You are a foreigner. You want to buy property in Kuala Lumpur. The process is entirely legal, well-established, and thousands of foreigners complete it every year. But it is also different from buying as a local — different price floors, different financing ratios, different approval timelines, and different tax obligations.
This guide covers every step of the process from start to finish. No filler. Just the process, the costs, the rules, and the mistakes to avoid.
The RM1,000,000 Minimum Price Rule
The most important rule for foreign buyers: you must purchase property at or above RM1,000,000 in Kuala Lumpur.
This threshold is set at the federal level under guidelines established by the Economic Planning Unit (EPU) and enforced by the relevant state or federal territory land office. For KL (a federal territory), the land office is the Pejabat Tanah dan Galian Wilayah Persekutuan (Federal Territories Land and Mines Office).
What counts toward the RM1M:
- The purchase price stated in the SPA must be at least RM1,000,000
- This is the total purchase price — not the price per square foot or per unit
- Developer rebates and discounts applied before signing the SPA are acceptable, as long as the SPA price remains at or above RM1M
What does NOT count:
- Renovation costs added after purchase
- Furniture packages
- Car park lots sold separately
The threshold varies by state. Some states set it higher (Penang island: RM2M for landed, RM1M for strata). Others set it lower in specific zones. But for KL, RM1M is the baseline. For a full state-by-state breakdown, see our foreigner minimum price guide.
Recommended Areas for Foreign Buyers
Given the RM1M floor, your options in KL concentrate in premium and upper-mid areas:
KLCC & City Center
Why it works for foreigners: Most inventory naturally exceeds RM1M. Strong corporate expat tenant pool if you plan to rent out. Recognizable address for resale to other foreign buyers later.
Price range: RM900K-2.5M+ for condos. Most 2-bedroom units exceed RM1M.
Rental yield: 3.5-4.5% gross. Furnished units targeting corporate tenants can achieve the higher end.
Considerations: Oversupply in the luxury segment. Be selective — pick buildings with proven occupancy above 80%. Avoid towers with high vacancy regardless of how impressive the lobby looks.
Mont Kiara
Why it works for foreigners: Established expat community, international schools (Garden International, Mont'Kiara International), self-contained lifestyle enclave. Easy to manage remotely because property management companies are well-established here.
Price range: RM700K-1.5M. Larger units (1,500+ sqft) and newer developments cross the RM1M line.
Rental yield: 4.0-5.0% gross. Furnished premium is significant — RM1,500-3,000/month above unfurnished.
Considerations: No direct MRT access. Car-dependent. This limits your tenant pool to those with vehicles or who rely on ride-hailing.
Bangsar & Bangsar South
Why it works for foreigners: Walkable lifestyle area, LRT and MRT connectivity, strong rental demand from young professionals and tech workers in Bangsar South's office hub.
Price range: RM650K-1.3M. Newer developments and larger units exceed RM1M.
Rental yield: 3.8-4.8% gross.
Considerations: Older Bangsar developments may have maintenance issues. Check sinking fund balances. Bangsar South is newer and generally better-maintained.
Damansara Heights & Dutamas
Why it works for foreigners: Premium residential area, proximity to embassy row and international schools, lower density than KLCC.
Price range: RM800K-2M+. Most quality condos exceed RM1M.
Rental yield: 3.5-4.5% gross. Stable, long-term tenants.
For a broader area comparison including prices per sqft and yield data, see our KL property for sale guide.
Step-by-Step Buying Process for Foreigners
Step 1: Property Selection and Due Diligence
Before viewing anything, define your criteria: budget, target yield, area preferences, and whether you plan to rent out or occupy.
Due diligence checklist:
- Verify the land title (freehold vs leasehold, remaining lease years)
- Check if the property sits on Malay Reserve land (foreigners cannot purchase)
- Confirm the property is not a Bumiputera lot
- Look up actual transaction prices via JPPH Brickz or EdgeProp
- Inspect the building's sinking fund and maintenance records
- Verify no caveats or encumbrances on the title
Step 2: Letter of Offer and Earnest Deposit
Once you identify a property, you sign a Letter of Offer (or booking form) and pay an earnest deposit — typically 2-3% of the purchase price.
This deposit is held by the seller's agent or lawyer. It is refundable if state consent is not obtained, but may be forfeited if you withdraw for other reasons. Confirm the refund conditions in writing before paying.
