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what is the discharge of charge stamping

What Is the Discharge of Charge Stamping in Malaysia (2026): Form 16N, Deed of Receipt & Reassignment, Fees and Timelines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

If you have fully repaid your home loan or refinanced with a new lender, you need to understand what the discharge of charge stamping process involves before your property title is truly free and clear. Since 1 January 2026, Malaysia’s widened Stamp Duty Self‑Assessment System (SDSAS) and expanded e‑stamping coverage have changed how discharge documents are stamped, who bears the cost, and how quickly penalties can accrue for late compliance. This guide walks Malaysian property owners, borrowers and conveyancing practitioners through every stage, from bank redemption to Land Office registration, with the documents, fees and realistic timelines that apply in 2026.

Whether you are dealing with a Form 16N discharge of charge or a Deed of Receipt and Reassignment, the step‑by‑step workflow below will help you avoid costly errors and unnecessary delays.

Quick Checklist, Discharge of Charge at a Glance
1. Settle your loan in full and obtain a redemption/settlement statement from the bank.
2. Instruct a solicitor to prepare or collect the executed Form 16N (or Deed of Receipt & Reassignment) and original Issue Document of Title (IDT).
3. Stamp the discharge document via LHDN’s e‑Stamping portal under SDSAS, then register at the relevant Land Office.

What Is the Discharge of Charge Stamping?

A discharge of charge is the legal process that removes a lender’s registered interest (the “charge”) from your property title after the underlying loan has been fully repaid. In Malay, the concept is commonly referred to as Pembebasan Cagaran. Until the charge is formally discharged and the discharge is registered at the Land Office, the lender’s encumbrance remains on the title, meaning you cannot freely sell, transfer or further charge the property even though no debt is outstanding.

The legal basis for the discharge of charges sits in Section 278 of the National Land Code (Act 828), which empowers the chargee (typically the bank) to execute a statutory instrument confirming that the debt has been satisfied. The specific instrument depends on whether the property has a registered charge on an individual or strata title, or whether the bank’s security was structured as an assignment rather than a charge.

“Stamping” refers to the payment of stamp duty on the discharge instrument and the official endorsement confirming that duty has been paid. From 1 January 2026, all discharge instruments fall under Malaysia’s SDSAS regime, meaning the party liable for stamp duty must self‑assess the amount owed and submit it electronically through the Inland Revenue Board (LHDN) e‑Stamping portal. Late or incorrect self‑assessment attracts penalties.

Document Purpose Legal basis
Form 16N Discharge a registered charge on individual or strata title National Land Code, Section 278 / Fourteenth Schedule
Deed of Receipt & Reassignment (DRR) Reassign title back to the borrower where security was by way of assignment Contractual; referenced in Malaysian Bar Circular No. 181‑2025

Form 16N vs Deed of Receipt & Reassignment, Which Applies?

The discharge of charge documents you need depend entirely on how the lender’s security was originally created. Getting this wrong is one of the most common sources of delay, so the comparison below should be your starting point.

Form 16N (Discharge of Charge), Charged Titles

Form 16N is the statutory discharge form prescribed under the Fourteenth Schedule of the National Land Code. It applies whenever a charge has been registered on the Issue Document of Title, the scenario for the vast majority of residential mortgages on individual title or strata title properties in Peninsular Malaysia. Once the bank executes Form 16N and the borrower’s solicitor stamps it under SDSAS, the form is presented to the Land Office together with the original IDT. The Land Office then endorses the discharge on the register and on the IDT itself, removing the bank’s encumbrance.

Deed of Receipt & Reassignment (DRR), Assigned Titles

A Deed of Receipt and Reassignment is used when the bank’s security was structured as an assignment of the borrower’s rights rather than a registered charge. This is common where individual title had not yet been issued at the time the loan was drawn down (for example, properties purchased “off‑plan” where only a master title existed) or for certain older landed properties. The DRR is a private contractual document, not a statutory form, through which the bank acknowledges receipt of the full redemption sum and reassigns its interest back to the borrower. Malaysian Bar Circular No. 181‑2025 provides detailed practice guidance on the distinctions between a discharge and a reassignment, including the documentation lawyers should verify before execution.

When Banks Use a DRR Instead of Form 16N

In practice, many banks maintain internal checklists that determine which instrument they execute. If the bank’s records show a registered charge memorial on the IDT, the bank’s panel solicitor will prepare Form 16N. If the bank’s security file shows an assignment (often accompanied by a Power of Attorney), the bank will prepare a DRR. Borrowers refinancing from one lender to another should confirm which instrument the outgoing bank will execute, because the incoming lender’s solicitor needs to know in order to complete perfection of the new charge or assignment.

