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Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026: Rates, Types & BEST Complete Guide

8 May 2026

Withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is one of the most widely misunderstood — and most widely violated — tax obligations for Malaysian businesses. Every time your company pays a foreign entity for services, royalties, interest, rent, or technical advice, you may be legally obligated to withhold a portion of that payment and remit it to LHDN — without the foreign party's permission, and regardless of whether they invoice you inclusive or exclusive of the tax. In 2026, as Malaysian SMEs increasingly spend on Google Ads, Meta Ads, overseas SaaS subscriptions, foreign consultants, and cross-border technical services, the withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation has become a daily business reality rather than an occasional compliance edge case. This complete withholding tax Malaysia 2026 guide covers every rate, every payment type that triggers a deduction obligation, real-world worked examples for the most common scenarios, how to file Form CP37 via LHDN MyTax, which Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs) reduce your rates, and the significant penalties LHDN imposes when withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligations are missed.

1 mth CP37 filing deadline — 1 month after the month of payment to a non-resident
10% Standard WHT rate on service fees paid to non-resident persons in Malaysia 2026
10% Late payment penalty on withholding tax Malaysia not remitted by CP37 deadline
70+ Double Tax Agreement countries reducing Malaysia's withholding tax rates in 2026

What Is Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026?

Withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is a mechanism under the Income Tax Act 1967 (ITA 1967) whereby a Malaysian payer — a company, individual, or entity making a payment to a non-resident — is legally required to deduct a percentage of the payment at source and remit that amount directly to LHDN on behalf of the non-resident payee. The withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation sits entirely with the Malaysian payer — not the foreign recipient.

The logic behind withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is straightforward: if a foreign entity earns income from Malaysian sources, Malaysia wants to tax that income — but since the foreign entity may have no physical presence in Malaysia and is outside LHDN's direct enforcement reach, the tax is collected at the point of payment from the Malaysian side. The Malaysian payer acts as a tax collection agent for LHDN, whether they want to or not.

Critically, withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is triggered by the nature of the payment — not by the amount. A single payment of RM1,000 to a foreign freelancer for services rendered in Malaysia can trigger the same withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation as a RM500,000 royalty payment to an overseas licensor. There is no minimum threshold below which the obligation disappears.

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Gross-Up Trap — The Most Common Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 Error: Many Malaysian businesses believe they can satisfy the withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation by simply deducting WHT from the invoice amount. This is only correct if the contract specifies that the payment is inclusive of WHT. If your contract says the foreign party receives a specified amount (e.g. USD 10,000 "net"), you must "gross up" — pay the foreign party USD 10,000 AND remit the withholding tax to LHDN on top, making the gross payment USD 11,111 (at 10% WHT). If you fail to gross up and pay only USD 9,000 to the foreign party while remitting USD 1,000 to LHDN, you are in breach of the contract AND potentially short-paying LHDN. Seek advice from KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia before structuring any cross-border payment arrangement.

Who Must Deduct Withholding Tax in Malaysia 2026?

The withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation applies to any person (individual, company, partnership, or other entity) resident in Malaysia who makes a payment that falls within the categories defined in Sections 109, 109B, 109C, 109E, and 109F of the ITA 1967 to a non-resident. Specifically:

  • Every Malaysian Sdn Bhd that makes payments to overseas service providers, foreign contractors, foreign royalty recipients, or non-resident individuals for services rendered in Malaysia must deduct withholding tax Malaysia 2026
  • Malaysian individuals in business (sole proprietors) who pay non-residents for technical or consultancy services related to their business activities
  • Malaysian public authorities and statutory bodies making payments to foreign parties

The foreign recipient's physical location is irrelevant — what matters is whether they are a non-resident of Malaysia for tax purposes. A foreign company with no permanent establishment in Malaysia, a foreign individual who does not meet Malaysia's 182-day residency test, and a foreign software company providing cloud services to Malaysian businesses are all potential non-resident payees who trigger withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligations in the Malaysian payer.

