Condo Maintenance Fees in Malaysia: How Much & What's Included

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Maintenance fees are the largest non-financing recurring cost for condo investors in Malaysia. On a 1,000 sqft unit at RM0.40 psf, you pay RM400/month — RM4,800/year — whether or not the unit is tenanted. This is money that comes straight off your rental income and directly impacts your net yield.

Yet most investors check maintenance fees as an afterthought, usually after they have already committed to a purchase. This is backwards. The difference between a RM0.25 psf development and a RM0.50 psf development is RM3,000/year on a 1,000 sqft unit. Over a 10-year hold, that is RM30,000 — real money.

How Maintenance Fees Are Calculated

The formula is simple:

Monthly Maintenance Fee = Rate per sqft x Built-up Area (sqft)

The per-sqft rate is set by the Joint Management Body (JMB) or Management Corporation (MC) based on the development's annual operating budget divided across all units proportionally by share units (which correlate with unit size).

A 1,200 sqft unit pays more than a 700 sqft unit in the same development. The per-sqft rate, however, is the same for all units of the same type within a development.

Typical Rates by Property Type

Property Type Rate (RM/sqft/month) 1,000 sqft Monthly (RM) Annual (RM)
Low-cost flat 0.10–0.15 100–150 1,200–1,800
Medium-cost apartment 0.15–0.25 150–250 1,800–3,000
Standard condominium 0.25–0.40 250–400 3,000–4,800
Luxury condominium 0.40–0.60 400–600 4,800–7,200
Serviced apartment 0.35–0.55 350–550 4,200–6,600
Super luxury / branded residence 0.60–1.00+ 600–1,000+ 7,200–12,000+

The rate is driven by facilities. A basic condo with a pool, gym, and security guard costs less to run than a luxury development with infinity pool, tennis court, function rooms, concierge, and landscaped gardens across 5 acres.

More facilities = higher fees. The question is whether those facilities translate into higher rent. Often, they do not.

What's Included in Maintenance Fees

Standard maintenance fees cover:

What is NOT included:

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Sinking Fund

The sinking fund is a separate charge — a reserve for major capital expenditure that the regular maintenance budget cannot cover:

Under the Strata Management Act 2013 (Act 757), the sinking fund contribution must be at least 10% of the maintenance charge. Most developments set it at exactly 10%.

So if your maintenance fee is RM350/month, your sinking fund is RM35/month. Total monthly charge: RM385.

A healthy sinking fund balance is a sign of good management. Ask to see the sinking fund balance before purchasing — a development with RM50,000 in sinking fund and 500 units is one lift breakdown away from a special levy.

JMB vs MC: Who Manages Your Money

Joint Management Body (JMB):

Management Corporation (MC):

The transition from JMB to MC often takes 2-5 years after VP in Malaysia. During this period, management quality can vary — developers sometimes underinvest in maintenance during the JMB phase to minimize costs.

How Fees Affect Your Yield

This is where maintenance fees matter most for investors. Here is the math:

Example: 1,000 sqft condo, RM500,000 purchase price, RM1,800/month rent

Maintenance Rate Monthly Fee Annual Fee Net Annual Rent Gross Yield Net Yield (after maintenance only)
RM0.20/sqft RM200 RM2,400 RM19,200 4.32% 3.84%
RM0.30/sqft RM300 RM3,600 RM18,000 4.32% 3.60%
RM0.40/sqft RM400 RM4,800 RM16,800 4.32% 3.36%
RM0.50/sqft RM500 RM6,000 RM15,600 4.32% 3.12%

The difference between RM0.20 and RM0.50 psf maintenance is 0.72% of yield — nearly a full percentage point. That is enormous in a market where net yields are already tight.

Red Flags to Watch For

High fee with poor maintenance. If a development charges RM0.45 psf but the common areas are dirty, lifts break down frequently, and the pool is green — the management is either incompetent or corrupt. Check the annual audited accounts if possible.

Frequent special levies. A special levy is an additional one-time charge approved by the AGM for major works. Occasional special levies are normal. Frequent ones suggest the regular maintenance fee is set too low or the sinking fund has been mismanaged.

Low collection rate. If many owners are not paying maintenance fees, the MC operates on a reduced budget, quality drops, and paying owners subsidize non-payers. Ask the management office for the current collection rate — anything below 80% is a concern.

No audited accounts. The Strata Management Act requires annual audited accounts. If the MC or JMB cannot produce them, governance is weak.

For a deeper analysis of maintenance fees and sinking fund, including legal obligations and dispute resolution, see our maintenance fee and sinking fund guide. To understand the full cost stack of owning a Malaysian rental property — including maintenance, taxes, insurance, and financing — see our true cost of ownership breakdown.

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