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SST Malaysia 2026: Rates, Registration & Filing Guide

5 May 2026

SST Malaysia 2026 remains one of the most misunderstood tax obligations for Malaysian business owners — and misunderstanding it is expensive. Since the service tax rate increase from 6% to 8% effective 1 March 2024, thousands of Malaysian businesses have been filing their SST-02 returns at the wrong rate, failing to register when they cross the RM500,000 threshold, or wrongly exempting taxable services. This complete SST Malaysia 2026 guide covers every rate, every registration requirement, every filing deadline, the expanded digital services tax scope, the Low Value Goods (LVG) tax, and exactly when your business must register — so you can stay fully compliant with the Royal Malaysian Customs Department (JKDM) and avoid the substantial penalties that SST Malaysia 2026 non-compliance carries.

8% Standard service tax rate in Malaysia 2026 — increased from 6% effective 1 March 2024
RM500K Annual turnover threshold triggering mandatory SST service tax registration
Every
2 months
SST-02 return filing frequency — taxable period runs bi-monthly
RM500K Maximum fine for SST evasion under Service Tax Act 2018

What Is SST Malaysia 2026? Sales Tax vs Service Tax Explained

SST Malaysia 2026 — the Sales and Service Tax system — is Malaysia's indirect tax framework that replaced the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on 1 September 2018. Unlike GST, which was a multi-stage consumption tax with full input tax credit recovery, SST Malaysia 2026 is a single-stage tax administered under two separate legislative frameworks: the Sales Tax Act 2018 and the Service Tax Act 2018. Both taxes are administered by the Royal Malaysian Customs Department (JKDM) and filed through the MySST online portal.

Understanding the distinction between the two components of SST Malaysia 2026 is fundamental — they apply to different types of businesses, have different rates, different registration thresholds, and different taxable scopes. Confusing which component applies to your business is one of the most common errors in SST Malaysia 2026 compliance.

FeatureSales Tax (ST)Service Tax (SvT)
What is taxed? Manufacture and sale of taxable goods in Malaysia; importation of taxable goods Provision of taxable services in Malaysia
Who charges it? Licensed manufacturers; importers of taxable goods Registered service providers whose annual taxable services exceed the threshold
Rate in 2026 5% or 10% depending on the goods category 8% (standard) or 6% (specific services)
Registration threshold Annual sales of taxable goods exceed RM500,000 Annual taxable service revenue exceeds RM500,000
Filing frequency Every 2 months (bi-monthly SST-02A return) Every 2 months (bi-monthly SST-02 return)
Input tax credit? No — single-stage tax at manufacturing level No — SST Malaysia 2026 does not allow input tax recovery unlike former GST
Governing law Sales Tax Act 2018 Service Tax Act 2018
Source: Royal Malaysian Customs Department (JKDM). SST Malaysia 2026 figures current as at Q2 2026. Consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia for business-specific advice.
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SST Is Not GST: The single most important conceptual difference in SST Malaysia 2026 vs the former GST system is that there is no input tax credit. Under GST, businesses could recover tax paid on their inputs. Under SST Malaysia 2026, service tax is a cost of doing business — it cannot be claimed back. This means SST Malaysia 2026 collected from your customers is entirely payable to Customs; it is not offset by any SST you paid to your own suppliers.

SST Malaysia 2026 Rates — Service Tax 8%, Sales Tax & Digital Services

The most significant change to SST Malaysia 2026 compared to prior years was the increase in the standard service tax rate from 6% to 8%, effective 1 March 2024 — introduced under Budget 2024. This rate remains at 8% for the majority of taxable services in 2026. However, a specific subset of services continues to attract service tax at 6%, making correct rate classification critical for every SST Malaysia 2026 registrant.