Step 3: Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA)
Your lawyer drafts or reviews the SPA. Key clauses for foreigners:
- State consent condition: The SPA should include a condition precedent that the purchase is subject to obtaining state authority consent. If consent is refused, the deposit is refunded and the deal is void.
- Completion period: Typically 3+1 months from SPA execution (3 months plus a 1-month extension). For foreigners, negotiate a longer period (3+2 or 3+3) to account for state consent processing time.
- Balance purchase price payment: Usually 90% of the purchase price, due upon completion.
You sign the SPA and pay the remaining deposit (bringing total to 10% of purchase price) within 14 days.
Step 4: State Authority Consent Application
Your lawyer submits the consent application to the Federal Territories Land Office. Required documents typically include:
- Completed application form
- Copy of your passport
- Copy of the SPA
- Land title search
- Application fee (varies, typically RM1,000-2,000)
Processing time: 1-3 months. Kuala Lumpur (as a federal territory) tends to process faster than some states. Approval is generally straightforward if the property exceeds RM1M and does not fall into restricted categories.
If consent is refused: The SPA becomes void, and your deposit is refunded in full (per the consent condition clause). Refusal is rare for standard transactions above the threshold.
Step 5: Loan Application (If Financing)
If you are financing the purchase, apply to Malaysian banks in parallel with the state consent process. Do not wait for consent approval — apply simultaneously to avoid delays.
Foreign buyer financing terms:
| Parameter | Typical Terms |
|---|---|
| Loan-to-value (LTV) | 60-70% |
| Loan tenure | Up to 30 years (or until age 65-70, whichever is earlier) |
| Interest rate | 4.0-4.5% (conventional) or 3.8-4.3% (Islamic, profit rate) |
| Currency | Ringgit Malaysia (RM) |
| Income documentation | Employment letter, 3-6 months payslips, bank statements, tax returns |
Banks that commonly lend to foreigners: Maybank, CIMB, HSBC Malaysia, OCBC Malaysia, Standard Chartered Malaysia. HSBC and Standard Chartered are often preferred by foreign buyers because they have regional relationships.
For more on financing options, see our foreigner property financing guide and Islamic financing guide.
Step 6: Completion and Key Collection
Upon state consent approval and loan approval:
- Your bank releases the loan to the seller's lawyer
- Balance of the purchase price is settled
- Stamp duty on the Memorandum of Transfer (MOT) is paid
- The MOT is registered at the land office
- Keys are handed over
See which properties hit your cashflow target — pre-screened with real yield data.
Get the Property Directory →Total Costs Breakdown
Here is the full cost picture for a foreigner buying a RM1,500,000 condo in KL with 60% financing (RM900,000 loan):
| Cost Item | Amount (RM) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment (40%) | 600,000 | LTV at 60% |
| Stamp duty on MOT | 39,000 | 1% on first 100K, 2% on 100K-500K, 3% on 500K-1M, 4% on balance |
| Legal fees (SPA) | ~10,000 | Based on regulated scale |
| Legal fees (loan) | ~7,000 | Based on regulated scale |
| Stamp duty on loan agreement | 4,500 | 0.5% of RM900K |
| Valuation fee | ~2,000 | Bank-appointed valuer |
| State consent fee | ~1,500 | Application and processing |
| MRTA/MRTT insurance | ~15,000-25,000 | Mortgage reducing term insurance |
| Total upfront capital | ~679,000-689,000 | Approximately 45-46% of purchase price |
The massive difference for foreigners vs locals: that 40% down payment (vs 10% for locals). This is the single biggest barrier — you need substantially more capital upfront.
Stamp Duty Calculation Detail
The MOT stamp duty follows a tiered structure:
| Property Value Tier | Rate | Duty (RM) |
|---|---|---|
| First RM100,000 | 1% | 1,000 |
| RM100,001 - RM500,000 | 2% | 8,000 |
| RM500,001 - RM1,000,000 | 3% | 15,000 |
| RM1,000,001 - RM1,500,000 | 4% | 20,000 |
| Total on RM1.5M | 44,000 |
Note: The RM39,000 in the table above reflects potential minor adjustments from the regulated scale. Use our stamp duty calculator for exact figures.
