The Break-Even Rent for Foreigners Buying in Malaysia

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Most foreigners buying Malaysian property do their compliance homework. They learn the 8% stamp duty. They learn the RM1m minimum-price floor. They read about RPGT and the 70% loan cap. Then they look at a listing showing "5% gross yield" and assume the monthly math works.

It usually does not. The same costs that make the purchase expensive also raise the rent you need to break even, and that single number is what separates a property that pays you from one you subsidise every month. Across roughly 130,000 listings we screened (April 2026), 1,088 have rent that clears the loan instalment for a Malaysian buyer. For a foreigner, only 309 foreigner-eligible listings do, and the gap is driven almost entirely by the RM1m price floor, not by the financing. Clearing the instalment is only the first bar, though. This post shows you the rent you actually need to break even after every cost, and why so little of the market reaches it.

Three costs that move your break-even point

A foreigner and a Malaysian can buy the identical unit at the identical price and end up with completely different cashflow. Four structural differences do the damage:

Factor Malaysian buyer Foreign buyer
Stamp duty (MOT) 1 to 4% tiered 8% flat
Loan-to-value up to 90% capped at 70%
Typical profit rate ~4.0% ~4.5%
Rental income tax progressive (resident) 30% flat (non-resident)

The 70% cap is the one most buyers misread. It does not raise your monthly instalment, it actually lowers it slightly because you borrow less. What it does is front-load cash: a 30% deposit instead of 10%. On an RM1.5m property that is RM450,000 down rather than RM150,000, plus RM120,000 in stamp duty rather than around RM44,000. You are roughly RM375,000 deeper in the hole before the unit earns a single ringgit, and that capital has to be recovered out of monthly surplus.

The 30% non-resident rental tax is the quiet killer. A Malaysian landlord pays progressive tax on net rental and often falls in a low bracket. A non-resident pays a flat 30% on net rental income from the first ringgit. That alone can turn a thin positive into a negative.

The break-even rent, worked out

Take a representative RM1.5m strata condo, just above the foreigner floor. This is an anonymized archetype, not a specific listing (the named, current, buyable properties live in the Foreign Buyer Edition and the free sample, not in this post).

At 70% LTV you borrow RM1,050,000. At a 4.5% profit rate over 35 years, the monthly instalment is about RM4,968. So the first break-even line is simple:

Break-even level Required rent Gross yield
Cover the loan only ~RM4,968 ~3.97%
Cover the full 12-cost stack ~RM6,200 ~4.96%

To merely cover the instalment you need RM4,968 a month, a 3.97% gross yield. But the loan is only one of twelve recurring costs. Add maintenance and sinking fund (around RM500 on a unit this size), assessment and quit rent (around RM90), insurance (around RM50), a one-month-per-year vacancy provision, remote property management (foreign owners almost always pay this, roughly 8% of rent), and minor repairs, and the true break-even rent climbs to roughly RM6,200 a month. That is close to a 5% gross yield, before the 30% non-resident tax takes its share of whatever net remains.

A Malaysian buyer on the same unit breaks even closer to 3.5% gross, because they put down less cash, borrow at a lower rate, and pay progressive rather than flat tax. The foreigner needs roughly a full extra percentage point of yield to reach the same place.

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Why so few properties work for foreigners

Here is the problem: most Malaysian condos yield between 3 and 4.5% gross. A property that needs roughly 5% just to break even after foreigner costs eliminates the large majority of the market.

The numbers from our April 2026 screening make it concrete. Across all foreigner-eligible stock, only 309 listings have rent that even covers the loan instalment, against 1,088 for local buyers. The foreigner actually borrows less and pays a lower instalment, so the gap is not the financing: it is the RM1m floor, which removes the affordable, higher-yield band where local buyers find most of their cashflow-positive stock. The regional split of the 309:

Region Foreigner cashflow-positive
Kuala Lumpur 257
Johor 24
Penang 12
Selangor 8
Other states ~8 combined

303 of those 309 sit at or above RM1m, with a national median entry price around RM1.625m and a median monthly cushion (rent minus instalment) of about RM1,309. The shape of that list is driven as much by law as by math: foreigners cannot legally buy strata below RM1m in KL or Johor in the first place, so the affordable, high-yield end of the market where Malaysians find most of their cashflow-positive stock is simply off-limits.

One carve-out matters. The Medini zone inside Iskandar Puteri is exempt from the RM1m floor for new strata bought directly from the developer. It is the one place a foreigner can legally enter below RM1m. The catch is that subsale eligibility (buying second-hand rather than new from the developer) is not clearly established, so do not assume a resale Medini unit qualifies. Verify the specific title and zone status with a Malaysian property lawyer and with IRDA before committing any deposit. For the full state-by-state thresholds, see our guide on the minimum price for foreigners by state.

A higher entry price is usually safer, not riskier

It feels backwards, but for a foreigner the floor-priced unit is often the worse investment. At exactly RM1m the rent-minus-instalment cushion is thin, and once you layer the full operating stack and the 30% tax it can slip negative. Move up toward the RM1.6m to RM2m band where the surviving stock concentrates, and the cushion runs closer to the RM1,309 median, with real headroom to absorb a vacancy month, a maintenance surprise, or a rate rise. The extra capital is buying a margin of safety, not just a bigger asset.

This is the opposite of how most Johor and KL property is marketed to foreign buyers, which leads with the lowest entry price and the headline gross yield. Both are the wrong filters. The right filter is the net cushion after every foreigner cost, and that is exactly the screen our directory applies.

How to find the ones that work

  1. Start with the cost stack, not the listing. Run any property you are considering through the cashflow calculator with the foreign-buyer settings: 8% stamp duty, 70% LTV, 4.5% rate, and the 30% rental tax. If it does not clear after all twelve costs, the gross yield was a mirage.
  2. Verify the rent, not just the asking rent. A property needs real rental comparables, ideally five or more recent lets in the same development, before you trust the yield. Thin rental data plus a thin cushion is how foreign buyers end up subsidising empty units in oversupplied towers.
  3. Confirm legal eligibility before anything else. Above the state floor, on non-restricted land, outside Bumiputera quota. See the full foreigner buying guide.
  4. Stress-test the ringgit. If your income is in another currency, model your instalment at a stronger ringgit. A deal that only works at today's exchange rate is not a resilient deal.

We pre-calculated the 8% stamp duty, 70% LTV, RPGT, and 30% rental tax for every foreigner-eligible property across all states. The Foreign Buyer Edition names the 309 where rent covers the loan, with the full 12-cost surplus per unit, so you can see which carry a real cushion above the RM1m floor and which only look positive.

See the Foreign Buyer Edition →

The bottom line

The 8% stamp duty and the RM1m floor are not just entry costs. They reset the rent you need to break even, from roughly 3.5% gross yield for a local to roughly 5% for you. Most Malaysian condos do not clear that bar, which is why only 309 foreigner-eligible listings even cover the loan, against 1,088 for locals, and why the ones worth buying cluster above RM1m where the cushion is real rather than at the floor where it is thin.

Do not start your search by browsing all listings and filtering by price or headline yield. Start by identifying the properties that clear the foreigner cost stack, then evaluate location, tenant demand, and exit liquidity from that shortlist.

Want to see the full 12-cost foreigner breakdown applied to real properties before you pay? Download the free 5-page sample PDF.

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Related guides

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The full foreign buyer cost sheet for Malaysia (2026)

Every cost a non-Malaysian pays: 8% stamp duty, state consent fees, minimum price thresholds, legal + SPA fees, loan agreement stamp duty, and RPGT brackets — one printable page.

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