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Resident vs Non-Resident — The Determining Question: Before applying withholding tax Malaysia 2026, you must determine whether the recipient is a Malaysian tax resident. A company is resident in Malaysia if its management and control is exercised in Malaysia. An individual is resident if they are in Malaysia for 182 or more days in the calendar year. Foreign companies registered in Singapore, the US, the UK, or any other jurisdiction — with no Malaysian management or control — are non-residents. When in doubt, require the payee to provide a Certificate of Residence (COR) from their home country tax authority or a statutory declaration of their tax residency status.

Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 — All Rates at a Glance

The withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rate depends on the type of payment being made. Malaysia applies different rates to different income categories — and Double Taxation Agreements with specific countries can reduce these rates further (see Section 5). Here are the current statutory withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rates under the ITA 1967 before any DTA reduction:

10%
Services / Technical Fees
Sections 109B & 109C ITA
15%
Royalties
Section 109 ITA
15%
Interest
Section 109 ITA
25%
Contract Payments (Non-Resident Contractor)
Section 107A ITA
Payment Type Statutory WHT Rate Section (ITA 1967) Common Examples
Special classes of income — services 10% Section 109B Technical services, management fees, consultancy fees, installation, maintenance, training, digital services from foreign platforms
Royalties 10% Section 109 Software licences, patent rights, trademark fees, know-how payments, publishing rights, franchise fees paid to foreign licensor
Interest 15% Section 109 Interest on loans from foreign banks, intercompany loans from overseas parent/related company, debenture interest paid to non-residents
Rental of movable property 10% Section 109A Equipment rental from foreign company, machinery leasing from overseas lessor, vehicle hire from non-resident
Non-resident contract payments (labour/materials) 10% (labour) + 3% (materials) Section 107A Foreign contractors engaged for construction, installation, or assembly work in Malaysia. Two deduction rates apply simultaneously
Non-resident public entertainer 15% Section 109A Fees paid to foreign artists, performers, athletes, and sportspersons for performances or events in Malaysia
Special classes of income — technical advice delivered outside Malaysia 10% Section 4A & 109C Technical advice, technical services, or technical assistance where the service is rendered or performed outside Malaysia for the benefit of a Malaysian payer
Other income specifically included by gazette Varies — check current gazette Section 109F LHDN may gazette additional income categories as subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 — check for current gazettes before concluding any non-resident payment is WHT-exempt
Rates above are Malaysia's domestic statutory withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rates. They are reduced by applicable Double Taxation Agreements — see Section 5. Source: Income Tax Act 1967. Always confirm with KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia before applying a treaty rate.

Common Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 Scenarios — With Worked Examples

These are the most frequently encountered withholding tax Malaysia 2026 situations for Malaysian SMEs in 2026. Each scenario includes the applicable rate and a worked calculation so you can apply the correct treatment to your own payments:

🌐 Google Ads / Meta Ads / Digital Platforms WHT 10%
Payment type and trigger: When a Malaysian company pays Google LLC (USA), Meta Platforms (USA), TikTok (Cayman Islands), or any other non-resident digital advertising platform, the payment constitutes a "special class of income" for services rendered — subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 at 10% under Section 109B of the ITA 1967.

Note: The 8% Digital Services Tax (SST) that Google/Meta charges on top of their advertising fees is a separate obligation — withholding tax Malaysia 2026 applies on the net service fee component.
Invoice from Google: RM10,000 (advertising fees)
WHT to deduct: RM10,000 × 10% = RM1,000
Payment to Google: RM10,000 (if contract is "net")
+ Remit to LHDN via CP37: RM1,000
👨‍💼 Foreign Consultant / Freelancer (Offshore) WHT 10%
Payment type and trigger: Fees paid to a non-resident individual or company providing consultancy, management advisory, technical, or professional services to a Malaysian business — whether the consultant works remotely from overseas or visits Malaysia — are subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 at 10% under Section 4A read with Section 109C.

