Renovation is where many Malaysian property investors either build their yield advantage or destroy it. Spend too little and you get a unit nobody wants to rent. Spend too much and you have sunk capital that will take years of rental income to recover. The sweet spot is knowing what costs what, where to spend, and where to save.
This guide is a budget-planning tool. Real RM figures for 2026, broken down by room and by scope, so you can build your renovation budget before talking to a single contractor.
Renovation Cost Overview by Scope
| Renovation Scope | Condo (800-1,200 sq ft) | Landed Terrace (1,200-1,800 sq ft) |
|---|---|---|
| Basic (paint, minor repairs, cleaning) | RM5,000–15,000 | RM8,000–20,000 |
| Standard (paint, flooring, kitchen/bath refresh) | RM25,000–45,000 | RM35,000–60,000 |
| Full (hack, replaster, new layout, built-ins) | RM50,000–80,000 | RM60,000–120,000 |
| Premium (designer finishes, custom everything) | RM80,000–150,000+ | RM120,000–250,000+ |
These ranges reflect 2026 pricing in the Klang Valley and Johor Bahru. Costs in Penang are 5-10% higher due to island logistics. East Malaysia (Sabah, Sarawak) can be 10-20% higher due to material shipping costs.
Room-by-Room Cost Breakdown
Kitchen
The kitchen is the highest-impact renovation for rental properties. A functional, clean kitchen with good countertops and working appliances is non-negotiable for quality tenants.
| Item | Cost Range (RM) |
|---|---|
| Full kitchen cabinet set (laminate, L-shaped) | 6,000–15,000 |
| Quartz countertop (per linear ft) | 150–350 |
| Backsplash tiles (supply + install) | 1,500–4,000 |
| Sink + tap (stainless steel, single bowl) | 300–1,200 |
| Hood + hob (built-in) | 1,500–4,000 |
| Total kitchen renovation | 8,000–25,000 |
Budget tip: For investment properties, laminate cabinets with quartz tops are the best value. Solid wood cabinets cost 2-3x more and tenants will not pay higher rent for them.
Bathroom
Bathrooms are the second priority. Water damage, mold, and outdated fixtures are top tenant complaints and legitimate reasons for rent negotiation.
| Item | Cost Range (RM) |
|---|---|
| Retiling (floor + walls, per bathroom) | 3,000–6,000 |
| New toilet bowl (supply + install) | 500–1,500 |
| Rain shower set (supply + install) | 300–1,200 |
| Vanity cabinet with mirror | 800–3,000 |
| Waterproofing (per bathroom) | 800–1,500 |
| Total bathroom renovation | 5,000–12,000 |
Budget tip: Always redo waterproofing when retiling a bathroom. Skipping this to save RM800-1,500 is the most common renovation regret — water leakage to the unit below can cost you RM5,000-15,000 in repairs and neighbor disputes.
Living and Bedrooms
| Item | Cost Range (RM) |
|---|---|
| Vinyl flooring (supply + install, per sq ft) | 4–12 |
| Laminate flooring (supply + install, per sq ft) | 6–15 |
| Full unit repainting (condo, 3-bedroom) | 2,000–4,500 |
| Feature wall (textured paint or panel) | 500–2,000 |
| Built-in wardrobe (per unit, laminate) | 2,500–6,000 |
| Curtain rods + blackout curtains (per room) | 300–800 |
Budget tip: Vinyl plank flooring is the best value for investment properties. It is waterproof, scratch-resistant, easy to install, and costs less than laminate. Avoid real wood flooring for rental units — it scratches, warps, and requires maintenance that tenants will not provide.
Electrical and Aircon
| Item | Cost Range (RM) |
|---|---|
| Rewiring (full unit, condo) | 3,000–6,000 |
| Aircon supply + install (1.0HP wall-mounted) | 1,200–2,000 |
| Aircon supply + install (1.5HP wall-mounted) | 1,500–2,500 |
| Aircon supply + install (2.0HP wall-mounted) | 2,000–3,500 |
| LED downlights (supply + install, per point) | 30–80 |
| DB board upgrade | 500–1,500 |
Budget tip: Install inverter aircons. They cost RM200-500 more upfront but consume 30-40% less electricity. Tenants care about electricity bills, and energy-efficient aircon is a selling point.
See which properties hit your cashflow target — pre-screened with real yield data.
Get the Property Directory →Contractor vs Interior Design Firm
| Factor | Contractor | Interior Design Firm |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | RM30K–60K (standard reno) | RM45K–90K (same scope) |
| Design fee | None | RM3,000–15,000 |
| Project management | You manage | They manage |
| Material sourcing | You select or they suggest | They specify and source |
| 3D rendering | Rarely | Usually included |
| Timeline management | You chase | They chase (in theory) |
| Warranty | Workmanship only | Usually includes materials |
For investment properties: Use a contractor. You do not need 3D renderings, mood boards, or designer selections. You need functional, clean, durable finishes that appeal to the broadest tenant pool. Save the RM10,000-30,000 premium and put it toward another property's down payment.
