gross business income does not exceed RM50 million. Where both conditions are met, the first RM600,000 of chargeable income is taxed at 17%; the balance at 24%. A branch office cannot ordinarily access this relief, a point that produces material tax savings even at modest profit levels.

What Is a Branch Office, and Who Does It Suit?

A branch office is not a separate legal entity. It is the Malaysian registration of a foreign company under Part III, Division 1 of the Companies Act 2016, governed by SSM’s Guidelines for Registration of Foreign Companies. The foreign parent company itself conducts business in Malaysia through the branch; all rights, obligations and liabilities of the branch are the parent’s.

Branches are taxed on Malaysian‑sourced chargeable income at the standard corporate rate of 24%. They are generally not eligible for the SME preferential rate available to qualifying Sdn Bhds. After‑tax profits can be remitted to the parent without a separate branch‑profit remittance tax in Malaysia, which appeals to companies that want to consolidate cash quickly. However, payments from the branch to the foreign parent, for management fees, royalties, interest or technical services, may attract withholding tax under LHDN’s rules.

Registration Steps and Timeline

  • Name reservation. Reserve the foreign company’s name with SSM.
  • Lodge prescribed documents. Certified copies of the foreign company’s certificate of incorporation, constitution, list of directors, memorandum of authorised agent and a statutory declaration. Documents originating outside Malaysia require consular legalisation or apostille.
  • Appoint an authorised agent. A Malaysian resident who accepts service of process on behalf of the foreign company, this is mandatory under the Companies Act 2016.
  • SSM processing. Registration is often completed within 1–5 working days once all certified documents are in order.

The critical bottleneck is document certification. Consular legalisation can add two to six weeks, meaning a branch may not always be faster than an Sdn Bhd in practice.

Compliance and Filing Requirements

A registered branch must file the parent company’s audited financial statements with SSM annually, along with a separate branch profit‑and‑loss account. It must also lodge any changes to the parent’s constitution, directors or name. Non‑compliance attracts penalties from SSM.

Practical Benefits and Constraints

  • Benefits. Unified global accounts, simpler profit remittance mechanics, no separate shareholders’ meetings, and direct parent control over operations.
  • Constraints. Full parent liability for all Malaysian obligations, no access to SME tax relief, potential difficulties in obtaining certain local licences, and reduced credibility with some Malaysian counterparties who prefer contracting with a locally incorporated entity.

Sdn Bhd vs Branch: Side‑by‑Side Comparison

The table below is the centrepiece of the branch office vs subsidiary Malaysia analysis. Each row isolates a single decision dimension so you can identify exactly where each structure wins.

Dimension Sdn Bhd (Subsidiary) Branch Office (Foreign Company)
Legal status Separate legal person under Companies Act 2016; shareholder liability limited Not a separate legal person; parent directly liable for all obligations
Eligibility / typical use Long‑term market entry, local contracts, hiring, liability ring‑fence Short‑term projects, single global accounts, direct booking of Malaysian income
Corporate tax rate 24% standard; eligible SMEs: 17% on first RM600,000 24% on Malaysian‑sourced income; SME relief generally unavailable
SME preferential access Yes, if paid‑up capital ≤ RM2.5 m and gross income ≤ RM50 m No
Liability Ring‑fenced to the Sdn Bhd (subject to director duties / guarantees) Parent liable for branch obligations and third‑party claims
Profit repatriation Via dividends, single‑tier system; no further Malaysian tax on dividends After‑tax profits remittable; no separate branch remittance tax, but WHT applies to service/royalty/interest payments
Withholding tax exposure Dividends: nil (single‑tier); other payments to non‑residents: standard WHT rates Payments to non‑residents (technical fees, royalties, interest): WHT at 10%+ (subject to DTA reductions)
Stamp duty (2026) Applies to share transfers and asset purchases; Budget 2026 exemptions may reduce cost on qualifying transactions Instrument stamp duty applies to branch contracts/asset deals; structure‑specific modelling needed
Time to operate 3–14 working days (SSM); overall 2–4 weeks with bank and licences 1–5 working days (SSM) once certified documents lodged; consular legalisation adds 2–6 weeks
Annual compliance cost Audit + company secretary + annual return: RM3,700–RM15,000+ Branch filings + parent accounts lodgement + certification: comparable cost, often higher for large‑capital branches
Enforceability Local entity; Malaysian courts and insolvency regime apply directly Enforcement against foreign parent may require cross‑border recognition

Summary: The Sdn Bhd wins on liability protection, SME tax relief and local enforceability. The branch wins on speed of profit remittance and operational simplicity for short‑term mandates. On raw tax cost, the Sdn Bhd is cheaper at profit levels up to RM600,000 and remains competitive above that threshold once compliance costs are netted off.