🏢 Service Tax — Standard
8%
Most taxable services
Professional services (accounting, legal, consulting, IT, engineering), hotels, food & beverage establishments, nightclubs, health and wellness, security services, advertising, management services, and most other services listed in the First Schedule of the Service Tax Act 2018.
🚚 Service Tax — Reduced Rate
6%
Selected services only
Logistics and freight forwarding services, telecommunications services, parking services, and karaoke premises. These specific service categories were maintained at 6% when the standard rate increased to 8% in March 2024. Verify the exact classification in the Service Tax Regulations 2018.
📦 Sales Tax — Standard Goods
10%
Standard taxable manufactured goods
Most taxable manufactured goods fall under the 10% sales tax tier. This includes electronics, alcoholic beverages, tobacco products, and a wide range of consumer and industrial goods manufactured in Malaysia or imported.
📦 Sales Tax — Reduced Goods
5%
Specific goods categories
Certain goods attract a lower 5% sales tax rate — including building materials, agricultural machinery, IT equipment, and other categories listed in the Sales Tax (Goods Exempted from Sales Tax) Order 2018. The 5% list is specific; never assume a lower rate without verifying the goods code.
🌐 Digital Services Tax
8%
Foreign digital service providers
Digital services provided by non-resident foreign companies to Malaysian consumers and businesses — including software subscriptions, streaming platforms, cloud services, and online advertising — are subject to 8% service tax under Malaysia's digital services tax framework. See full details in Section 6 of this guide.
✓ Zero-Rated / Exempt
0%
Specific exempt categories
Exports of taxable goods are zero-rated for sales tax. Many essential services — healthcare, education, financial services regulated by BNM, public transport, and residential property — are explicitly exempted from SST Malaysia 2026. See Section 8 for the full exemptions list.
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Critical Rate Change Still Catching Businesses Out: The service tax rate increase from 6% to 8% effective 1 March 2024 means that any SST Malaysia 2026 registrant still applying 6% to their standard taxable services is systematically under-collecting and under-remitting service tax. JKDM can assess the shortfall — plus penalties — retrospectively for up to 6 years from the date of the under-collection. If your accounting software or invoice templates still show 6% service tax, update them immediately. Bukku cloud accounting Malaysia allows you to update your SST rate across all invoice templates instantly.

Who Must Register for SST Malaysia 2026?

The SST Malaysia 2026 registration obligation is triggered by crossing a defined revenue threshold — not by business type alone. Understanding the exact trigger conditions protects you from both inadvertent non-compliance (failing to register when required) and unnecessary voluntary registration when you are below the threshold.

Service Tax Registration — Who Must Register?

Every person carrying on a taxable service in Malaysia must register for SST Malaysia 2026 service tax if their annual taxable service revenue exceeds RM500,000 in any 12-month period ending at the end of any calendar month. The taxable services requiring registration are those listed in the First Schedule to the Service Tax Act 2018, and include:

Service CategoryRateRegistration Threshold
Professional services — accounting, legal, consulting, engineering, IT, architecture 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Food & beverage premises (restaurants, cafes, fast food — licensed premises) 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Hotels, inns, resorts, service apartments (accommodation >25 rooms) 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Security, cleaning, gardening, and pest control services 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Health and wellness — private hospitals, health screening, beauty salons, fitness centres 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Advertising and media services 8% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Telecommunications services (post-paid; pre-paid ≥RM100/month per account) 6% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Logistics and freight forwarding 6% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
Parking services 6% RM500,000 annual taxable revenue
This table is indicative only. Always verify against the current Service Tax Act 2018 First Schedule for the complete list of taxable services. Some services have specific conditions or sub-categories with different rates. Consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia for classification advice specific to your business activities.

Sales Tax Registration — Who Must Register?

For sales tax, the SST Malaysia 2026 registration obligation applies to licensed manufacturers of taxable goods in Malaysia whose annual sales of taxable goods exceed RM500,000, and to importers of taxable goods (who pay sales tax at the point of importation via customs clearance, regardless of revenue threshold).

