Moving to Malaysia: Work Visas, Health, Banking and Budget

Could Malaysia Be a Practical New Beginning? Work Visas, Healthcare, Banking, and a First-Year Budget

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Malaysia is often presented as a practical relocation choice: manageable everyday costs, access to private services and a well-connected base in Southeast Asia. But none of those advantages answers the questions that determine whether a move will actually work—whether the person can legally perform the planned work, whether the salary remains sufficient after deductions, and whether the household can absorb healthcare, housing deposits and a delayed first paycheck.

Moving to Malaysia can look affordable on paper and still become financially fragile. A single employer may control both income and immigration status. A salary may satisfy an Employment Pass category without supporting a family. Banking can take longer than expected, employer health coverage may have important gaps, and several major expenses can arrive before the first local salary.

This guide examines the main work and residence routes, healthcare, banking, tax residence, payroll deductions, housing and first-year cash needs. The objective is not to produce one universal relocation budget, but to help readers determine whether Malaysia offers a sustainable new beginning—or whether the route, salary or financial buffer needs to change first.

Important: Malaysian immigration, employment, tax, healthcare and banking rules depend on the pass, employer, location and individual circumstances and may change. This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal, tax, medical or financial advice. Verify current requirements with the relevant Malaysian authority or a suitably qualified professional before making decisions.

Who Malaysia May Suit—and Who May Find the Trade-Offs Too Large

Malaysia may suit professionals who have a reliable income plan, value multicultural urban life and regional connectivity, and are comfortable budgeting for private services. It may be less suitable for people who need portable local work rights, guaranteed public subsidies or strong permanent-residence certainty.

Malaysia may be a stronger fit if…

  • A lawful route already matches the actual work.
  • Net income remains comfortable after deductions.
  • The household values regional connectivity and multicultural life.
  • Healthcare and insurance are priced in writing.
  • Cash is available for deposits, delays and emergency departure.

It may be a weaker fit if…

  • The plan depends on tourist or ordinary social-visit status.
  • Fully portable local work rights are essential.
  • One fragile employer controls income and residence.
  • Guaranteed public subsidy or instant banking is required.
  • Strong permanent-residence certainty is non-negotiable.

Malaysia in One Practical Snapshot

AreaPractical reading
Work rightsDepend on the exact pass and, for an Employment Pass, the named employer
SalaryMust satisfy the route and support the household after deductions
HealthcarePublic and private systems exist; foreigner charges and insurance matter
BankingSubject to bank-specific KYC and risk controls
HousingLocation, commute and deposits change the apparent affordability
FamilyResidence may be available; work rights are separate
TaxesImmigration status does not determine tax residence
StabilityDepends on renewal, employer continuity, income and route

Start With the Reason for Moving to Malaysia, Not the Pass Name

SituationRoute to research firstCentral caution
Local employment with Malaysian entityEmployment PassEmployer-linked and category-specific
Temporary services for Malaysian company on behalf of overseas employerProfessional Visit PassTemporary, not ordinary local employment
Sector-based foreign employmentVisitor’s Pass (Temporary Employment), or PLKSSeparate sector, quota, levy and medical system
Established highly skilled expatriate in MalaysiaResidence Pass–TalentSelective, not an entry-level route
Remote work for foreign employer or clientsDE Rantau Nomad PassNot general local-employment authorisation
Long-term lifestyle residenceMM2HCategory-specific residence, not universal work permission

Tourist or ordinary social-visit status does not create a general right to work. The route must match what the person will do, who pays them and whether the activity is local employment, overseas assignment, remote work or residence without local work.

Employment Pass: The Employer, Salary Category and Role Must Align

Employer-linked status

The Expatriate Services Division (ESD) defines the Employment Pass as permission to work for an organisation in Malaysia. The Malaysian company or eligible organisation submits the application after the relevant position approval.

The holder may work only for the named company. Changing company normally requires a new application. Approval and endorsement are separate stages, and work should not begin outside a valid pass’s conditions. ESD states that an individual application may cover an employment period of up to 60 months, subject to the contract, sector requirements and authority discretion. The ESD Employment Pass page also states that this pass is valid only in Peninsular Malaysia; employment in Sabah or Sarawak requires state-specific immigration verification.

