Frequently Asked Questions
Get clarity on Malaysia’s tax system, filing requirements, and smart planning strategies
Malaysia uses a progressive tax system with brackets ranging from 0% on the first RM2,700 of chargeable income up to 30% on income above RM400,000. Your bracket depends on your total chargeable income after reliefs and deductions. The higher your income, the higher percentage you pay on that portion—so understanding which bracket you fall into helps you plan how much to set aside for taxes and identify reliefs that could lower your taxable income.
You can claim reliefs for personal circumstances (basic relief, spouse, children), medical and health expenses (up to RM6,000), life insurance premiums, education fees, and investment-related expenses. The key is documentation—keep receipts, invoices, and policy statements. For medical claims, you’ll need itemized receipts from registered practitioners; for insurance, your policy certificate and premium statements; for education, proof of enrollment and fee payments. Without solid paperwork, the Inland Revenue Board (IRB) can disallow your claims, so don’t guess.
Tax returns for most individuals are due by June 30th each year (for the previous assessment year). If you file late, you’ll face penalties starting at RM100 and increasing by RM100 for each month of delay, up to a maximum of RM1,000. If the IRB assesses you and you owe tax, late payment also incurs interest at 8% per annum. It’s worth setting a calendar reminder—missing the deadline can cost you significantly beyond just the tax owed.
Keep invoices for all income, receipts for business expenses (supplies, equipment, rent, utilities), bank statements showing transactions, mileage logs if you claim vehicle expenses, and records of any quarterly tax payments. The IRB can audit up to five years back, so organize everything clearly in folders by year and category. Digital records work fine—just ensure you can access and prove them quickly if audited.
Tax planning is legal and smart—it means organizing your finances to minimize tax within the law (like maximizing relief claims or timing income). Tax evasion is illegal and involves hiding income or making false claims. The difference: if you can defend every claim with documentation and it follows the law, you’re planning; if you’re hiding something or lying, you’re evading. We help you do the former—claim everything you’re entitled to, file honestly, and keep great records.
You can file your own return if you have straightforward income (single employment, no investments, standard reliefs). If you’re self-employed, have multiple income streams, claim complex reliefs, or want to ensure you’re not missing deductions, professional guidance pays for itself in reliefs you’d otherwise miss. Either way, understanding the basics helps you spot errors and feel confident in what you’re filing—that’s what our education is for.
Still have questions?
Our tax education specialists are here to walk you through Malaysia’s system and help you build a compliant, optimized tax strategy.
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