Dimension‑by‑Dimension Analysis: Sdn Bhd vs Branch Malaysia Tax, Cost and Risk

Tax Implications and SME Preferential Thresholds

Tax is usually the decisive dimension in the Sdn Bhd vs branch Malaysia tax comparison. The worked examples below show why.

Scenario Sdn Bhd (SME‑eligible) Branch Office Tax Saving (Sdn Bhd)
Chargeable income: RM500,000 RM500,000 × 17% = RM85,000 RM500,000 × 24% = RM120,000 RM35,000
Chargeable income: RM1,500,000 (RM600,000 × 17%) + (RM900,000 × 24%) = RM318,000 RM1,500,000 × 24% = RM360,000 RM42,000

At RM500,000 in profits, the Sdn Bhd saves RM35,000 per year, enough to cover all additional compliance costs (audit, company secretary, annual return) and still leave cash in the business. At RM1.5 million, the RM42,000 saving remains meaningful, and the gap widens further once you factor in the liability ring‑fence value. The SME preferential rate of 17% on the first RM600,000 of chargeable income is available only to locally incorporated companies meeting LHDN’s paid‑up capital and gross‑income conditions.

Stamp Duty and Transactional Costs (Budget 2026)

Budget 2026 introduced and extended several stamp‑duty exemptions and revised caps that affect both share transfers and asset sales. The likely practical effect for foreign investors choosing between entity types is that an asset transfer into a newly incorporated Sdn Bhd may attract different stamp‑duty treatment compared with the same assets being acquired directly by a branch, particularly where Budget 2026 exemptions for qualifying transactions or first‑time purchasers apply.

  • Share sale in an Sdn Bhd. Stamp duty on the transfer of shares is charged ad valorem on the consideration or value of the shares. Budget 2026 retained and in some cases widened exemptions for qualifying restructuring exercises and small‑enterprise share transfers.
  • Asset purchase by a branch. The branch purchases assets in the parent’s name. Stamp duty applies to the instrument of transfer at the prevailing ad valorem rates. No share‑transfer route is available to reduce exposure.

The key takeaway: where an acquisition is structured as a share sale of an existing Sdn Bhd (rather than an asset purchase), Budget 2026 measures may produce lower aggregate stamp duty. Engage counsel to model the specific transaction.

Liability and Enforcement

Under the Companies Act 2016, an Sdn Bhd is a separate legal person. Creditors of the Sdn Bhd have recourse to the company’s assets, not the foreign parent’s, unless the parent has provided guarantees or the corporate veil is pierced for fraud or improper conduct. This ring‑fence is the single strongest commercial argument for incorporating locally.

A branch offers no such protection. SSM’s guidelines require the foreign company to appoint an authorised agent who accepts service of process in Malaysia, and the parent remains directly liable for every branch obligation. In a dispute, a Malaysian counterparty can pursue the full resources of the foreign parent, a risk that many investors underestimate until litigation materialises.

Profit Repatriation and Withholding Tax

Repatriation mechanics differ between the two structures:

  • Sdn Bhd. Profits are repatriated via dividend declarations. Under the single‑tier system, dividends paid by a Malaysian‑resident company are exempt from further Malaysian income tax. No Malaysian withholding tax applies to dividends paid to non‑resident shareholders.
  • Branch. After‑tax profits can be remitted directly. Malaysia does not impose a separate branch‑profit remittance tax. However, if the branch makes payments to the foreign parent characterised as management fees, technical‑service fees, royalties or interest, those payments attract withholding tax, typically at 10% for royalties and technical fees, subject to reduction under an applicable double‑taxation agreement.

In practice, the branch route appears simpler for cash repatriation, but the withholding‑tax exposure on intercompany service payments can erode the advantage. Structuring intercompany flows through a well‑drafted service agreement with appropriate gross‑up or indemnity clauses is essential for either entity type.

