True Cost of Buying Luxury Property in Malaysia: Full Breakdown
Stamp duty, MOT legal fees, loan agreement costs, valuation fees, and hidden costs for RM2M–5M properties. Worked examples for Malaysian and foreign buyers.
Alpian Ali
Perunding Hartanah Berdaftar · Updated 24/04/2026
The Purchase Price Is Just the Starting Point
Experienced buyers are often caught off-guard by the total cash required to complete a luxury property transaction. When browsing the Penang luxury property market, a RM3 million listing on paper requires considerably more in total cash outlay once all statutory costs are added.
On average, you should budget an additional 5%–6% above the purchase price to cover all legal and government fees. For a RM3 million property, this means preparing approximately RM485,000 in total upfront cash.
Cost Breakdown for Luxury Property Purchases
Transactions in the RM2M–RM5M range typically incur additional costs of 5%–6% of the sale price, covering stamp duty, legal fees, and valuation.
1. MOT Stamp Duty (Transfer of Ownership)
Stamp duty on the Memorandum of Transfer (MOT) is calculated on a progressive scale under the Stamp Act 1949 for Malaysian citizens:
- 1% on the first RM100,000
- 2% on RM100,001 to RM500,000
- 3% on RM500,001 to RM1,000,000
- 4% on any amount above RM1,000,000
Example calculation for a RM3,000,000 property:
- 1% × RM100,000 = RM1,000
- 2% × RM400,000 = RM8,000
- 3% × RM500,000 = RM15,000
- 4% × RM2,000,000 = RM80,000
- Total: RM104,000
2. MOT Legal Fees
Legal fees for property transfers were revised under the Solicitors Remuneration Order (SRO) 2023. This supersedes the older fee schedules still quoted in many older guides.
The current SRO 2023 scale for sale and purchase:
- 1.25% on the first RM500,000
- 1.0% on the next RM7,000,000
For a RM3,000,000 property:
- 1.25% × RM500,000 = RM6,250
- 1.0% × RM2,500,000 = RM25,000
- Total MOT legal fee: RM31,250
3. Loan Agreement Legal Fees
The loan agreement is a separate legal document charged under the same SRO 2023 scale, calculated on the loan amount (not the purchase price).
For an 80% loan on a RM3M property (loan = RM2,400,000):
- 1.25% × RM500,000 = RM6,250
- 1.0% × RM1,900,000 = RM19,000
- Total loan legal fee: RM25,250
4. Loan Agreement Stamp Duty
All loan agreements must be stamped at LHDN at a flat rate of 0.5% of the total loan amount.
For a RM2.4 million loan: 0.5% × RM2,400,000 = RM12,000
5. Valuation Fee
Banks require an independent valuation report before releasing the loan. This is borne entirely by the buyer based on a national fee schedule:
- 0.25% on the first RM100,000
- 0.2% on the next RM2,000,000
For a RM3M property: approximately RM5,753
6. Miscellaneous Fees (SST, Title Search, Caveat)
Additional charges include title searches, caveat registration, document printing, and SST (Sales and Services Tax) at 8% on all legal and valuation fees.
| Misc Item | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| Land title registration fee | RM100–RM300 |
| SST 8% on legal & valuation fees | ~RM4,980 |
| MRTA / MRTT mortgage insurance | 3%–5% of loan (optional but common) |
Full Worked Example: RM3 Million Property (Malaysian Buyer, 80% Loan)
| Cost Item | Amount (RM) |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price | 3,000,000 |
| MOT Stamp Duty | 104,000 |
| MOT Legal Fees (SRO 2023) | 31,250 |
| Loan Agreement Legal Fees (SRO 2023) | 25,250 |
| Loan Agreement Stamp Duty (0.5%) | 12,000 |
| Official Bank Valuation Report | 5,753 |
| SST (8%) & Miscellaneous | 6,980 |
| Total Transaction Costs | 185,233 |
| 10% Deposit (cash) | 300,000 |
| Minimum Cash Required | ~RM485,233 |
The remaining 80% (RM2.4 million) is disbursed directly by the bank to the seller’s solicitor’s account.
First-Time Buyer Adjustments
First-time buyers of residential property below RM500,000 enjoy full MOT stamp duty exemption until end of 2027. Partial exemption applies up to RM1 million.
For luxury properties above RM1 million, no stamp duty exemption applies regardless of first-time buyer status.
Foreign Buyer Adjustments
Effective 1 January 2026, foreign buyers face a flat MOT stamp duty rate of 8% (doubled from the previous 4%). This significantly raises the entry cost for international buyers.
Real Property Gains Tax (RPGT) on Resale
Foreign nationals are subject to a maximum RPGT rate of 30% if they sell within the first 5 years of ownership. After year 6, this drops to 10%. Plan your holding period accordingly.
Foreign Levy (Penang Island)
The Penang state government charges a 3% foreign levy on the purchase price for properties on the island. For a RM3M property, this adds RM90,000 to your total outlay.
EPU / State Consent Fees
| Item | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|
| State consent administrative processing | RM500–RM2,000 |
| Solicitor fees for Consent to Transfer drafting | RM3,000–RM7,000 |
| State approval fee (Penang island) | Up to RM10,000 |
Hidden Costs Buyers Often Overlook
Beyond legal fees, new owners should budget a further 5%–10% of the purchase price for:
- Renovation and fit-out: RM30,000–RM150,000 to bring the unit to your required standard
- Furniture and interior design: RM50,000–RM300,000 depending on unit size and specification
- Fire and perils insurance renewal: RM500–RM2,000 per year
- Monthly strata maintenance charges: RM0.35–RM0.50 per square foot per month
- Sinking fund contribution: Typically 10% of the monthly maintenance fee
Annual Holding Costs
Ownership costs don’t stop at the bank repayment. For a 2,000 sqft luxury condo in the Gurney Drive area:
| Annual Cost Item | Estimated Amount |
|---|---|
| Maintenance fee (RM0.40 × 2,000 sqft × 12) | RM9,600 |
| Sinking fund | RM960 |
| Assessment tax (cukai pintu) | RM2,000 |
| Quit rent (cukai tanah) | RM3,000 |
| Fire & perils insurance | RM1,200 |
| Emergency repairs reserve | RM5,000 |
| Total annual holding cost | ~RM21,760 |
Quick Reference Summary
For luxury properties in the RM2M–RM5M range, budget an additional 5%–6% of the purchase price for transaction costs. For foreign buyers, add the 8% flat stamp duty rate, the 3% Penang foreign levy (if applicable), and state consent fees.
For the eligibility rules around who can buy as a foreign national, read the foreign buyer property rules in Malaysia.