This includes payments to overseas accountants providing virtual CFO services, foreign IT developers, Singapore-based marketing consultants, and any other non-resident service provider.
Invoice from Singapore consultant: SGD 5,000
Equivalent in RM (at e.g. RM3.50/SGD): RM17,500
WHT at 10%: RM1,750 remitted to LHDN
Payment to consultant: RM17,500 (if gross) or RM15,750 (if net)
💻 Software Licence / SaaS Subscription WHT 10%
Payment type and trigger: Payments for the right to use software — whether a one-time licence fee, annual subscription, or per-user SaaS fee — paid to a non-resident software company are treated as royalties under Section 2 of the ITA 1967 and subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 at 10%. This affects payments to foreign SaaS platforms including Xero, QuickBooks, Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoom, Slack, and other overseas software subscriptions.
Annual Salesforce subscription: USD 6,000
RM equivalent (at e.g. RM4.70/USD): RM28,200
WHT royalty at 10%: RM2,820 remitted to LHDN via CP37
Note: DTA with USA may reduce this — verify treaty position
🏗️ Foreign Contractor — Construction/Installation WHT 10%+3%
Payment type and trigger: A non-resident contractor engaged for construction, installation, assembly, or related work in Malaysia is subject to Section 107A — two simultaneous withholding deductions: 10% on the labour component and 3% on the materials/equipment supply component. If the contract does not separate labour and materials, LHDN may treat the entire contract as labour — resulting in the full 10% being applied.
Contract: RM500,000 (RM350,000 labour / RM150,000 materials)
WHT on labour: RM350,000 × 10% = RM35,000
WHT on materials: RM150,000 × 3% = RM4,500
Total to remit to LHDN: RM39,500
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Cloud Software Is Frequently Missed: One of the most common withholding tax Malaysia 2026 compliance gaps in 2026 is the failure of Malaysian businesses to apply WHT on monthly SaaS subscriptions paid to foreign software providers. Accounting software, CRM platforms, HR tools, project management apps, and cloud storage services paid to non-resident providers are all potentially subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 as royalties or service fees. LHDN's e-invoice cross-referencing capabilities mean these payments — previously invisible to LHDN — are now increasingly visible through financial data cross-referencing. Engage KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia to review your foreign payment schedule and identify any WHT obligations you may have missed.

Double Taxation Agreements — How DTAs Reduce Your Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 Rate

Malaysia has concluded over 70 Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs) with countries worldwide — and these DTAs can significantly reduce the domestic withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rates applicable to payments made to residents of DTA partner countries. Understanding which DTA applies and what reduced rate it offers is one of the most commercially important aspects of withholding tax Malaysia 2026 planning.

To claim a DTA reduced rate on your withholding tax Malaysia 2026, the non-resident recipient must provide a Certificate of Residence (COR) issued by the tax authority of their home country — confirming they are a tax resident of that DTA country for the relevant period. Without a valid COR, the full domestic WHT rate applies regardless of what the DTA says.

Country Royalties (DTA Rate) Interest (DTA Rate) Services / Technical Fees
Singapore 10% (= domestic rate) 10% (reduced from 15%) Check DTA for specific provisions — technical fees may be covered
United Kingdom 8% (reduced from 10%) 10% (reduced from 15%) Services rendered in UK may have reduced rate — verify with DTA text
United States No DTA with Malaysia — 10% domestic rate applies No DTA with Malaysia — 15% domestic rate applies No DTA — full 10% domestic rate applies to all US service payments
Australia 10% 10% (reduced from 15%) Management fees and technical services — check DTA Article provisions
Japan 10% 10% (reduced from 15%) Technical fees typically covered under royalty provisions in Malaysia-Japan DTA
China (PRC) 10% 10% (reduced from 15%) Technical services fee provisions — verify current DTA text
India 10% 10% (reduced from 15%) Technical fees typically 10% under Malaysia-India DTA
Germany 7% (significantly reduced) 10% (reduced from 15%) Business profits article may exempt certain service fees from WHT — verify
Netherlands 8% (reduced from 10%) 10% (reduced from 15%) Covered under business profits or royalty provisions depending on characterisation
Important: The USA has no Double Taxation Agreement with Malaysia — meaning full domestic withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rates (10% services/royalties, 15% interest) apply to all payments to US entities, including Google, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce, Amazon (AWS), and all other US-based digital service providers. View all Malaysia DTA treaties →
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DTA Rates Are NOT Self-Applying: You cannot simply apply a lower DTA rate without the required documentation. For every withholding tax Malaysia 2026 payment where you want to apply a treaty-reduced rate, you must obtain a valid Certificate of Residence from the non-resident payee's tax authority, retain it on file, and attach it to your CP37 filing or make it available for LHDN audit. If LHDN audits your WHT and finds you applied a DTA rate without a valid COR, they will assess the full domestic rate — plus a 10% late payment penalty on the shortfall.