Timing, Regulatory Approvals and Licensing

On paper, branch registration at SSM can be faster, as few as one to five working days. However, the requirement for consular legalisation of the foreign company’s constitutional documents often adds two to six weeks. An Sdn Bhd incorporation via MyCoID routinely completes within three to ten working days and requires no foreign‑document certification, making it the faster option in many real‑world scenarios.

Sector‑specific licensing (e.g., wholesale/retail trade for foreign companies, WRT licence) and local bank‑account opening timelines apply equally to both structures and should be factored into the overall project plan.

Practical Costs and Administration

Annual Obligation Sdn Bhd Branch
Licensed company secretary Required, RM1,200–3,600/year Not required (but authorised agent must be appointed)
Statutory audit Required, RM1,000–8,000+/year Parent’s audited accounts must be filed; branch P&L also required
Annual return (SSM) RM200 filing fee + secretarial cost Annual filing + lodgement of parent documents; fees scale with nominal capital
Authorised agent Not applicable Required, ongoing retainer

For most small to mid‑size operations, total annual compliance costs are broadly comparable. The branch’s variable SSM fee schedule (which scales with the parent’s nominal capital) can make it significantly more expensive for large‑capital foreign parents.

What Changes in 2026: Budget Measures That Shift the Sdn Bhd vs Branch Calculus

Malaysia’s Budget 2026, enacted by Parliament and published by the Ministry of Finance, introduced several fiscal measures that directly affect the entity‑structure decision for foreign investors.

  • SME corporate‑tax relief preserved. The 17% preferential rate on the first RM600,000 of chargeable income continues for qualifying Sdn Bhds. LHDN’s eligibility criteria (paid‑up capital ≤ RM2.5 million, gross income ≤ RM50 million) remain unchanged, locking in the tax advantage for small and mid‑size subsidiaries.
  • Stamp‑duty exemptions adjusted. Budget 2026 extended and in some cases widened exemptions on instruments of transfer for qualifying restructuring exercises, mergers, and certain first‑time purchaser transactions. For investors structuring an acquisition as a share sale of an Sdn Bhd rather than a direct asset purchase, these measures can materially reduce transaction costs.
  • Malaysia corporate tax 2026 standard rate steady. The headline 24% rate has not changed, but the cumulative effect of the SME relief and stamp‑duty adjustments means the break‑even point where an Sdn Bhd becomes cheaper than a branch has shifted downward for many SME‑scale operations.

Industry observers expect these measures to make the Sdn Bhd the default choice for any foreign investor planning to operate in Malaysia beyond a single project cycle. The practical implication: run a post‑2026 tax model before locking in your structure.

Decision Framework: When to Choose an Sdn Bhd, When to Choose a Branch

The following decision framework converts the dimension analysis into actionable triggers. Use it as a checklist before instructing counsel.

Choose Sdn Bhd when:

  • You need a liability ring‑fence between Malaysian operations and the parent’s global balance sheet.
  • Projected Malaysian chargeable income falls within the SME preferential threshold (first RM600,000 at 17%).
  • You plan to enter into local contracts, leases or employment agreements and want counterparties to deal with a Malaysian entity.
  • The investment horizon is longer than 12–18 months.
  • You may later sell the Malaysian business as a going concern (share sale of an Sdn Bhd is structurally simpler and may attract lower stamp duty).
  • You require Malaysian sector‑specific licences that are more readily issued to a locally incorporated company.
  • You want local enforceability, Malaysian courts and insolvency regime applying directly to the entity.

Choose a branch when:

  • The Malaysian engagement is a short‑term project (under 12 months) with a defined scope and exit date.
  • You want to book all revenue and expenses directly to the parent company’s global accounts.
  • The parent accepts full liability for Malaysian operations and has the balance‑sheet strength to absorb claims.
  • Speed of profit remittance is the overriding priority and there are no significant intercompany service payments that would trigger withholding tax.
  • You do not need access to SME tax relief.
  • The parent already holds consular‑certified constitutional documents, making SSM registration fast.
If Your Priority Is… Choose
Liability ring‑fence and long‑term local hub Sdn Bhd
Reduce effective corporate tax on first RM600,000 profit Sdn Bhd (if SME conditions met)
Minimise stamp duty on a small asset purchase (post‑2026) Model both, share‑sale of Sdn Bhd may produce lower duty; engage counsel
Fast project entry with single global accounts Branch office
Direct cash remittance without dividend mechanics Branch office (but model WHT on service payments)
Future exit via share sale Sdn Bhd