Revised salary categories effective 1 June 2026

Under the official revised policy, complete new and renewal applications submitted on or after 1 June 2026 must use these gross monthly basic-salary bands:

CategoryRevised basic salaryGeneral category frameworkCentral caution
Category IRM20,000 and aboveUp to 10 yearsSalary alone does not guarantee approval
Category IIRM10,000–RM19,999Up to 10 yearsFuture succession-plan rules may apply
Category IIIRM5,000–RM9,999Up to 5 yearsTighter category and employer conditions may apply

The ten- and five-year figures describe the revised maximum employment-duration framework tied to the employing company, not one automatically issued pass. The official FAQ says companies may apply for up to 60 months at a time. Further periods remain subject to the category ceiling, contract, sector rules and Immigration discretion. The threshold uses gross monthly basic salary, excluding allowances and bonuses.

ESD announced on 26 May 2026 that succession-plan requirements for Categories II and III will begin only on 1 January 2027. The official policy FAQ says holders of passes that remain valid do not need to submit a new application merely because the policy changed. However, new applications and renewals submitted on or after 1 June 2026 are subject to the revised policy, while sector-specific and approving-agency rules may add conditions.

Threshold versus salary adequacy

Separate pass-qualifying basic salary from market pay, gross remuneration, taxable benefits, payroll deductions, employer-paid housing or health benefits, net cash and exchange-rate exposure. A Category III salary may qualify yet remain insufficient for a family paying private insurance, a car and international school fees.

Employer approvals and departure formalities

The employer may need ESD registration, projections, an approving-agency support letter and labour-market approvals such as JTKSM processes. Xpats Gateway is used in relevant sectors. Submission is not approval.

For permanent departure, ESD rules introduced in November 2025 require the company to shorten an active EP or PVP. Exit Clearance applies to relevant expired passes where no shortening or renewal was recorded.

Professional Visit Pass and Other Work Arrangements

Professional Visit Pass

The Professional Visit Pass covers qualified foreign talent providing services or training to a Malaysian company on behalf of an overseas company. ESD states a maximum of 12 months per issuance. It is limited to the named company and does not permit a Dependant Pass. It should not disguise ordinary Malaysian employment.

Visitor’s Pass (Temporary Employment)

The Visitor’s Pass (Temporary Employment) is a separate foreign-worker system for approved sectors including manufacturing, plantation, agriculture, construction and services. Quotas, source-country rules, levies, medical screening and employer obligations apply. It is not interchangeable with an expatriate Employment Pass.

DE Rantau Nomad Pass

DE Rantau is a Professional Visit Pass for eligible remote professionals. Under the criteria published and checked on 27 June 2026, it generally runs 3–12 months, renewable for another 12 months. Published gross annual income evidence is above USD24,000 for eligible tech professions or above USD60,000 for eligible non-tech professions. Remote employees need a foreign employer; freelancers or independent contractors must satisfy the qualifying contract rules. It is not general permission for local salaried work.

MM2H

MM2H is a MOTAC long-term social-visit programme, not a universal employment route. MOTAC’s posted terms state that Platinum permits career and business or investment activities, while Gold and Silver require the relevant pass. Category-specific fixed-deposit, participation-fee, residence-purchase and minimum-stay conditions also apply. Verify the current MOTAC schedule before transferring money, buying property or accepting local work.

Residence Pass–Talent: A Longer-Term Option for Selected Expatriates

The Residence Pass–Talent is a selective, up-to-ten-year renewable route for established expatriates. TalentCorp’s minimum criteria include three consecutive years working in Malaysia, an Employment Pass with more than three months remaining, two recent years of Malaysian tax paid, RM15,000 monthly basic salary excluding allowances and bonuses, recognised credentials and at least five years’ experience.

It offers greater employer flexibility. Eligible dependants can obtain RP-T dependant status, and TalentCorp says an eligible spouse may seek employment without a separate Employment Pass. Continuation after the initial ten-year period is subject to TalentCorp’s current renewal or RP-T Post-10-Years process and eligibility rules. RP-T remains discretionary and is not permanent residence.