Ongoing Costs After Purchase
Owning property in KL comes with recurring costs:
| Cost | Typical Range (Monthly) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage payment | RM3,800-4,200 | Based on RM900K loan at 4.2%, 30 years |
| Maintenance fee | RM400-1,200 | Depends on building and sqft |
| Sinking fund | Included above | Usually 10% of maintenance fee |
| Assessment tax (cukai taksiran) | RM100-300 | Paid twice yearly to DBKL |
| Quit rent (cukai tanah) | RM50-200 | Paid annually |
| Property insurance | RM100-200 | Fire insurance (compulsory) + homeowner insurance |
For rental properties, add:
- Vacancy allowance (budget 1 month per year)
- Property management fee (8-12% of rent if using a manager)
- Maintenance and repairs fund (budget 1-2 months rent annually)
See our true cost of owning rental property guide for detailed calculations.
Tax Obligations for Foreign Property Owners
Rental Income Tax
Foreign owners earning rental income in Malaysia must file a tax return. The tax treatment depends on your residency status:
| Status | Tax Rate on Rental Income |
|---|---|
| Tax resident (183+ days in Malaysia) | Progressive rates: 0-30% |
| Non-resident | Flat 30% on gross rental income |
Non-resident tax at 30% on gross income (no deductions) is punitive. If you spend 183+ days in Malaysia (e.g., on MM2H or work visa), you qualify as a tax resident and can claim deductions — mortgage interest, maintenance fees, quit rent, assessment, repairs — which significantly reduces the effective tax rate.
For complete details, see our foreigner rental income tax guide.
RPGT on Sale
When you sell, Real Property Gains Tax applies:
| Holding Period | RPGT Rate (Foreigner) |
|---|---|
| Within 5 years | 30% |
| 6th year onward | 10% |
You never reach 0% as a foreigner. Factor this into your exit strategy. For a detailed RPGT guide, read our capital gains tax guide.
Common Mistakes Foreigners Make
1. Not budgeting for the LTV gap. Locals get 90% LTV. You get 60-70%. On a RM1.5M property, that is RM450,000-600,000 in cash you need upfront. Many foreigners underestimate this.
2. Ignoring state consent timelines. The process adds 1-3 months. If your SPA completion period is too short, you may face penalties or even lose the deal. Build in buffer.
3. Buying in oversupplied buildings. KL's luxury segment has pockets of persistent vacancy. A beautiful unit in a 50%-occupied tower will be hard to rent and hard to resell. Check actual occupancy before buying.
4. Skipping the rental yield calculation. "Good location" does not equal good yield. Run the full cashflow calculation including all costs. Our cashflow calculator guide shows how.
5. Not appointing a Malaysian lawyer early. Your lawyer should be involved from the Letter of Offer stage — not just when the SPA arrives. They can flag issues before you commit your deposit.
6. Assuming renovation is simple. If you plan to renovate, understand Malaysian renovation costs and timelines before budgeting. Cost overruns of 20-30% are common for foreigners who manage remotely.
7. Forgetting about currency risk. Your rental income is in RM. Your loan payments are in RM. But if you earn in USD, SGD, or another currency, exchange rate movements can turn a positive cashflow property into a negative one. Consider this in your stress testing.
Do You Need MM2H or a Visa?
No. Foreigners can buy property in Malaysia without any visa, residency program, or physical presence requirement. You do not need MM2H, DE Rantau, or any work permit to purchase property.
However:
- You need to be in Malaysia (or appoint a power of attorney) for certain steps
- Having a Malaysian bank account helps for loan servicing and rent collection
- MM2H holders may get slightly better financing terms from some banks
For details on buying without MM2H, see our foreigner property guide without MM2H.
Timeline: How Long Does It Take?
| Stage | Duration |
|---|---|
| Property search and selection | 2-8 weeks |
| Letter of Offer and deposit | 1-3 days |
| SPA signing | 2-4 weeks after offer |
| State consent application | 1-3 months |
| Loan approval | 2-4 weeks |
| Completion and key collection | 2-4 weeks after consent + loan |
| Total (typical) | 3-6 months |
This is significantly longer than a local purchase (which can complete in 6-10 weeks). The state consent step is the main bottleneck.
The Bottom Line
Buying in KL as a foreigner is straightforward — but capital-intensive. The RM1M minimum, 60-70% LTV, and higher tax rates mean you need more upfront capital and must be more selective about what you buy. Focus on areas with proven rental demand (KLCC, Mont Kiara, Bangsar), run the cashflow numbers including all costs and taxes, and appoint a good Malaysian lawyer from day one.
The opportunity is real. KL property prices per square foot remain significantly below Singapore, Hong Kong, and Bangkok for comparable quality. For investors who do the math, the yields work — especially if you hold long-term and manage costs well.