Document When used Key stamping & registration steps
Form 16N (Discharge of Charge) Registered charge on individual or strata title, the most common scenario for residential mortgages Bank executes Form 16N → Stamp via SDSAS / e‑Stamping → File at Land Office with original IDT → Land Office endorses discharge on register and title
Deed of Receipt & Reassignment (DRR) Bank holds interest by assignment (no registered charge); common for properties where individual title was not issued at the time of the loan Bank executes DRR → Stamp via SDSAS / e‑Stamping → Solicitor registers reassignment / discharge at Land Office (state‑specific procedures may apply)
Assignment / other lender document Rare or complex commercial mortgages; assignment to a trustee or syndicated facility Process varies, often requires additional affidavits, board resolutions and solicitor liaison with lender and Land Office

Note on company charges: If the charge was also registered with the Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM), for instance, where the borrower is a company, a separate discharge of charge at SSM is required under the Companies Act 2016. This is a distinct filing from the Land Office registration discussed here.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Discharge a Property (Form 16N / DRR Workflows)

The discharge of charge stamping workflow involves four sequential phases. Missing a step or getting the order wrong can trigger penalties under the 2026 SDSAS rules or cause the Land Office to reject your filing.

Phase 1, Before You Instruct a Lawyer

  • Obtain a full settlement or redemption statement from your bank confirming the outstanding balance (including any early‑settlement penalties if applicable). Request this in writing.
  • Settle the loan in full. The bank will not execute any discharge instrument until it has received cleared funds for the full redemption amount.
  • Prepare your authorisation. If you are appointing a solicitor to act on your behalf, sign a letter of authorisation allowing the solicitor to collect the discharge documents and IDT from the bank.
  • Confirm the document type. Ask the bank whether it will execute a Form 16N or a Deed of Receipt and Reassignment. This affects what your solicitor needs to prepare.

If you are buying residential property in Malaysia from a seller who has not yet discharged their charge, the buyer’s solicitor typically coordinates with the seller’s bank to ensure the discharge and transfer happen concurrently.

Phase 2, Bank Execution and Release of Documents

Once the bank confirms receipt of full redemption funds, its panel solicitor (or internal legal department) prepares and executes the discharge instrument. Under Bank Negara Malaysia guidelines referenced by Skrine, banks are expected to release original title documents within a specified timeframe after receiving full settlement. In practice, this phase takes two to eight weeks, though some banks may be faster or slower depending on their internal processes and the location of their document vault.

The bank typically releases the following discharge of charge documents to your solicitor:

  • Executed Form 16N or executed Deed of Receipt & Reassignment
  • Original Issue Document of Title (IDT)
  • Bank’s letter confirming full and final settlement
  • Any supporting documents (e.g., board resolution if the chargor is a company; original loan agreement if required by the Land Office)

Phase 3, Stamping Under SDSAS / e‑Stamping (2026 Rules)

This is where the 2026 changes are most significant. From 1 January 2026, LHDN requires all stampable instruments, including Form 16N and the DRR, to be self‑assessed and stamped electronically through the LHDN e‑Stamping portal. The key points for property owners are:

  • Who stamps: The borrower (or their solicitor acting on their behalf) is typically responsible for stamping the discharge instrument, unless the loan agreement states otherwise.
  • How to stamp: The solicitor logs into the LHDN e‑Stamping system, enters the instrument details, self‑assesses the duty payable, makes payment online and receives the e‑Stamp certificate.
  • Stamp duty amount: For a straightforward Form 16N, the stamp duty is generally a nominal amount (RM10 ad valorem is common for instruments of discharge). However, duty varies depending on the nature of the instrument. Your solicitor should verify the applicable rate against the current LHDN schedule.
  • Deadline and penalties: Under SDSAS, instruments must be stamped within 30 days of execution. Late stamping attracts penalties, starting at RM25 or 5% of the deficient duty (whichever is greater) for the first three months, and increasing thereafter. Repeated or prolonged non‑compliance may attract higher penalties and potential audit attention from LHDN.

Industry observers expect the wider SDSAS coverage to significantly reduce manual adjudication delays that were common before 2026, but it also means borrowers and their solicitors must be more disciplined about stamping promptly.

Phase 4, Land Office Registration

After stamping, the solicitor presents the following to the relevant state or district Land Office (Pejabat Tanah):

  • Stamped Form 16N or DRR (with e‑Stamp certificate)
  • Original Issue Document of Title
  • Certified copy of the bank’s settlement letter
  • Prescribed Land Office forms and registration fees

The Land Office verifies the documents, endorses the discharge on the register document of title and on the IDT, and returns the title to the owner (or the solicitor). Registration timelines vary significantly by state, see the timelines section below. Once registration is complete, the property is officially free from the lender’s encumbrance.