Family Members: Residence and Work Rights Are Separate Questions

A standard Dependant Pass may cover a qualifying Employment Pass holder’s spouse and eligible children under 18. Duration follows the principal pass and passport validity.

ESD states that a dependant wishing to work must obtain an Employment Pass. Older children, parents or parents-in-law may fall under a Long-Term Social Visit Pass. The general ESD page says only a principal earning above RM5,000 gross monthly is eligible for related family passes. Because revised Category III begins at exactly RM5,000, applicants at that boundary should obtain written confirmation. Category III passes issued before 1 June 2026 remain under the earlier policy, which did not allow dependants.

Budget separately for passes, larger housing, insurance, school or childcare, transport and emergency travel. Do not rely on a spouse’s future income until work authorisation and employment are secure.

Healthcare: Public Access Does Not Mean Equal Cost

Foreigners can use government facilities, but public care is not free. The Ministry of Health foreigner schedule, updated 23 September 2025, listed RM40 per general outpatient hospital visitRM120 for a specialist outpatient visit and RM100 for an emergency-department visit. Tests, procedures, deposits and wards add further charges.

Public queues, referrals and capacity vary. Private facilities may provide faster access but prices differ. They are regulated under the Private Healthcare Facilities and Services Act 1998; regulation does not guarantee affordability.

Employer benefits also vary. Confirm inpatient, outpatient, dependants, maternity, chronic medicine and cover after termination. Do not assume sector-based foreign-worker insurance rules apply identically to expatriate packages.

Insurance checklist

Verify inpatient and day surgery, outpatient and specialists, emergency care, maternity, dental, mental health, pre-existing exclusions, waiting periods, deductibles, annual limits, cashless network, dependants, evacuation, travel and continuity after job loss. Use MOH facility information and the relevant professional register when checking a provider. Marketing is not proof that a claim will be paid.

Banking: Opening an Account Is Possible, but Not Automatic

Banks apply customer due diligence, product eligibility and risk controls. A bank may also request a valid pass, employment letter, Malaysian address, local phone, tax-residency information, deposit or employer introduction. Requirements vary by institution, branch, product and digital channel. An employer payroll arrangement may simplify onboarding, but no bank must approve every applicant. Keep backup funds until the local account and online access work.

Deposit protection

PIDM protects eligible deposits up to RM250,000 per depositor per member bank, regardless of nationality or residence. Savings, current, fixed, Islamic and foreign-currency deposits may qualify. Investment accounts, unit trusts, shares, precious-metal products, cryptoassets, deposits not payable in Malaysia and overseas branches are not covered merely because the banking brand is familiar.

Banking checklist

Check account type, salary-credit requirement, fees, minimum balance, card, online access, transfer limits, foreign-currency options, PIDM status, source-of-funds requirements and closure rules after pass expiry. Bank Negara Malaysia’s Foreign Exchange Policy permits many transactions, but documentation can still apply. Compare the exchange spread as well as the fee.

Taxes: Immigration Status and Tax Residence Are Different

An Employment Pass does not automatically create Malaysian tax residence.

Residence under Section 7

The 182-day test is one route. Residence can also arise through a shorter period linked to a 182-day period in an adjacent year; at least 90 days plus the required pattern across three of the four preceding years; or the statutory test involving residence in the three preceding years and the following year. Permitted temporary absences and day counting matter. When two countries claim residence, a Double Taxation Agreement may supply tie-breakers.

Resident and non-resident treatment

Residents generally face progressive rates and may claim eligible reliefs or rebates. Individual assessment normally follows the calendar year under self-assessment. The applicable resident rate bands and reliefs should be checked for the exact Year of Assessment; this article does not calculate a personal 2026 liability.

HASIL lists a 30% rate for relevant Malaysian-source income of non-resident individuals from Year of Assessment 2020 onward, without normal personal reliefs. Short-employment exemptions are narrow and fact-specific; Public Ruling No. 2/2026 shows why “under 60 days” is not a safe universal rule.

Monthly Tax Deduction

MTD or PCB is employer payroll withholding, not necessarily the final liability. Registration, annual reporting, evidence and a balance payable or refundable may still matter. HASIL issued a dedicated computerised MTD specification for Year of Assessment 2026. Foreign employers, remote work, overseas bonuses, stock compensation, dual residence, remittances, treaty claims and Certificates of Residence can justify professional advice.

