Commercial property in Johor Bahru sits in a different investment category from residential. Higher yields, longer leases, fewer foreign ownership restrictions — but also higher capital requirements, longer vacancy risks, and more cyclical demand. For investors who have the capital and stomach for the asset class, JB commercial property offers some of the strongest yield opportunities in southern Malaysia.
This guide covers shophouses, retail lots, and office space across JB's key commercial zones with real pricing and yield data.
Why Commercial Over Residential in JB?
The numbers tell the story:
| Factor | Residential Condo | Commercial Shop/Office |
|---|---|---|
| Gross yield | 4.0–6.0% | 5.5–8.0% |
| Typical lease | 12 months | 24–36 months |
| Tenant turnover | Every 1-2 years | Every 3-5 years |
| Vacancy recovery | 2-4 weeks | 1-6 months |
| Down payment | 10% | 20-30% |
| Financing rate | 3.8–4.5% | 4.5–5.5% |
| Foreigner minimum price | RM1,000,000 | None (most states) |
| Monthly maintenance | RM200–600 | RM100–300 |
The yield premium is 1.5-2.5 percentage points higher for commercial. The trade-off: when a commercial unit goes vacant, it can stay vacant for months. When a condo goes vacant, you typically fill it in weeks. Commercial investing requires patience and financial reserves.
For a broader comparison of commercial vs residential investing, see our commercial vs residential guide.
JB Commercial Property Types
Shophouses
JB's shophouses fall into two categories with very different investment profiles:
Heritage shophouses (JB CBD): Two and three-storey pre-war shophouses along Jalan Tan Hiok Nee, Jalan Dhoby, and surrounding streets. These have undergone a revival as cafes, boutique offices, and creative spaces. Prices range from RM800K-2M depending on condition and frontage. Yields of 5-7% are common, with the added benefit of land appreciation in the heritage zone. Renovation costs can be substantial — RM150K-400K for a full restoration.
Modern shophouses (townships): Three-storey intermediate shoplots in planned townships like Austin, Setia Tropika, Taman Molek, and Iskandar Puteri. Ground floors for retail/F&B, upper floors for offices or storage. Prices: RM700K-1.5M for intermediate lots, RM1.5M-3M for corner lots. Yields: 6-8% for well-located ground floor units with road frontage.
Retail Lots
Stand-alone retail units in shopping malls and commercial complexes. These are higher risk — mall performance is highly variable in JB, and several malls have struggled with occupancy. Unless you are buying in a proven, high-traffic mall, retail lots in JB carry significant vacancy risk. Prices range from RM300K-800K for smaller units.
Office Space
Strata office units and shop-offices are available across JB. The office market is bifurcated:
- JB CBD offices: Older buildings with lower psf pricing but established demand from professional services (law firms, accounting, insurance). RM300-500 psf.
- Iskandar Puteri offices: Newer buildings with SEZ potential but current occupancy challenges. RM400-700 psf. The SEZ may change this dynamic, but it has not yet.
See which properties hit your cashflow target — pre-screened with real yield data.
Get the Property Directory →Best Areas for Commercial Investment
JB CBD (Johor Bahru City Centre)
The historical commercial heart. Jalan Wong Ah Fook, Jalan Trus, Jalan Tan Hiok Nee — these streets carry decades of commercial activity and will benefit directly from the RTS Link at Bukit Chagar.
- Shophouse prices: RM800K–2M
- Shop lot rental: RM3,000–8,000/month (ground floor)
- Yields: 5–7%
- Strengths: Established foot traffic, heritage appeal, RTS proximity
- Risks: Aging building stock, parking constraints, gentrification uncertainty
Austin / Mount Austin
JB's most successful post-2000 township. Strong residential catchment of 150,000+ residents creates consistent demand for retail and services.