How to File and Pay Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 — CP37 Step by Step

Withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is filed and paid using Form CP37 (for Section 109 payments — royalties and interest), Form CP37A (for Section 109B/109C service fees), or Form CP37D (for non-resident contractors under Section 107A). All forms are submitted via LHDN MyTax. The critical deadline: payment must reach LHDN within 1 month after the end of the month in which the payment to the non-resident was made.

1

Determine WHT Applicability & Rate for Each Foreign Payment

For every payment to a non-resident — invoice by invoice — confirm: Is the recipient a non-resident? What type of income does the payment represent (services, royalties, interest, rent)? Does a DTA apply and has the COR been obtained? What is the correct withholding tax Malaysia 2026 rate? Document this analysis and attach it to the payment record. For recurring payments to the same non-resident, conduct this analysis once and update if circumstances change.

2

Compute the WHT Amount and Make the Gross Payment

Calculate the withholding tax Malaysia 2026 amount based on the gross payment or grossed-up amount as applicable. Make the payment to the non-resident (either the full gross amount or the net amount per the contract terms), retaining the WHT amount for remittance to LHDN. Record both the gross payment and the WHT withheld in your accounting system — your cloud accounting software should have a WHT payable liability account for this purpose.

3

Complete the Correct CP37 Form via LHDN MyTax

Log in to LHDN MyTax and navigate to the WHT payment section. Select the correct form: CP37 for royalties and interest; CP37A for technical/service fees; CP37D for non-resident contractor payments. Complete the form with the non-resident's details (name, country, payment type, gross payment amount), the applicable WHT rate, and the WHT amount computed. Attach the Certificate of Residence if a reduced DTA rate is being applied.

4

Remit Payment by the CP37 Deadline

The CP37 filing and payment must be completed within 1 month after the month in which the payment to the non-resident was made. For a payment made on 15 March 2026, the CP37 deadline is 30 April 2026. Payment is via FPX online banking through the MyTax portal. Retain the CP37 submission receipt — it is your proof of timely withholding tax Malaysia 2026 compliance for that payment.

5

Issue a Withholding Tax Certificate to the Non-Resident

After remitting the withholding tax Malaysia 2026, issue a written certificate to the non-resident payee confirming the gross payment amount, the WHT rate applied, and the WHT amount deducted and remitted to LHDN. The non-resident may need this certificate to claim a foreign tax credit in their home country against the WHT paid in Malaysia. The certificate format is not prescribed by LHDN — a clear, signed company letter is sufficient.

Not Sure If Your Foreign Payments Trigger Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026?

KC Group reviews your foreign payment schedule, identifies every WHT obligation, computes the correct rates including DTA reductions, and handles all CP37 filings — so you stay fully compliant with LHDN.

