Living in Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia's capital and largest city: the country's deepest job, services and international-school market, fast and cheap fibre, and rents well below other major Asian hubs — under an equatorial climate that is warm, humid and wet year-round, with air quality that breaches WHO guidelines and worsens during the regional haze season.
Verified
At a glance
The headline numbers for Kuala Lumpur — each with its own source and freshness. A live official figure is not the same as a survey estimate or a 30-year climate normal.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2022
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
- Notes
- Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Mar 31, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- KL city-wide by-room asking rents (RM/month, portal-triangulated around the KRI/NAPIC KL average: studio ≈2,100, 1BR ≈2,901, 2BR ≈3,900, 3BR ≈5,200) split into central vs outside using location multipliers (central prime districts ×1.30; outer suburbs ×0.75) that market sources broadly agree on (KLCC/Mont Kiara/Bangsar premium; Cheras/Setapak/outer-KL discount), then converted at USD/MYR 4.08.
- Notes
- Central/outside cells are DERIVED (city room-average × district multiplier) — no single official source publishes KL rent by room count AND by centre/outside at once. The city-wide 1BR anchor (RM2,901) is directly observed; the room ladder and location multipliers are triangulated from KL market reports. Central = KLCC / Mont Kiara / Bangsar-type prime districts; outside = outer suburbs (Cheras, Setapak, Wangsa Maju). Flagged for refinement against NAPIC rental transaction tables on next verification.
/mo
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jan 1, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
- Notes
- The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
i
World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2023
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
- Notes
- UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
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WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (June 2026) — Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2019
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (GlobalCity_Db_V8.0_2026-06-28), Malaysia (ISO3 MYS) row for Kuala Lumpur, year 2019: pm25_concentration = 28.27 µg/m³ (2 sub-urban stations, PM10 36.04, NO2 0.02). The database's only other KL entry is 2010 = 21 µg/m³ (1 station).
- Notes
- The latest year WHO publishes for Kuala Lumpur is 2019 (28.27 µg/m³) — about 5.7× the WHO 2021 guideline (5 µg/m³) and above Malaysia's own 15 µg/m³ standard. Malaysia's DOE continuous-monitoring network reports more recent, somewhat lower single-year KL annual means (national/city figures in the ~16–18 µg/m³ range for 2024–2025 per DOE-fed reports), but the DOE Environmental Quality Report was not machine-accessible this cycle; commercial aggregators (IQAir, aqi.in) are excluded by sourcing policy. Recorded value is the authoritative WHO open-data figure; treat as an upper-bound/older reading. Regional biomass-burning haze (typically Aug–Oct) spikes PM2.5 well above these annual means.
i
M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia)
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2023
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Median of daily medians over 343 days of 2023 (231,846 download samples), computed by log-interpolation within the median histogram bucket of M-Lab's public country-daily-stats API (latest full year available; 2024 file covers only 86 days). Bucket-midpoint method gives ≈37 Mbps as an upper alternative.
- Notes
- M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads well below Ookla-style figures (Ookla-based sources report Malaysian fixed download ~100+ Mbps) — comparable only within this criterion. Malaysia's fibre (Unifi, Maxis, TIME) is fast and widely available in cities; the M-Lab figure understates real fibre-plan speeds.
i
EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia
Research
- Data as of
- Nov 1, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Notes
- Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jul 4, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Comprehensive plans that include inpatient/hospitalisation plus outpatient cover for a resident foreigner run ≈ RM400–1,200/month across major insurers (AIA, Great Eastern, Allianz, AXA/Prudential); a healthy 35-year-old midpoint ≈ RM650–700/month ≈ RM8,000/year ≈ $1,960 at USD/MYR 4.08 (range ≈ $1,180–$3,530). Premiums are individually underwritten and quoted on request, so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote.
- Notes
- Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient) basis, chosen for cross-country comparability. Malaysian citizens/PRs access heavily subsidised public healthcare; foreigners typically buy private cover or use the (higher) foreigner tariff at public hospitals. International (IPMI) plans with global coverage cost substantially more. Insurers quote on request.
Population 2,067,500 · Asia/Kuala_Lumpur · country-level facts (taxes, visas, crypto) inherited from Malaysia
What it costs you per month
A planning estimate: real asking rent plus a cost-of-living basket scaled to your household. Not a quote.
≈ $13,848 / year
- Rent (1-bed)$533
- Food & non-alcoholic beverages$128
- Restaurants & accommodation$127
- Transport$89
- Utilities (water, electricity, gas)$55
- Personal care & misc goods/services$51
- Recreation, sport & culture$39
- Communications$38
- Household furnishings & maintenance$33
- Alcohol & tobacco$19
- Clothing & footwear$18
- Health (out-of-pocket)$15
- Education$9
- Living costs$621
Rent from the asking-rent matrix below. Living costs scale a one-person basket ($621/mo) by household size and lifestyle; the equivalence factors are our assumption. Schooling and one-off setup are excluded.