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The RM500,000 Threshold is a Rolling 12-Month Test — Not a Calendar Year: The SST Malaysia 2026 registration threshold is assessed on a rolling basis. You must monitor your taxable revenue at the end of every calendar month. If your total taxable revenue for any consecutive 12-month period ending on the last day of any month exceeds RM500,000, you must apply for SST registration within 28 days from the end of that taxable period. Waiting until the end of the calendar year to assess whether you've crossed the threshold is a compliance error that can result in backdated assessments.

How to Register for SST Malaysia 2026 via MySST Portal

All SST Malaysia 2026 registrations — for both service tax and sales tax — are processed through the MySST online portal at mysst.customs.gov.my. Manual registration at Customs offices is no longer the standard process. Here is the complete SST registration process for 2026:

1

Determine Your Taxable Date and Registration Deadline

Calculate the month in which your rolling 12-month taxable revenue first exceeded RM500,000. Your taxable date is the first day of the month following that threshold crossing. Your registration application must be submitted to Customs within 28 days of your taxable date. Retrospective registration is possible but attracts penalties — engage a professional tax firm in Malaysia if you believe you may be late.

2

Create a MySST Account

Access the MySST portal at mysst.customs.gov.my and create a user account linked to your company's Business Registration Number (BRN) and Tax Identification Number (TIN). If you have not yet obtained a TIN from LHDN, register via LHDN MyTax first — your TIN is required for all SST Malaysia 2026 filings.

3

Complete the SST Registration Application

Submit Form SST-01 (for service tax) or Form SST-01A (for sales tax) through MySST. The form requires your company details, business activity description, SSM registration number, TIN, estimated annual taxable turnover, taxable date, and banking details for refund purposes. Supporting documents — SSM business profile, latest management accounts or bank statements showing revenue — may be requested by Customs during processing.

4

Receive Your SST Registration Number

Customs typically processes complete SST Malaysia 2026 registration applications within 5–14 working days. Upon approval, you receive a SST Registration Number — a unique identifier that must appear on every tax invoice you issue from your taxable date onwards. Your SST certificate is issued digitally through MySST and should be downloaded and kept as evidence of your registered status.

5

Update Your Invoices and Accounting System

From your taxable date, every invoice issued for taxable services must show your SST Registration Number, the applicable SST Malaysia 2026 rate (8% or 6%), the SST amount charged, and the total inclusive of SST. Update your cloud accounting software invoice templates immediately — issuing invoices without the correct SST details is a separate offence under the Service Tax Act 2018.

SST-02 Return Filing — Deadlines, Process & How to Pay in 2026

Every registered SST Malaysia 2026 business must file a bi-monthly SST return — Form SST-02 (service tax) or Form SST-02A (sales tax) — through the MySST portal for each two-month taxable period. Filing and payment must be completed by the last day of the month following the end of each taxable period.

SST-02 Taxable Periods and Deadlines — 2026 Calendar

31
Mar 2026
Taxable Period: Jan – Feb 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 31 March 2026. Covers all taxable services and sales during January and February 2026.
31
May 2026
Taxable Period: Mar – Apr 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 31 May 2026. First period fully under the 8% service tax rate for the full period.
31
Jul 2026
Taxable Period: May – Jun 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 31 July 2026.
30
Sep 2026
Taxable Period: Jul – Aug 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 30 September 2026.
30
Nov 2026
Taxable Period: Sep – Oct 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 30 November 2026.
31
Jan 2027
Taxable Period: Nov – Dec 2026SST-02 filing & payment due by 31 January 2027. Final SST Malaysia 2026 taxable period.