How to Account for Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 in Your Books

Correct accounting treatment for withholding tax Malaysia 2026 ensures your financial statements accurately reflect your tax obligations and your expense deductions are not overstated. Here is the standard accounting treatment for the most common withholding tax Malaysia 2026 scenarios:

ScenarioDebitCreditAmount
Foreign consultant invoice received — RM10,000 fee, 10% WHT Consultancy Expense (P&L) Accounts Payable — Consultant (RM9,000) + WHT Payable — LHDN (RM1,000) RM10,000 gross
Payment made to consultant (net) Accounts Payable — Consultant Bank Account RM9,000 net
CP37 remittance to LHDN WHT Payable — LHDN Bank Account RM1,000
Software subscription (royalty) — USD 500/month, 10% WHT Software Subscription Expense (P&L) Accounts Payable — Software Co. (RM2,115) + WHT Payable — LHDN (RM235) (at RM4.70/USD) RM2,350 gross
Interest on overseas loan — RM5,000, 15% WHT Interest Expense (P&L) Accounts Payable — Lender (RM4,250) + WHT Payable — LHDN (RM750) RM5,000 gross
The gross payment (inclusive of WHT) is the full deductible expense in your corporate income tax return — not just the net amount paid to the foreign party. The WHT Payable account clears to zero when CP37 is remitted to LHDN. Ensure your cloud accounting system has a dedicated WHT Payable liability account to track outstanding obligations between payment date and CP37 remittance deadline.
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Is WHT a Deductible Expense? The withholding tax Malaysia 2026 amount remitted to LHDN on behalf of a non-resident is generally not separately deductible as a business expense in your corporate tax return. The full gross payment to the non-resident (which includes the WHT component) is the allowable deduction — not the gross payment plus an additional WHT cost. If your contract is structured on a "net of WHT" basis (you absorb the WHT cost), then the grossed-up amount is your allowable deduction. Consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia for the correct treatment of your specific payment structure.

Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 Penalties — What LHDN Charges for Non-Compliance

LHDN enforces withholding tax Malaysia 2026 compliance with the same rigour as income tax compliance. The penalty structure is significant — and importantly, the liability falls entirely on the Malaysian payer who failed to deduct and remit, not on the foreign recipient who received their payment in full. Here are the penalties applicable to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 non-compliance:

OffencePenaltyLegal Basis
Late payment of WHT (after the 1-month deadline) 10% penalty on the WHT amount unpaid after deadline; compounding monthly until paid Section 107A(3) / 109(3) / 109B(3), ITA 1967
Failure to deduct WHT when required The Malaysian payer is assessed the full WHT that should have been deducted — plus 10% late payment penalty from the original due date LHDN administrative assessment
Incorrect WHT rate applied (e.g. applying DTA rate without valid COR) Assessment of the shortfall between rate applied and correct rate, plus 10% penalty on shortfall Section 113 assessment by LHDN
Deducted WHT but failed to remit to LHDN Full WHT amount plus 10% penalty per month; criminal prosecution possible under Section 113/114 ITA for wilful non-remittance Sections 113/114, ITA 1967
Failure to issue WHT certificate to non-resident Administrative penalty; LHDN may compel issuance Administrative requirement under LHDN guidelines
LHDN's ability to detect withholding tax Malaysia 2026 non-compliance has improved dramatically in 2026 through cross-referencing of financial data, e-invoice records, and information exchange under international tax transparency frameworks. Businesses that have historically not applied WHT to foreign payments face increasing audit risk as LHDN's data capabilities grow.
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The Malaysian Payer Bears the Full WHT Liability: The most commercially painful aspect of withholding tax Malaysia 2026 non-compliance is that when LHDN identifies missed WHT obligations, the assessment falls on the Malaysian payer — not the foreign recipient who has already been paid in full. If your company paid USD 50,000 to a US software company over 3 years without deducting WHT, LHDN can assess the full WHT amount (10% × RM equivalent of USD 50,000 × 3 years) from your company — even though you cannot recover this from the foreign party. This makes proactive withholding tax Malaysia 2026 compliance far cheaper than retrospective enforcement.