EPF, PERKESO and the Real Payroll Deduction

EPF

Mandatory EPF coverage expanded from October 2025 wages for many non-Malaysian employees with a valid passport and work pass; domestic workers are excluded from the standard group. The rate is 2% employer and 2% employee. Permanent residents, historic members, permitted elections, age rules and statutory exclusions may differ. See the EPF guidance for non-Malaysian citizen employees. EPF is retirement saving, not income tax.

PERKESO

Current foreign-worker coverage includes Employment Injury, Invalidity from 1 July 2024, and LINDUNG 24 JAM non-employment injury protection from 1 June 2026. For a first-category foreign worker, the published combined shares are 1.75% employer and 1.25% employee, subject to the official wage table and a RM6,000 monthly wage ceiling. PERKESO does not replace private medical insurance.

Payroll itemWhat it isBudget caution
Gross salaryContractual remunerationNot spendable amount
MTD/PCBMonthly tax deductionMay differ from final liability
EPFRetirement contributionReduces current cash while creating savings
PERKESOSocial protectionDoes not replace health insurance
Other deductionsContractual or lawful itemsRequire itemisation
Net salaryCash receivedUse this for the household budget

Housing: Affordable Compared With What?

Kuala Lumpur/Klang Valley offers the broadest corporate ecosystem but can add rent, parking and commute costs. Penang, Johor Bahru, Melaka, Ipoh, Sabah, Sarawak and smaller locations have different job, transport and service trade-offs. Sabah and Sarawak require state-specific immigration checks.

Compare the signed tenancy’s total occupancy cost, not one listing. Advance rent, security and utility deposits, stamp duty, agent fee where applicable, temporary accommodation, furniture, appliances and internet may be due together. Deposit customs are negotiable; do not assume one universal formula.

NAPIC/JPPH data provides market context, but a portal figure is an asking rent. Furnishing, parking, tolls and commute determine the household result.

The First-Year Budget Has Five Layers

LayerExamplesMain risk
Before departureDocuments, medicals, passes, flightsPaid before local salary
ArrivalTemporary stay, deposits, transportCosts arrive together
MonthlyRent, food, transport, insurance, deductions“Low-cost” assumptions
Family/annualSchool, renewals, travel, medical gapsIrregular but predictable
EmergencyJob loss, pass change, treatment, return flightIncome and residence fail together

DOSM’s 2024 survey reported mean Malaysian household consumption of RM5,566 per month. It describes domestic spending patterns, not an expatriate budget. The May 2026 Consumer Price Index provides broad context but should not mechanically update a rent, insurance or relocation quote. Obtain current prices for the actual household and location.

Pre-Departure Costs

ItemOfficial quote/source
Pass and processingEmployer/ESD/agency
Documents/translationIssuer/translator
Medical/insuranceClinic/policy schedule
Flights/baggageConfirmed itinerary
Temporary accommodationBooking terms
Currency transferFee plus exchange spread

Include passports, civil and education records, translations, required medicals, school files and temporary cover. Record who pays and when; later reimbursement does not reduce initial cash needs.

Arrival-Month Costs

Arrival itemOne-off?Refundable?Recurring consequence
Temporary accommodationYesNoLonger search raises total
Rental depositYesConditionalCash remains locked
Utility depositYesOften conditionalTied to tenancy
Furniture/setupYesNoMaintenance follows
Transport setupMaybeLimitedFuel, insurance, parking, tolls
Health coverMaybeNoRecurring premium
School/childcare depositMaybeDependsOngoing fees

Add first rent, SIM, internet, daily transport and any bank minimum balance. Do not assume payroll arrives before these bills.

Recurring Monthly Costs

CategoryEvidence
HousingSigned/local comparable
UtilitiesTariff and unit history
FoodFour-week trial
TransportRoute, parking, tolls, vehicle
HealthPolicy and out-of-pocket reserve
School/childcareFull fee schedule
CommunicationsProvider quote
Emergency reserveSeparate liquid account

Also include medicine, lawful household help, remittances, debt, leisure and travel. A cheaper distant home may create car, toll and parking costs.