What to Include in Your SST-02 Return

Each SST Malaysia 2026 SST-02 return filed through MySST must declare the following for the relevant two-month taxable period:

  • Total value of taxable services provided — gross revenue from all services subject to service tax at 8% or 6% during the period
  • SST amount collected — the actual service tax amount charged to customers on your invoices, matching your accounting records
  • Value of exempt services — revenue from services that are exempt from service tax (not included in the taxable base)
  • Adjustments — credit notes issued, bad debt relief claimed, and corrections from prior periods
  • Net SST payable — the total SST Malaysia 2026 amount due to Customs after all adjustments
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Payment Methods for SST Malaysia 2026: SST-02 payment is made directly through the MySST portal via FPX online banking, CIMB Clicks, or Maybank2u. Payment must be received by Customs by the filing deadline — do not wait until the due date to initiate the transfer, as banking processing times may cause late payment even if initiated on time. A late payment of even one day triggers a 10% penalty on the outstanding SST Malaysia 2026 amount.

Need Help with SST Malaysia 2026 Registration or Filing?

KC Group's tax team handles SST registration, SST-02 return preparation, rate classification, and JKDM correspondence for Malaysian businesses of all sizes.

Digital Services Tax Malaysia 2026 — What It Covers

One of the most significant expansions in SST Malaysia 2026 is the treatment of digital services provided by foreign companies. Since 1 January 2020, non-resident foreign businesses that provide digital services to consumers and businesses in Malaysia have been required to register for service tax in Malaysia and charge 8% service tax (raised from 6% effective 1 March 2024) on their digital services. This is commonly referred to as the Digital Services Tax (DST) or the Foreign Digital Service Provider (FDSP) regime.

Digital Service CategoryExamplesSST Rate 2026
Software and application subscriptions Microsoft 365, Adobe Creative Cloud, Salesforce, Xero, QuickBooks Online, antivirus software 8%
Video and music streaming platforms Netflix, Spotify, Disney+, YouTube Premium 8%
Cloud computing and infrastructure services AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, Dropbox, Google Workspace 8%
Online advertising platforms Google Ads, Meta Ads (Facebook/Instagram), LinkedIn Ads, TikTok for Business 8%
Online marketplace commission Shopee, Lazada, Amazon platform fees charged to Malaysian sellers 8%
Digital content downloads e-books, digital music, online courses, app purchases 8%
Online gaming Game subscriptions, in-app purchases from non-resident game providers 8%
SST Malaysia 2026 impact for businesses: When Malaysian businesses purchase digital services from registered foreign providers, the 8% DST is included in the invoice. This SST Malaysia 2026 cost cannot be recovered — it is a direct business expense. Ensure your accounting system correctly codes digital subscription SST as an input cost, not a recoverable credit.
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B2B Digital Services — Reverse Charge Mechanism: For SST Malaysia 2026, Malaysian businesses purchasing digital services from non-registered foreign providers (those below the FDSP registration threshold or not yet compliant) may be subject to a self-assessment / reverse charge mechanism where the Malaysian business accounts for and remits the 8% service tax on the value of the digital services received. This is an area of active JKDM enforcement in 2026. Consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia if you regularly purchase digital services from overseas providers.

Low Value Goods (LVG) Tax Malaysia 2026

A further dimension of SST Malaysia 2026 that affects e-commerce businesses and consumers purchasing goods from overseas is the Low Value Goods (LVG) Tax. Effective 1 April 2023, Malaysia imposes a 10% LVG tax on goods imported into Malaysia via e-commerce platforms where the goods value is RM500 or below per consignment (previously, goods valued at RM500 or below were exempt from sales tax at the border).

The LVG tax under SST Malaysia 2026 is collected by the electronic commerce operator (marketplace or express delivery company) at the point of sale or delivery. Malaysian consumers purchasing from platforms like Shopee, Lazada, Alibaba, Amazon, and similar marketplaces for goods shipped from overseas suppliers at RM500 or below per consignment are subject to this 10% LVG tax. Foreign sellers with annual Malaysian sales above RM500,000 must register with JKDM as LVG tax registrants.