When to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

Not every entity‑choice question requires external counsel, but several trigger situations move the decision firmly into professional‑advice territory. Engage a commercial transactions lawyer when:

  • You are acquiring Malaysian assets or shares, stamp duty modelling, due diligence and SPA drafting require transaction‑specific legal and tax analysis.
  • Cross‑border intercompany payments are planned, management fees, royalties and loan interest must be structured with withholding‑tax mitigation, gross‑up clauses and DTA analysis.
  • You need indemnity or guarantee structures, parent guarantees, escrow arrangements or performance bonds for a branch or subsidiary require bespoke drafting.
  • Sector‑specific licensing is involved, WRT licences, financial‑services permits or construction licences have entity‑type and foreign‑equity conditions that affect the structure choice.
  • You are restructuring from a branch to an Sdn Bhd (or vice versa), asset transfers, contract novations and employment migrations generate stamp duty, tax and commercial‑continuity risks that must be planned in advance.

A typical scope of work for an entity‑selection engagement includes: an entity‑choice memorandum with tax modelling, draft incorporation or branch‑registration documents, a template shareholder or intercompany agreement, withholding‑tax analysis with DTA mapping, and a compliance checklist for the first 12 months of operation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shanker Sivapragasam at MESSRS K.SILADASS & PARTNERS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Lembaga Hasil Dalam Negeri (LHDN), SME Tax Guidance
  2. LHDN, Corporate Tax
  3. LHDN, Withholding Tax
  4. Ministry of Finance (MOF), Budget 2026 (Enacted)
  5. Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM), Guidelines for Registration of Foreign Companies
  6. PwC Malaysia, Stamp Duty
  7. Crowe Malaysia, Business Vehicle Guide for Foreign Investors
  8. ASEAN Briefing, Malaysia Entry Strategy: Sdn Bhd vs Branch Office
  9. 1Company, Branch Office Registration in Malaysia

FAQs

What is the tax rate for an Sdn Bhd company in Malaysia?
The standard corporate tax rate is 24%. SME‑eligible Sdn Bhds pay 17% on the first RM600,000 of chargeable income, provided paid‑up capital does not exceed RM2.5 million and gross income does not exceed RM50 million.
No. A branch is a registration of the foreign parent company under the Companies Act 2016. The parent company is directly liable for all branch obligations and third‑party claims.
Higher compliance costs (mandatory audit, licensed company secretary), the requirement for at least one Malaysian‑resident director, and slower profit repatriation via formal dividend declarations. These costs are typically outweighed by the liability ring‑fence and SME tax savings.
For long‑term operations, the Sdn Bhd is the stronger choice: it provides limited liability, access to SME preferential tax rates and a cleaner exit via share sale. Choose a branch only for short‑term, defined‑scope projects where the parent accepts full liability.
Malaysia does not impose a separate branch‑profit remittance tax. However, payments from the branch to the parent characterised as technical fees, royalties or interest attract withholding tax at rates of 10% or more, subject to applicable double‑taxation agreements.
Consider restructuring when the Malaysian operation becomes long‑term, profits exceed the SME threshold, local contracts require a ring‑fenced entity, or you plan a future exit via share sale. Restructuring generates stamp duty and contract novation costs, engage counsel before committing.
Yes, but at a cost. Converting a branch into an Sdn Bhd (or vice versa) requires incorporating a new entity, transferring assets and contracts, novating employment agreements and potentially paying stamp duty on the asset transfers. Pre‑transaction planning significantly reduces these costs.
Penalties are primarily commercial rather than regulatory: overpaid tax (forfeiting SME relief), unintended parent liability for Malaysian claims, withholding‑tax under‑deductions attracting LHDN penalties and interest, and stamp‑duty surcharges on unstamped instruments. Each risk is avoidable with proper upfront structuring.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Sdn Bhd vs Branch in Malaysia: Tax, Liability and Which to Choose (post‑2026 Budget)

Send welcome message

Custom Message