Build Three First-Year Scenarios

Lean but viable: confirmed employer, modest housing, known insurance, short temporary stay, no school fees and public transport.

Realistic household: market rent, private healthcare, moderate setup, family costs, mixed transport and an annual home trip.

Stress case: pass or payroll delay, employer change, longer temporary accommodation, medical event, school deposit, car need, currency loss or emergency flight.

Budget phaseLeanRealisticStress
Before departure
Arrival month
Months 2–3
Months 4–12
Emergency reserve
Total cash need

The stress case should combine risks that can occur together: job loss, lost employer insurance and pressure on the pass.

Banking and Cash-Flow Timeline

Before arrival

Keep application, flights, first accommodation and emergency funds liquid.

First two weeks

Prepare passport, endorsed pass, employer letter, address and tax information; maintain a backup payment method.

First month

Fund deposits, transport, insurance and daily costs without relying on immediate salary.

Months two to six

Reconcile payslips, MTD, EPF, PERKESO, benefits and actual household spending.

Months seven to twelve

Prepare for tax filing, renewal, travel and insurance, and rebuild the arrival reserve.

Costs People Commonly Forget

Duplicate accommodation, tenancy stamp duty, utility deposits, parking, tolls, vehicle insurance, school registration, uniforms, dental care, prescriptions, insurance exclusions, dependant processing, translations, renewal, an employer-change gap, pass shortening, tax advice, emergency flights, exchange spreads, furniture delivery, air-conditioning electricity and interstate relocation.

What Could Break the Plan?

Warning signs include salary barely meeting the threshold, an employer unable to explain approvals, work before endorsement, assumed dependant income, major insurance exclusions, delayed banking, ignored non-resident tax, omitted EPF/PERKESO, deposits consuming the reserve, or Malaysian averages being used as expatriate costs.

The largest concentration risk is one job controlling salary, medical cover and residence. Build a written exit plan.

Red Flags in Malaysia Relocation Offers

  • Guaranteed Employment Pass or bank account
  • Work requested on tourist status
  • Declared salary differing from actual salary
  • Salary returned to the employer
  • Unclear pass category or approving agency
  • MM2H marketed as unrestricted employment
  • DE Rantau marketed for any local salaried role
  • Insurance said to cover “everything”
  • False PIDM claims
  • Cash pay without payslip or unexplained deductions
  • False qualifications, payment for a job or promised permanent residence

When Professional Advice May Be Worth the Cost

Immigration advice may help with refusal, employer change, complex family cases, remote-work overlap, Sabah/Sarawak, RP-T or prior overstay. Tax advice may be worthwhile for dual residence, foreign income, equity compensation, treaties and first/last years. Employment advice may be needed for salary mismatch, deductions, unpaid wages or termination. Independent insurance or financial advice can help with serious conditions, maternity, international cover or large transfers.

A Practical Malaysia Decision Matrix

Decision areaStronger foundationHigher risk
Legal routeCorrect pass for real activityTourist/nomad/lifestyle route misused
EmployerRegistered and transparentCannot explain process
SalaryAffordable after deductionsBarely qualifies
HealthcareWritten cover and backupVague promise
BankingDocuments and backup fundsAssumes instant account
HousingDeposits and commute budgetedListing price alone
FamilyPass, work and school verifiedAssumes automatic rights
TaxResidence and MTD understoodGross treated as net
BufferSurvives disruptionSpent on arrival

Five Questions Before Committing

  1. Which pass lawfully matches the actual plan?
  2. Does verified net income support housing, health and family costs?
  3. Can the household operate before banking and first salary?
  4. What happens if the job ends?
  5. Is the budget based on documents rather than reputation?

Conclusion: Malaysia Is Practical Only When the Systems Are Practical

Moving to Malaysia may be a practical new beginning when the route matches the activity, the employer can support it, net income carries the household, and healthcare and banking have backups.

It becomes fragile when a pass threshold is confused with affordability, a lifestyle route is treated as work permission, or deposits consume every reserve. There is no universal yes or no. Verify the current rule with the responsible agency, then test realistic and stress budgets before signing.

