Finding a property agent in Malaysia is easy. Finding a good one is harder. The market has over 30,000 registered Real Estate Negotiators (RENs) and roughly 1,500-2,000 Registered Estate Agents (REAs) — plus an unknown number of unregistered individuals operating informally. This guide covers where to find agents, how to verify them, and what to look for.
Official Directory: LPPEH
The Board of Valuers, Appraisers, Estate Agents and Property Managers (LPPEH) maintains the official public register of all licensed property practitioners in Malaysia.
Website: lppeh.gov.my
The register allows you to search by:
- Agent name
- Registration number / tag number
- Firm name
- State
Every search result shows the agent's registration status, the firm they are registered under, and validity period. This is the only authoritative source for verifying an agent's legal authorization to practice.
For a full explanation of the licensing framework (REN vs REA vs PEA), see our property agent license guide.
Property Portals
PropertyGuru Malaysia
Website: propertyguru.com.my
The largest property listing portal in Malaysia. Agent profiles include:
- REN/REA tag number
- Number of active listings
- Areas of focus
- Contact details
- Reviews from past clients (limited)
PropertyGuru is the most practical way to find agents active in a specific area. Search for properties in your target location, then contact the listing agents. Agents with many active listings in your area are likely more experienced in that market.
iProperty Malaysia
Website: iproperty.com.my
Malaysia's second-largest property portal. Similar agent directory features to PropertyGuru. Some agents list exclusively on iProperty, so check both platforms.
EdgeProp
Website: edgeprop.my
Focused on data and analytics. Fewer agents than PropertyGuru/iProperty but tends to attract data-savvy agents. Useful for investors who want an agent who understands yield and cashflow, not just listing prices.
Agency Firms
Major estate agency firms with national coverage:
| Firm | Strengths | Foreign Buyer Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Rahim & Co | Oldest firm, strong in KL and JB | Moderate |
| KGV International | Strong in Penang and northern states | Moderate |
| Savills Malaysia | International network, luxury segment | Strong |
| Knight Frank Malaysia | Commercial and high-end residential | Strong |
| CBRE | Commercial, institutional | Limited for individuals |
| IQI Global | Large agent network, active in JB | Strong |
| Hartamas Real Estate | KL-focused, established | Moderate |
For individual investors buying residential property, boutique firms and experienced individual agents often provide more personalized service than large corporate firms. The big names are better for commercial, industrial, or portfolio-level transactions.
See which properties hit your cashflow target — pre-screened with real yield data.
Get the Property Directory →Questions to Ask Before Engaging an Agent
1. "What is your REN/REA tag number?" Verify it on the LPPEH register. If they hesitate or cannot provide one, they may be unregistered.
2. "How many transactions have you completed in [target area] in the past 12 months?" You want an agent with deep local knowledge, not one who covers the entire state superficially.
3. "Have you handled foreign buyer transactions before?" State consent, minimum price verification, cross-border financing — these require specific experience. An agent who only works with local buyers may not know the foreign buyer process well enough.
4. "What is the realistic rental yield for this property?" A good agent can cite specific rental comparables — actual rents achieved in the same development or nearby buildings. Vague answers like "around 5-6%" without backing data suggest limited market depth.
5. "What are the negatives of this property/area?" Every property has downsides — oversupply, management issues, traffic, upcoming competing developments. An agent who only talks positives is selling, not advising.
6. "Who pays your commission and how much?" For sub-sale, the seller typically pays 2-3%. For rental, the landlord typically pays one month's rent. Confirm this upfront to avoid surprises.
Red Flags
No tag number on marketing materials. LPPEH requires all marketing materials — flyers, online listings, business cards — to display the agent's REN/REA tag number. If it is missing, proceed with caution.
Pressure to transfer deposit to personal account. All deposits should go to the agency's client account or a lawyer's client account. Never transfer money to an agent's personal bank account.
Unwillingness to provide comparable data. An agent who cannot show you recent transacted prices or rental rates for similar properties in the area either lacks market knowledge or is hiding unfavorable data.
Dual agency without disclosure. If the agent represents both buyer and seller in the same transaction, they must disclose this. Undisclosed dual agency is a conflict of interest and a breach of LPPEH's code of conduct.
Guaranteeing returns. No agent can guarantee rental income, capital appreciation, or investment returns. Statements like "confirmed can rent for RM3,000" or "sure will appreciate 20% in 3 years" are red flags. Projections based on data are fine; guarantees are not.
Tips for Singaporean Buyers
If you are buying from Singapore:
- Use an agent based in your target area, not a Singapore-based agent who refers you to a Malaysian counterpart. The local agent has direct market access.
- WhatsApp is the standard communication tool in Malaysia's property industry. Be prepared to communicate primarily via WhatsApp.
- Weekend viewings are standard. Most agents arrange viewings on Saturdays. If you are crossing the border for viewings, coordinate multiple properties in one trip.
- Get comparable data before making an offer. Ask for recent transacted prices in the same development from EdgeProp or NAPIC data. Do not rely solely on the asking price.
- Your agent should coordinate with your lawyer. A good agent connects you with a conveyancing lawyer experienced in foreign transactions and helps coordinate the process from offer to completion.
For the complete buying process in JB, see our JB purchase guide. For understanding agent commissions and how they are structured, see our agent commission guide.