- Shophouse prices: RM900K–1.8M (intermediate), RM2M+ (corner)
- Shop lot rental: RM4,000–10,000/month (ground floor, main road)
- Yields: 6–8%
- Strengths: Deep residential catchment, growing population, food traffic
- Risks: Competition from newer shop lots in adjacent developments
Iskandar Puteri (formerly Nusajaya)
The planned administrative and commercial hub. Home to state government offices, EduCity, Legoland, and growing tech/BPO clusters. The SEZ designation is the key catalyst.
- Shophouse prices: RM600K–1.2M
- Shop lot rental: RM2,000–5,000/month
- Yields: 5–7% (but highly variable by specific location)
- Strengths: SEZ upside, government anchor tenants, newer infrastructure
- Risks: Population still building, many shop lots sitting empty in newer phases, distance from JB CBD
Tebrau Corridor
The stretch along Jalan Tebrau from JB CBD to Kempas. Mix of older commercial areas and newer developments. AEON Tebrau City mall anchors the area.
- Shophouse prices: RM700K–1.5M
- Shop lot rental: RM3,000–7,000/month
- Yields: 5.5–7.5%
- Strengths: High traffic corridor, established commercial strip, good connectivity
- Risks: Some sections have ageing stock, competition from newer developments
Foreign Ownership: Easier Than Residential
Commercial property has fewer foreign ownership hurdles in Johor:
- No minimum purchase price for most commercial properties (vs RM1M for residential)
- State consent still required but approval rates are high and processing is generally faster
- 2% foreign buyer levy still applies
- Financing: Malaysian banks offer 50-60% LTV to foreigners for commercial property, lower than the 60-70% for residential
- RPGT applies on the same schedule as residential — 30% for disposals within 3 years, stepping down to 10% after 5 years for foreigners
This makes commercial property an interesting option for foreign investors who want JB exposure below the RM1M residential threshold. A RM700K shophouse in a good location yielding 7% is a viable proposition that residential rules would not permit.
For more on foreigner commercial property rules, see our foreigner commercial property guide.
Running the Numbers: Shophouse Example
RM1.2M intermediate shophouse in Austin:
| Item | Monthly (RM) |
|---|---|
| Gross rental (ground floor) | 6,000 |
| Maintenance fee | -150 |
| Assessment rate | -100 |
| Insurance | -80 |
| Quit rent (annualized) | -25 |
| Net operating income | 5,645 |
| Mortgage (RM720K at 5.0%, 20 years) | -4,750 |
| Monthly cashflow | +895 |
Gross yield: 6.0%. Net cashflow after financing: positive RM895/month. This assumes 100% occupancy — which is realistic for a well-located shop in Austin but not guaranteed. Budget 1-2 months vacancy per tenancy cycle (every 3 years) and a maintenance reserve.
Key Risks
- Vacancy duration. A vacant shop lot does not rent as fast as a vacant condo. Expect 1-3 months to fill a good unit, 3-6 months for a less desirable one.
- Tenant quality. Commercial tenants can default on rental or damage the property. Get bank guarantees or security deposits equivalent to 3 months rent.
- Oversupply in newer areas. Iskandar Puteri and some newer JB townships have more shop space than the current population can support. Buy where the people already are, not where they are promised to be.
- Economic sensitivity. Commercial rents drop faster than residential rents in a downturn. The 2020-2021 period saw JB commercial rents fall 10-20% while residential held relatively steady.
- Liquidity. Commercial properties take longer to sell than residential. Expect 6-12 months to find a buyer at market price.
Bottom Line
JB commercial property delivers yields that residential cannot match — but demands more capital, more patience, and more tolerance for vacancy risk. The best opportunities are in established areas with proven foot traffic: Austin, JB CBD, and Tebrau corridor. Iskandar Puteri is a bet on the SEZ delivering real tenant demand.
For investors with RM700K-1.5M to deploy and a 5+ year horizon, a well-located JB shophouse generating 6-8% gross yield is a compelling alternative to residential condos yielding 4-5%.