Discharge of Charge Legal Fees Malaysia: Who Pays and Illustrative Fee Table (2026 Estimates)

One of the most common questions borrowers ask is how much is a discharge fee. The total cost depends on several variables: which bank you are dealing with, whether the matter is straightforward or involves complications (such as a lost IDT), and the solicitor’s professional fees. The table below provides practitioner‑estimated ranges based on typical residential transactions in 2026.

Fee component Typical range (RM) Who pays
Bank handling / redemption fee RM 50 – RM 300 Borrower (deducted by bank or invoiced separately)
Solicitor’s professional fee (discharge) RM 200 – RM 1,200 Borrower (varies by complexity and firm)
LHDN stamp duty (Form 16N / DRR) RM 10 – RM 50 (nominal for most residential discharges) Borrower (unless loan agreement allocates to bank)
Land Office registration fee RM 50 – RM 150 (varies by state) Borrower
Courier / document collection RM 30 – RM 100 Borrower
Miscellaneous disbursements (search fees, certified copies) RM 20 – RM 80 Borrower

Important: These are practitioner estimates drawn from published fee guides and conveyancing practice. Actual fees will depend on your solicitor’s quotation and the specific bank’s schedule. Some banks absorb the handling fee for customers who maintain other accounts, while others charge a flat fee. Always request a written fee estimate from your solicitor before engagement. For more detail on the Hire‑Purchase (Amendment) Act 2026 and how it affects financing‑related discharge timelines, see our separate guide.

Timelines: Bank, Stamping (SDSAS) and Land Office, Realistic Expectations

The total time from loan settlement to a fully registered discharge of charge can range from a few weeks to several months. The table below breaks the process into its component steps with realistic timeframes for both fast and slow scenarios.

Step Typical timeframe Fast scenario Slow scenario
Bank confirms settlement and prepares discharge instrument 2 – 4 weeks 1 week (some banks with digital processes) 6 – 8 weeks (large banks, high volume periods)
Bank releases IDT and executed Form 16N / DRR to solicitor 1 – 2 weeks after preparation Same day (solicitor collects in person) 3 – 4 weeks (courier delays, vault retrieval)
Stamping via SDSAS / e‑Stamping 1 – 3 working days Same day (e‑Stamping online) 1 – 2 weeks (if queries arise or adjudication required)
Land Office registration 4 – 8 weeks 2 weeks (KL, well‑staffed offices) 12 – 16 weeks (certain East Malaysian or rural Land Offices)
Total estimated end‑to‑end 8 – 14 weeks 4 – 5 weeks 20+ weeks

Bank Negara Malaysia has published guidance setting expectations for how quickly banks should process document releases. According to analysis published by Skrine referencing BNM’s policy documents, banks are expected to return original documents within a reasonable period after receiving full settlement. In practice, borrowers can and should follow up proactively, a polite written request from your solicitor to the bank’s legal department often accelerates the process. State‑level variations in Land Office registration are significant: offices in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor tend to be faster, while certain district offices in Johor, Perak or East Malaysia may take considerably longer.

Common Problems, Errors and Penalties, What to Avoid

The Malaysian Bar’s Circular No. 181‑2025 highlights several recurring issues that delay or derail the discharge of charge stamping process. Be aware of these common pitfalls:

  • Missing or lost IDT. If the bank cannot locate the original title, you will need to apply for a replacement title at the Land Office, a process that can add months. Instruct your solicitor to confirm with the bank that the IDT is physically available before settlement.
  • Late stamping penalties under SDSAS. The 30‑day window for stamping runs from the date the instrument is executed by the bank. If your solicitor is slow to collect the documents, the clock is still ticking. Penalties start from day 31 and compound over time.
  • Incorrect party names. Discrepancies between the names on the charge instrument, the title and the NRIC or passport can cause Land Office rejections. Verify all names match exactly before the bank executes the discharge.
  • Bank internal delays. Some banks require multiple internal approvals (branch → regional → headquarters legal) before executing the discharge. Build this into your timeline expectations and start the process early.
  • Failure to register at the Land Office. Stamping alone does not discharge the charge. You must also register the discharge at the Land Office. Until registration is complete, the charge remains on the title.
  • Company charges at SSM. If the chargor is a body corporate, remember that a separate filing to remove the charge from SSM’s register is required, overlooking this creates a compliance gap.