Withholding Tax Exemptions Malaysia 2026

Not all payments to non-residents trigger withholding tax Malaysia 2026. Certain specific exemptions exist under the ITA 1967 and ministerial orders that exclude qualifying payments from the WHT obligation. The most commercially significant exemptions in 2026 are:

  • Dividend payments: Dividends paid by Malaysian companies to non-resident shareholders are exempt from withholding tax Malaysia 2026 — Malaysia operates a single-tier dividend system under which dividends are paid from after-tax profits and are not subject to a further WHT layer. This is a significant advantage of Malaysia's tax system compared to many neighbouring jurisdictions.
  • Interest paid to approved financial institutions: Interest on loans from banks and financial institutions licensed or approved in Malaysia is specifically exempt from withholding tax Malaysia 2026 even if the bank is foreign-owned, provided it holds an approved licence from Bank Negara Malaysia.
  • Payments for services performed entirely outside Malaysia by non-residents: Services rendered entirely outside Malaysia by a non-resident without any Malaysian presence or connection may not constitute Malaysia-sourced income and therefore may not trigger withholding tax Malaysia 2026. This is a factual determination that requires careful analysis — do not assume exemption without professional confirmation.
  • Royalties paid in approved international currency centres: Certain approved financial and leasing arrangements in Labuan and designated financial zones operate under separate tax regimes with modified WHT treatment — applicable only in very specific structured finance contexts.
  • Payments covered by specific Ministerial exemption orders: LHDN periodically issues exemption orders for specific payment types — always check the current gazette orders before concluding that a non-resident payment is exempt from withholding tax Malaysia 2026.
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"Pure Export of Services" Is Not a WHT Exemption: A common misconception is that if a foreign company performs work entirely overseas and "exports" the result to Malaysia (e.g. a foreign developer builds software remotely and delivers it online), no withholding tax Malaysia 2026 applies because the work was done outside Malaysia. This is incorrect — under Section 4A of the ITA 1967, technical and consultancy fees are Malaysia-sourced income when the service is provided for the benefit of a Malaysian payer, regardless of where the physical work is performed. Unless a specific exemption or DTA protection applies, withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligations remain. Verify each payment's WHT status with a qualified tax firm in Malaysia.

Frequently Asked Questions — Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026

Do I need to pay withholding tax for Google Ads in Malaysia 2026?

Yes — payments to Google LLC (a US company) for Google Ads are subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 at 10% under Section 109B of the ITA 1967 as a special class of income (service fee paid to a non-resident). Since the United States does not have a Double Taxation Agreement with Malaysia, the full 10% domestic rate applies. The same treatment applies to Facebook/Meta Ads, TikTok for Business, LinkedIn Ads, and other digital advertising platforms operated by non-resident foreign companies. For example, if you spend RM10,000 on Google Ads in March 2026, you must withhold RM1,000 (10%) and remit it to LHDN via CP37 by 30 April 2026. In practice, most Malaysian SMEs have not been applying this — but LHDN's enforcement in 2026 has increased as digital payment data becomes more visible through financial information sharing frameworks.

What is the withholding tax rate on foreign freelancer payments in Malaysia?

Payments to foreign (non-resident) freelancers or independent contractors for services rendered — whether remotely or in Malaysia — are subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 at 10% under Section 4A read with Section 109C of the ITA 1967. This rate may be reduced by a Double Taxation Agreement if the freelancer's home country has a DTA with Malaysia and they provide a valid Certificate of Residence. For example, a Singapore-based freelancer benefits from the Malaysia-Singapore DTA which may reduce the WHT rate on certain service payments. A UK-based freelancer benefits from the Malaysia-UK DTA. A US-based freelancer receives no DTA benefit — the full 10% applies. The CP37 form must be filed within 1 month after the payment month.

Is withholding tax the same as income tax in Malaysia?

No — withholding tax Malaysia 2026 and income tax are separate concepts even though both are administered under the Income Tax Act 1967. Income tax is assessed on the Malaysian taxpayer's net income from all sources after allowable deductions — filed annually via Form C or Form BE. Withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is a tax collected at source from payments made by Malaysian payers to non-residents — it is the non-resident's tax liability (on their Malaysia-sourced income) collected by the Malaysian payer as LHDN's agent. For the Malaysian payer, the gross payment (including the WHT component) is a deductible business expense — the WHT remittance itself is not an additional tax cost for the Malaysian company but rather a tax collection obligation that it fulfils on LHDN's behalf.