For own-stay properties: An ID firm is worth the premium if you value design coherence and do not want to project-manage.
Getting Quotes: The Process
- Get at least 3 quotes. This is non-negotiable. Pricing variance between contractors for the same scope can be 30-50%.
- Provide a detailed scope. List every item you want done. Vague scopes produce vague quotes and scope creep.
- Specify materials. "Kitchen cabinets" is not a specification. "Laminate kitchen cabinets, L-shaped, 10 linear feet, soft-close hinges, quartz countertop" is.
- Ask for itemized quotes. Lump sum quotes hide margin. Itemized quotes let you compare line by line and negotiate specific items.
- Check references. Ask for 2-3 recent project photos and contact details of past clients. Visit a completed project if possible.
Permits and Approvals
Condo Renovation
Before starting any condo renovation, you need:
- Management approval. Submit your renovation plan to the JMB/MC. Processing takes 3-7 working days.
- Renovation deposit. RM500-5,000 (refundable upon satisfactory completion and inspection).
- Renovation hours. Most condos restrict work to Monday-Saturday, 9 AM-5 PM. No work on Sundays and public holidays.
- Renovation period. Most condos limit renovation to 1-3 months. Extensions may require additional deposits.
Hacking works (removing walls, tiles) generate noise and debris. Your management may require additional deposits or restrict hacking to specific hours. Always check the house rules before committing to a scope that involves extensive hacking.
Landed Property
- Interior works: No permit needed for painting, flooring, cabinet installation, electrical rewiring, or bathroom renovation.
- Structural changes: Removing or adding walls, changing roof structure, or building extensions requires a local authority (PBT) permit. You will need plans from a registered architect or draftsman. Permit fees vary by state but typically RM500-2,000.
- Additional floors: Adding a floor requires full architectural plans, structural engineer certification, and PBT approval. Budget RM5,000-10,000 for plans and permits alone, on top of construction costs.
Timeline Planning
| Phase | Duration |
|---|---|
| Contractor/ID selection and quoting | 2-4 weeks |
| Management approval (condo) | 1-2 weeks |
| Hacking and structural work | 1-2 weeks |
| Plumbing and electrical | 1-2 weeks |
| Tiling and waterproofing | 1-2 weeks |
| Carpentry and built-ins | 2-3 weeks |
| Painting | 3-5 days |
| Cleaning and touch-up | 2-3 days |
| Total (standard renovation) | 6-10 weeks |
Add 2-4 weeks buffer. Malaysian renovation timelines almost always overrun. Common causes: material delivery delays, subcontractor scheduling conflicts, festive season slowdowns (Chinese New Year, Hari Raya), and the inevitable "need to check with supplier."
Renovation for Rental Return: What Moves the Needle
Not all renovation spending generates rental return. Here is what actually increases rent vs what is just cost:
| Renovation | Cost (RM) | Rental Impact | ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full repaint | 2,000–4,500 | +RM100–200/month | Excellent |
| Kitchen refresh (cabinets + countertop) | 8,000–15,000 | +RM200–400/month | Good |
| Aircon (3 units) | 4,500–7,500 | +RM200–300/month | Good |
| Bathroom retile + fixtures | 5,000–12,000 | +RM100–200/month | Moderate |
| Built-in wardrobes | 5,000–12,000 | +RM100–150/month | Low-moderate |
| Feature walls / designer touches | 2,000–8,000 | +RM0–50/month | Poor |
| Premium flooring (real wood) | 8,000–20,000 | +RM0–100/month | Poor |
The takeaway: Paint, kitchen, aircon, and basic bathroom upgrades are the four moves that pay for themselves through higher rent. Everything beyond that is diminishing returns for investment properties.
For more on maximizing rental returns, see our how to increase rental yield guide. For understanding all ongoing property costs, see our true cost of ownership breakdown.
Common Budget Mistakes
- Underestimating hacking costs. Removing tiles and walls generates debris that needs disposal. Debris removal alone can cost RM1,000-3,000 for a full condo hack.
- Forgetting the deposit. Contractors typically require 30-40% upfront, 30% at mid-point, and 30% upon completion. Cash flow your renovation payments alongside your mortgage payments.
- Over-renovating for the area. A RM100,000 renovation on a RM400,000 condo in Cheras will not generate proportional rental returns. Match your renovation budget to the area's rental ceiling.
- Skipping waterproofing. RM800-1,500 per bathroom. Skipping it risks RM5,000-15,000 in water damage repairs later.
- Not accounting for furniture. Furnished units rent for 15-30% more than unfurnished. Budget RM8,000-15,000 for basic furniture (beds, sofa, dining table, washing machine, fridge) on top of renovation costs.
Bottom Line
For a standard investment condo renovation in 2026, budget RM30,000-50,000 for a scope that covers kitchen, bathrooms, paint, flooring, and aircon. This gets you a unit that is competitive in the rental market without over-capitalizing. Keep the renovation functional, durable, and tenant-friendly — save the designer flourishes for your own home.