Defensible exit planning for Australian high earners relocating to Malaysia. No vague promises — just the numbers, the rules, and the evidence that holds up.
Every calculation below uses the same assumptions the ExitProof calculator applies when you select "Malaysia" as your destination. These are not optimistic projections — they reflect current ATO rules (ITAA36 s6(1), TR 2023/1) and Malaysian tax law as of 2024-25.
* Includes one-time CGT exit event (~$40k). Malaysia has no capital gains tax for individuals — share disposals and investment gains post-residency are not subject to Malaysian CGT. Non-resident CGT on shares = 0% from departure date. Ringgit stability provides currency predictability compared to some other destinations.
* Exit CGT on $800k portfolio: ~$75k. No Malaysian CGT on share disposals by individuals. Investment gains post-residency are not subject to Malaysian tax. Rental income from Australian property is Australian-sourced and may have ATO implications; DTA provides some relief. MM2H visa status affects ability to work in Malaysia.
* CGT exit event on $2M portfolio: ~$140k. No Malaysian CGT on share disposals by individuals — a meaningful advantage over jurisdictions that tax capital gains. Malaysia's progressive rates (top rate 30% from MYR 2M+) apply to employment and business income. DTA with Australia provides double-taxation relief.
Malaysia determines tax residency based on the "prevailing year" concept — essentially, whether you were present in Malaysia for 182 or more days in a calendar year. This is the primary threshold. Malaysian residents are taxed on worldwide income; non-residents are taxed only on Malaysian-sourced income.
| Concept | Threshold | Relevance for Australian high earners |
|---|---|---|
| 182-day rule | 182+ days physically present in Malaysia in a calendar year | Primary trigger for Malaysian tax residency |
| Partial year counting | Days do not need to be consecutive; part-days count | Precise day tracking required — 182 days is the line |
| Worldwide income | Employment, self-employment, rental, dividends, interest, other income | Malaysian residents taxed on global income; DTA credit available for foreign tax paid |
| No CGT for individuals | Malaysian individuals pay no capital gains tax on share or asset disposals | Significant structural advantage — gains post-residency are not Malaysian-taxed |
The Malaysia My Second Home (MM2H) programme is the primary visa route for foreign nationals seeking long-term residence in Malaysia. The programme was revised in 2021 with significantly higher financial requirements.
Malaysia uses a progressive rate system with a top marginal rate of 30% for resident individuals. Non-resident individuals are taxed at a flat 30% on all income. Key for Australian high earners: income over ~MYR 1M (~$A 330k) enters the top 30% bracket. Note: Malaysian income tax is levied in Malaysian Ringgit — the MYR/AUD exchange rate fluctuates, which affects the effective cost comparison.
| Taxable income (MYR) | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – 5,000 | 0% | |
| 5,001 – 20,000 | 1% | |
| 20,001 – 35,000 | 3% | |
| 35,001 – 50,000 | 8% | |
| 50,001 – 70,000 | 13% | |
| 70,001 – 100,000 | 21% | |
| 100,001 – 400,000 | 24% | |
| 400,001 – 600,000 | 25% | |
| 600,001 – 1,000,000 | 26% | |
| 1,000,001 – 2,000,000 | 28% | |
| Over 2,000,000 | 30% | Top marginal rate |
Reference: Lembaga Hasil Dalam Negeri (LHDN) — Malaysian Inland Revenue Board; MM2H programme at mm2h.gov.my
Under s6(1) ITAA36, you are an Australian tax resident if you satisfy any one of four tests. You must fail all four to be a genuine non-resident. The ordinary concepts test is the battleground.
| Test | What it asks | Malaysia-mover risk |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Ordinary concepts | Does your presence in Australia feel "usual and settled" — or temporary and casual? | HIGH — maintaining AU property + regular returns sustains continuity of association |
| 2. Domicile | Is your domicile in Australia? (Presumed yes unless you establish a permanent place of abode overseas AND intend to stay) | MEDIUM — MM2H property purchase + declared intent counters domicile; MM2H property purchase is itself good evidence |
| 3. 183-day test | Have you been physically present in Australia for 183+ days in the income year? | LOW — if you actually live in Malaysia (182+ days), you'll fail this |
| 4. Superannuation test | Does your employer pay compulsory superannuation contributions in Australia? | MEDIUM — remote work for AU employer may still generate AU super contributions |
The Australia-Malaysia Double Tax Agreement was signed in 1981 and came into force in 1983. It provides the key protections relevant to Australian expats in Malaysia.
Each item directly addresses one of the six ordinary concepts factors (TR 2023/1 para 20). Malaysia's DTA with Australia provides a backstop — but only if ordinary concepts evidence establishes genuine Malaysian residency first.
Headline numbers. Run the full comparison →
| Malaysia | Dubai | Thailand | Stay in Sydney | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal income tax | 0–30% (progressive) | 0% | 0–35% (remittance basis) | 37%–47% |
| Individual CGT | None | None | Income tax on remitted gains | N/A |
| AU non-resident CGT on shares | 0% | 0% | 0% | N/A |
| DTA with Australia | Yes (1981 DTA) | None | Yes (2019 DTA) | N/A |
| Evidence burden | Medium (DTA tie-breaker) | High (no treaty) | Medium (DTA) | N/A |
| 10yr leave-vs-stay delta (~$400k earner) | ~+$1.52M | ~+$1.69M | ~+$1.62M* | Baseline |
* Thailand figures include Thai income tax on remitted foreign income. Malaysia's lack of individual CGT compounds significantly for high-net-worth individuals with large investment portfolios — a factor not captured in the income-tier calculations above which focus on income tax.