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LVG Tax & Malaysian Online Sellers: Malaysian e-commerce sellers who purchase goods from overseas suppliers in low-value consignments (≤RM500) for resale may find their landed cost increased by the 10% LVG component. This affects margin calculations and competitive pricing for dropshippers, cross-border traders, and small importers operating under the SST Malaysia 2026 LVG framework. Factor LVG tax into your cost of goods for any SST Malaysia 2026 compliance review of your e-commerce business.

SST Exemptions & Zero-Rated Goods Malaysia 2026

Not all goods and services are subject to SST Malaysia 2026. The Sales Tax Act 2018 and Service Tax Act 2018 both contain comprehensive exemption schedules. Understanding what is genuinely exempt from SST Malaysia 2026 prevents businesses from incorrectly charging customers SST on exempt supplies — which creates a refund obligation — and from incorrectly self-exempting taxable supplies, which creates an underpayment liability.

Services Exempt from SST Malaysia 2026

The following categories of services are not subject to service tax under SST Malaysia 2026, regardless of the annual revenue of the provider:

  • Financial services — banking, insurance, capital markets, and money-changing services regulated by Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and the Securities Commission
  • Healthcare and medical services — services provided by registered medical, dental, and allied health practitioners; hospital services; and traditional & complementary medicine registered under the TCM Act
  • Education services — services provided by registered educational institutions at all levels from pre-school through tertiary education
  • Public transportation — bus, rail, LRT, MRT, taxi, and e-hailing services (Grab, AirAsia Ride) for passenger transport
  • Residential property rental — rental of residential premises for human habitation
  • Government services — services provided by federal, state, or local government authorities in their official capacity
  • International transport — international freight and passenger transportation services
  • Domestic public utilities — electricity, water, and sewerage services supplied to residential consumers within defined threshold usage levels

Goods Zero-Rated or Exempt from Sales Tax Malaysia 2026

Under the Sales Tax (Goods Exempted from Sales Tax) Order 2018, hundreds of specific goods categories are zero-rated or exempt from sales tax in Malaysia. The broadest exempt categories include: basic food items (rice, flour, cooking oil, sugar); live animals and agricultural produce; pharmaceutical and medical products; fertilisers and agricultural chemicals; and exports of all taxable goods (zero-rated at point of export). Always verify against the current Order, as the exemption schedule is subject to periodic amendment.

SST Malaysia 2026 Exemption Certificate (Form CJ5/CJ6): Certain businesses — manufacturers, exporters, and companies operating in designated areas — may apply for SST exemption certificates (Form CJ5 for sales tax; CJ6 for manufacturers) that allow them to purchase taxable goods without paying sales tax when those goods are used in the manufacturing of other taxable goods. If your business is in manufacturing or processing, verify with KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia whether you qualify for CJ5/CJ6 exemptions — unclaimed exemptions represent a direct, recoverable cash cost.

How to Account for SST Malaysia 2026 Correctly in Your Books

Correctly recording SST Malaysia 2026 in your accounting system is not just a bookkeeping preference — it is a legal obligation. Under the Service Tax Act 2018 and Sales Tax Act 2018, every registered person must maintain proper accounting records that allow Customs to verify the accuracy of every SST-02 return filed. Here is how SST Malaysia 2026 should be treated in your accounts:

  • Service Tax Collected (Output SST): Service tax charged to your customers is a liability — it belongs to Customs, not to your business. Record it in a dedicated SST Payable liability account in your Chart of Accounts. Never record SST collected as revenue. Your P&L should reflect revenue exclusive of SST.
  • Service Tax on Your Purchases (Input SST): Unlike GST, SST Malaysia 2026 does not allow input tax credit recovery. Service tax charged to you by your suppliers is a cost of doing business — record it as part of the relevant expense (e.g., legal fees inclusive of SST, or as a separate SST expense line). It is not reclaimable.
  • Proper Tax Invoice Requirements: Every invoice you issue must include your SST Registration Number, the SST rate applied (8% or 6%), the SST amount as a separate line item, and the total value inclusive of SST. Invoices without these elements are not valid tax invoices under the Service Tax Regulations 2018 and may result in your customers disputing SST charges.
  • Record Retention: All SST Malaysia 2026 records — tax invoices issued, invoices received, SST-02 returns filed, payment receipts, and Customs correspondence — must be retained for 7 years from the date of the transaction or return. Customs can audit any period within this window.
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Cloud Accounting Makes SST Malaysia 2026 Much Simpler: Bukku cloud accounting Malaysia has native SST support — you configure your SST rate (8% or 6%), and the system automatically populates the SST line item on every invoice, maintains a real-time SST payable balance, and generates the SST-02 output data you need for each filing period. This eliminates manual SST calculation errors and dramatically speeds up your bi-monthly return preparation. Paired with KC Group's tax filing service, your SST Malaysia 2026 compliance becomes a seamless, automated process.

Penalties for SST Non-Compliance in Malaysia 2026

The SST Malaysia 2026 penalty regime under the Service Tax Act 2018 and Sales Tax Act 2018 is substantial — and JKDM has demonstrated willingness to pursue enforcement action against both large and small businesses. Every SST Malaysia 2026 registrant must understand the penalty exposure for each category of non-compliance:

Offence Penalty Legal Basis
Failure to register for SST when threshold exceeded Fine up to RM30,000 and/or 2 years imprisonment; backdated SST assessment with penalties Section 26, Service Tax Act 2018
Failure to file SST-02 return by due date 10% penalty on unpaid SST per month of default, maximum 40% total Section 43, Service Tax Act 2018
Late payment of SST after filing 10% surcharge on amount unpaid after the due date Section 43, Service Tax Act 2018
Incorrect return — understating taxable services Fine up to RM50,000 per offence; additional SST assessment on understated amount Section 88, Service Tax Act 2018
Fraudulent misrepresentation / SST evasion Fine up to RM500,000 and/or 5 years imprisonment per offence Section 89, Service Tax Act 2018
Failure to maintain proper SST records Fine up to RM30,000 and/or 2 years imprisonment Section 91, Service Tax Act 2018
JKDM audit — past periods (up to 6 years) Backdated SST assessment for full 6-year period plus applicable penalties on any shortfall identified Section 45, Service Tax Act 2018
Penalties shown are maximums. JKDM exercises discretion and compounding may be available. Source: Service Tax Act 2018 and Sales Tax Act 2018. Engage KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia immediately if you receive a JKDM audit notice or believe your SST Malaysia 2026 compliance may be deficient.

Frequently Asked Questions — SST Malaysia 2026

What is the current SST rate in Malaysia 2026?

The current SST Malaysia 2026 rates are: 8% service tax for most taxable services (standard rate, increased from 6% effective 1 March 2024); 6% service tax for specific services including logistics, telecommunications, and parking; 10% sales tax for most taxable manufactured goods; and 5% sales tax for specific goods categories. Digital services provided by foreign providers are taxed at 8% under the Digital Services Tax framework. The standard 8% service tax rate has been in force since 1 March 2024 and remains unchanged in 2026.

When must I register for SST in Malaysia?

You must register for SST Malaysia 2026 service tax within 28 days of the end of the month in which your cumulative taxable service revenue for any rolling 12-month period exceeds RM500,000. This threshold is assessed on a monthly rolling basis — not at calendar year-end. If your annual taxable revenue has consistently exceeded RM500,000 but you have not registered, you are already in a period of non-compliance and should seek urgent advice from KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia to regularise your position with Customs (JKDM) before an audit identifies the deficiency.

Is SST Malaysia the same as GST?