Reviewed: 27 June 2026.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner work in Malaysia?

Yes, when the person holds the immigration permission that matches the actual employment or professional activity. Tourist or ordinary social-visit status does not provide a general right to work.

What is the difference between an Employment Pass and a Professional Visit Pass?

An Employment Pass supports employment with the named Malaysian organisation. A Professional Visit Pass generally supports temporary services or training for a Malaysian company on behalf of an overseas company, for up to 12 months per issuance.

What are the Malaysia Employment Pass salary categories from June 2026?

For applications submitted on or after 1 June 2026, Category I starts at RM20,000 monthly basic salary, Category II covers RM10,000–RM19,999, and Category III covers RM5,000–RM9,999. These are gross monthly basic-salary thresholds, not net income or affordability guarantees.

Does meeting the salary threshold guarantee an Employment Pass?

No. The employer, role, approving authority, sector conditions, documents, contract and immigration discretion also matter.

Can an Employment Pass holder change employers?

Not on the same employer-linked permission. ESD states that a change of company requires a new application.

Can a dependant work in Malaysia?

Not automatically under the standard Dependant Pass. ESD says the dependant must obtain the appropriate Employment Pass. Different provisions apply to an eligible RP-T spouse.

Is DE Rantau a local work permit?

No. It is a nomad-oriented Professional Visit Pass with specific remote-work and income criteria. It is not general authorisation for any locally salaried job.

Does MM2H allow unrestricted employment?

No. Under MOTAC’s posted terms, the Platinum category permits career and business or investment activities, while Gold and Silver participants must obtain the relevant pass for those activities. The current terms should be rechecked before acting.

Is healthcare free for foreigners in Malaysia?

No. Foreigners can access government facilities, but non-citizen fees, deposits, tests, procedures and ward charges may apply.

Do expatriates need private health insurance?

There is no single answer for every pass and employment arrangement, but relying only on a vague employer promise is risky. Price inpatient, outpatient, exclusions, dependants and cover after job loss.

Can a foreigner open a bank account in Malaysia?

Potentially, subject to the bank’s KYC, product eligibility and risk assessment. A passport, valid pass, employment evidence and Malaysian address are commonly relevant, but requirements vary.

Are foreign deposits protected by PIDM?

Eligible deposits at a PIDM member bank are protected up to RM250,000 per depositor per member bank. Nationality and residence do not remove protection, but not every product or overseas branch is covered.

When is a foreign employee tax resident in Malaysia?

Residence is determined under Section 7 of the Income Tax Act and applicable treaties—not by the Employment Pass alone. See Public Ruling No. 11/2017 for the full rules.

Is the 182-day rule the only tax-residence test?

No. Linked periods, the 90-day and prior-year pattern, and another multi-year statutory test can also establish residence.

Do foreign employees contribute to EPF?

Many do. From October 2025 wages, the standard expanded-coverage rate is 2% employer and 2% employee for covered non-Malaysian employees with a valid passport and work pass, excluding domestic workers. Different treatment and exceptions apply to some categories.

What is PERKESO coverage?

Foreign workers can fall under Employment Injury, Invalidity and, from 1 June 2026, non-employment injury protection. Contributions and benefits depend on the applicable category. See PERKESO’s rate of contribution page for the current schedule.

How much money is needed for the first year?

There is no responsible universal figure. Add verified pre-departure, arrival, monthly, annual-family and emergency costs, then model lean, realistic and stress cases.

Is Malaysia equally affordable in every city or state?

No. Housing, transport, employment opportunities, private services and administrative rules vary. Sabah and Sarawak also require state-specific immigration checks.

Published on: 27 de June de 2026

Sofia Lopez

Sofia Lopez

Sofia Lopez has spent years researching international mobility, work visa pathways, and life abroad across Europe, North America, and Oceania. With a background in business administration and a personal interest in making complex immigration and employment information more accessible, she founded SegueAsDicas.com as a practical resource for those planning to work, study, or relocate internationally. Her guides are built on official sources and real procedural research — not generic advice. When she is not writing, Sofia enjoys travelling, exploring new cultures, and a quiet moment with a good book.