When to Instruct a Lawyer, Checklist and Sample Engagement

While there is no strict legal prohibition on a property owner presenting their own discharge documents at the Land Office, engaging a qualified conveyancing solicitor is strongly recommended. The stamping, verification and registration process involves technical requirements that, if mishandled, lead to rejections, penalties or title complications.

When you instruct a solicitor, have the following documents ready:

  • Letter of authorisation (to collect documents from the bank on your behalf)
  • Full settlement / redemption statement from the bank
  • Copy of the original loan agreement
  • Copy of the Issue Document of Title (if you have one)
  • Your NRIC or passport (and spouse’s, if joint ownership)

To find a conveyancing lawyer in Malaysia through the Global Law Experts directory, you can filter by practice area and region to identify a specialist with experience in discharge of charge work.

Conclusion

Understanding what the discharge of charge stamping entails, and getting each step right, is essential for every Malaysian property owner clearing a mortgage or refinancing in 2026. The widened SDSAS and e‑stamping regime that took effect on 1 January 2026 means stamping deadlines are stricter and penalties for non‑compliance are real. Whether your transaction involves a Form 16N or a Deed of Receipt and Reassignment, the fundamentals remain the same: settle the loan, collect the executed instrument and IDT from the bank, stamp promptly through LHDN’s e‑Stamping portal, and register the discharge at the Land Office.

Engaging an experienced conveyancing solicitor reduces risk at every stage and ensures your title is returned to you free of encumbrance as efficiently as possible.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Brent Yap Hon Yean at Viknesh & Yap, Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. LowPartners, Discharge of Charge and Deed of Receipt and Reassignment in Malaysia: A Comprehensive Guide
  2. Malaysian Bar, Circular No. 181‑2025 (Discharging / Reassigning Properties)
  3. NextSix Blog, Discharge of Charge, Title Redemption & Costs Malaysia
  4. Skrine, Bank Negara Sets Time Frames for Release of Documents
  5. DWC, Setting Your Property Free: Understanding the Discharge of Charge Process
  6. HSLim, Discharge of Charge Practitioner Page
  7. LHDN (Inland Revenue Board Malaysia), Stamp Duty & e‑Stamping Portal
  8. Bank Negara Malaysia

FAQs

What is the discharge of charge stamping?
It is the process of paying stamp duty on the instrument (Form 16N or Deed of Receipt & Reassignment) that formally removes a lender’s registered interest from your property title. Under Malaysia’s National Land Code (Act 828), Section 278, the chargee executes the discharge instrument, which must then be stamped under LHDN’s SDSAS rules and registered at the Land Office to take effect.
First, obtain a settlement statement and settle the loan in full. Then, instruct a solicitor to collect the executed discharge instrument and original title from the bank. Your solicitor stamps the instrument via e‑Stamping, and finally registers the discharge at the relevant Land Office. The detailed workflow is set out in the step‑by‑step section above.
Total costs typically range from RM 350 to RM 1,900 depending on the bank’s handling fee (RM 50–RM 300), solicitor’s professional fee (RM 200–RM 1,200), stamp duty (nominal, often RM 10–RM 50 for residential discharges), Land Office registration fee (RM 50–RM 150) and miscellaneous disbursements. Always request a written quotation from your solicitor before proceeding.
Form 16N is the statutory form prescribed under the Fourteenth Schedule of the National Land Code for discharging a registered charge on an individual or strata title. It is the most commonly used discharge instrument for residential mortgages in Peninsular Malaysia. See the comparison table above for how it differs from a Deed of Receipt & Reassignment.
Bank Negara Malaysia guidelines expect banks to release original title documents within a reasonable period after receiving full settlement. In practice, most banks take two to eight weeks to release the IDT and executed discharge instrument. If the bank is delayed beyond eight weeks, your solicitor should send a formal written request to expedite.
Under the SDSAS framework, instruments must be stamped within 30 days of execution. Late stamping attracts penalties starting at RM 25 or 5% of the deficient duty (whichever is greater) for the first three months of delay, increasing for longer periods. Voluntary disclosure to LHDN may help mitigate penalties. The safest approach is to ensure your solicitor stamps the instrument as soon as it is received from the bank.
Strictly speaking, a property owner may present documents at the Land Office in person. However, engaging a qualified solicitor is strongly recommended. The process involves verifying instrument accuracy, managing SDSAS compliance, liaising with the bank’s panel solicitor and ensuring the Land Office endorses the discharge correctly. Errors at any stage can result in rejection, penalties or title defects that are costly to remedy.

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What Is the Discharge of Charge Stamping in Malaysia (2026): Form 16N, Deed of Receipt & Reassignment, Fees and Timelines

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