No — SST Malaysia 2026 and GST are structurally different tax systems. GST (abolished in Malaysia on 31 August 2018) was a multi-stage Value Added Tax (VAT) with a standard 6% rate applied broadly across virtually all goods and services, with full input tax credit recovery at each stage of the supply chain. SST Malaysia 2026 is a single-stage tax under two separate legislative frameworks — service tax applied at the point of service provision (now 8%), and sales tax at the manufacturing or importation stage (5% or 10%). Critically, SST Malaysia 2026 does not allow input tax credit recovery — SST paid on your inputs is a business cost, not a reclaimable credit. This makes SST Malaysia 2026 simpler to administer for many businesses but more costly for those in B2B service supply chains.

Do freelancers and sole proprietors need to register for SST Malaysia?

Yes — if a Malaysian freelancer or sole proprietor provides taxable services listed in the First Schedule of the Service Tax Act 2018 and their annual taxable service revenue exceeds RM500,000, they are required to register for SST Malaysia 2026 and charge 8% service tax to their clients. Business structure (Sdn Bhd vs sole proprietorship) does not affect the SST registration obligation — it is revenue-based. Common freelance services that are taxable include IT development, graphic design, consulting, legal services, accounting services, and marketing. If your freelance annual revenue is approaching RM500,000, begin monitoring your rolling 12-month total monthly and plan your registration timeline accordingly.

What happens if I charge SST to customers but fail to remit it to Customs?

Collecting SST Malaysia 2026 from customers without remitting it to JKDM is one of the most serious offences under the Service Tax Act 2018. The SST you collect belongs to Customs — your customers have paid it to you as an agent of Customs, not as your income. Failure to remit collected service tax can be treated as fraudulent misrepresentation and carries penalties up to RM500,000 and/or 5 years imprisonment under Section 89 of the Act, in addition to the full backdated assessment with 10% monthly penalties. JKDM cross-references SST returns against corporate income tax returns and can identify significant discrepancies. If you have collected SST Malaysia 2026 and are unable to remit, consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia immediately to arrange a payment plan with Customs before enforcement action commences.

Can I claim back SST I paid on business purchases (input SST)?

No — this is one of the fundamental differences between SST Malaysia 2026 and the former GST system. Under SST Malaysia 2026, there is no input tax credit mechanism. Service tax that you pay on purchases from your own service tax-registered suppliers (for example, 8% service tax on your accounting fees, legal fees, or IT services) is a non-recoverable cost of doing business. It should be expensed in your accounts — not treated as a refundable credit. This is why SST Malaysia 2026 has a cascading cost effect in B2B service supply chains, where service tax is charged at each service-to-service transaction without any mechanism for the intermediate business to recover the tax paid.


Final Word: SST Malaysia 2026 Compliance Is Not Optional — and Getting It Right Matters

SST Malaysia 2026 affects virtually every service business with annual revenue above RM500,000, every manufacturer of taxable goods, every importer, and every business purchasing digital services from overseas providers. With the standard service tax rate now fixed at 8% following the March 2024 increase, the financial stakes of SST Malaysia 2026 non-compliance — missed registration, under-collected service tax, late SST-02 filings, and incorrectly exempted supplies — are higher than ever.

The good news is that SST Malaysia 2026 compliance is entirely manageable with the right systems and professional support. Registering on time via MySST, configuring your accounting software to automatically apply the correct rate, filing your SST-02 return bi-monthly, and maintaining complete records for 7 years are the four pillars of SST Malaysia 2026 compliance. None of these is technically difficult — but each requires discipline, correct rate knowledge, and a clear compliance calendar.

If you are unsure whether your business should be registered for SST Malaysia 2026, whether you are applying the correct rate (8% vs 6%), whether your services are genuinely exempt, or whether your SST-02 filings accurately reflect your taxable revenue — that uncertainty is exactly the moment to engage a qualified tax firm in Malaysia to review your position and regularise your compliance before JKDM does it for you.

👉 Speak to KC Group's SST Malaysia 2026 specialists — registration, rate advice, SST-02 filing, and JKDM correspondence handled professionally →

SST Malaysia 2026 — Handled by KC Group's Tax Professionals

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