What happens if I paid a foreign company without deducting withholding tax in Malaysia?

If you made payments to non-residents without deducting withholding tax Malaysia 2026 when required, your company is exposed to a backdated LHDN assessment for the full WHT that should have been deducted, plus a 10% late payment penalty per month from the original due dates. LHDN's 7-year audit window means payments made from 2019 onwards could be assessed. If LHDN has not yet audited this, the most cost-effective resolution is to voluntarily disclose the missed WHT obligations and file retrospective CP37 forms — voluntary disclosure attracts a significantly reduced penalty compared to an audit-initiated assessment. KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia can assess the full extent of any backdated WHT exposure and manage the voluntary disclosure process with LHDN.

How do I apply a Double Taxation Agreement rate for withholding tax in Malaysia?

To apply a reduced DTA rate on withholding tax Malaysia 2026, you must: (1) confirm the non-resident payee is a tax resident of a country with a valid DTA with Malaysia; (2) obtain a Certificate of Residence (COR) issued by the payee's home country tax authority confirming their residency status for the relevant period; (3) apply the DTA rate specified in the treaty for that payment type; and (4) retain the COR on file and reference it in your CP37 filing. Without the COR, the full domestic rate applies regardless of the DTA. The COR must cover the period of the payment — a COR for 2024 does not cover 2026 payments. Verify all DTA rates at LHDN's DTA page or with KC Group's tax advisers in Malaysia.

Is Microsoft 365 / Office 365 subject to withholding tax in Malaysia?

Yes — payments for Microsoft 365 (formerly Office 365), Microsoft Azure, and other Microsoft cloud services are potentially subject to withholding tax Malaysia 2026 as royalties (for software licences) or service fees, depending on how the payment is characterised. Microsoft is a US-incorporated company, and the United States has no Double Taxation Agreement with Malaysia — meaning the full 10% domestic WHT rate would apply. This applies similarly to other US cloud platforms: Adobe Creative Cloud, Autodesk, AWS, Dropbox, Zoom, and other US SaaS providers. In practice, many of these providers have restructured their billing through Irish or Singapore entities (which do have DTAs with Malaysia) — the applicable rate depends on which entity you are actually contracting with and paying. Verify the payee entity's tax residency and obtain the appropriate COR before applying any reduced rate. Consult KC Group's tax firm in Malaysia for a definitive WHT analysis of your specific software subscriptions.


Final Word: Withholding Tax Malaysia 2026 Is a Daily Business Obligation — Not a One-Time Filing

Withholding tax Malaysia 2026 is triggered by every payment your business makes to a non-resident that falls within the defined categories — royalties, service fees, interest, rent, and contractor payments. With Malaysian businesses now routinely paying foreign digital platforms, overseas consultants, foreign software providers, and non-resident technical specialists as part of their normal operations, the withholding tax Malaysia 2026 obligation has become a monthly compliance task rather than an occasional exception.

The core rules are not complicated: identify each foreign payment's WHT category, apply the correct rate (reduced by DTA if applicable and COR obtained), deduct the WHT from the gross payment, remit via CP37 within one month of the payment month, and issue a WHT certificate to the non-resident. What makes withholding tax Malaysia 2026 complex in practice is the characterisation of specific payment types, the DTA analysis for different recipient countries, and the gross-up implications when contracts are structured on a net-of-WHT basis.

KC Group's tax team provides withholding tax Malaysia 2026 advisory services — from a full review of your existing foreign payment schedule to identify missed WHT obligations, to ongoing monthly CP37 preparation and filing for businesses with regular non-resident payments. Whether you need a one-time compliance review or integrated WHT management as part of your annual tax service, KC Group handles it accurately and on time.

👉 Speak to KC Group's withholding tax Malaysia 2026 specialists — WHT review, CP37 filing, DTA analysis, and retrospective compliance →

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