Cost of living
What a single person spends each month — food, utilities, transport, eating out and the rest — excluding rent.
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DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (COICOP expenditure shares), single-person basket derived
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2022
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- DOSM HES 2022 main-group expenditure shares (Food & non-alcoholic 16.3%, Restaurants & accommodation 16.1%, Transport 11.3%, etc.), with the housing group reduced to its utilities portion (rent removed), renormalised over the ≈$620/mo single-person non-rent basket and converted at USD/MYR 4.08. Categories sum to the cost-of-living aggregate.
- Notes
- Derived from the all-household survey shares; the utilities-vs-rent split within the housing group is approximate. National average.
Malaysia's household-budget basket for a single person, excluding rent. Non-rent costs vary little between cities — the city-specific part is rent, shown under Housing below.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Cost of living (single, excl. rent)country-level | 620USD/month, single person, excluding rentiCurated by SettleMetric
| 9.4 |
Housing
What it costs to rent, by apartment type and location.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Mar 31, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- KL city-wide by-room asking rents (RM/month, portal-triangulated around the KRI/NAPIC KL average: studio ≈2,100, 1BR ≈2,901, 2BR ≈3,900, 3BR ≈5,200) split into central vs outside using location multipliers (central prime districts ×1.30; outer suburbs ×0.75) that market sources broadly agree on (KLCC/Mont Kiara/Bangsar premium; Cheras/Setapak/outer-KL discount), then converted at USD/MYR 4.08.
- Notes
- Central/outside cells are DERIVED (city room-average × district multiplier) — no single official source publishes KL rent by room count AND by centre/outside at once. The city-wide 1BR anchor (RM2,901) is directly observed; the room ladder and location multipliers are triangulated from KL market reports. Central = KLCC / Mont Kiara / Bangsar-type prime districts; outside = outer suburbs (Cheras, Setapak, Wangsa Maju). Flagged for refinement against NAPIC rental transaction tables on next verification.
| Apartment | Central | Outside centre |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | 669 USD/mo | 386 USD/mo |
| 1-bedroom | 924 USD/mo | 533 USD/mo |
| 2-bedroom | 1,243 USD/mo | 717 USD/mo |
| 3-bedroom | 1,657 USD/mo | 956 USD/mo |
Central/outside cells are DERIVED (city room-average × district multiplier) — no single official source publishes KL rent by room count AND by centre/outside at once. The city-wide 1BR anchor (RM2,901) is directly observed; the room ladder and location multipliers are triangulated from KL market reports. Central = KLCC / Mont Kiara / Bangsar-type prime districts; outside = outer suburbs (Cheras, Setapak, Wangsa Maju). Flagged for refinement against NAPIC rental transaction tables on next verification.
Climate
Temperature and rainfall through the year, plus air quality.
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NOAA/WMO Climatological Standard Normals 1991–2020 — Subang (WMO 48647), Malaysia
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2020
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- WMO 1991–2020 station normals for Subang (48647, 03°07'50"N 101°33'09"E, elev. 17 m), NCEI accession 0253808 (public domain). Subang is the standard WMO reference station for the Kuala Lumpur / Klang Valley area (~15 km west of the city centre); no separate WMO normals station exists for KL city proper. Columns Daily_Minimum_Temperature / Daily_Maximum_Temperature / Precipitation_Total. Annual: min 24.4°C, max 32.9°C, precip 2847 mm.
Average day/night temperature (lines, left axis) and total rainfall (bars, right axis) for each month — 1991–2020 normals. Hover a month for exact figures.
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daytime high °C | 32.6° | 33.3° | 33.7° | 33.7° | 33.6° | 33.3° | 32.8° | 32.8° | 32.7° | 32.6° | 32.3° | 32.0° |
| Nighttime low °C | 23.8° | 24.0° | 24.5° | 24.7° | 25.0° | 24.8° | 24.4° | 24.5° | 24.2° | 24.2° | 24.1° | 24.0° |
| Rainfall mm | 227 | 193 | 270 | 302 | 230 | 146 | 165 | 174 | 220 | 284 | 356 | 281 |
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Climate comfort | 0pleasant months/yeariSettleMetric computation over climate-normals (Subang WMO 48647) Curated by SettleMetric
| 0.0 |
| Air quality (PM2.5) | 28.3µg/m³, annual mean PM2.5iWHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (June 2026) — Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Open data
| 1.3 |
Safety
How safe daily life is, from official crime statistics.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Homicide ratecountry-level | 0.7intentional homicides per 100,000/yeariWorld Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5) Open data
| 9.5 |
Infrastructure
Internet speed and how parcels get to your door.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic delivery qualitycountry-level | GoodiPos Malaysia (Pos Laju) and major courier coverage pages (J&T, Ninja Van, GDEX, DHL) — composite Curated by SettleMetric
| 7.0 |
| International delivery easecountry-level | Minor frictioniOfficial source
| 7.0 |
| Internet speedcountry-level | 32Mbps, median fixed downloadiM-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia) Open data
| 2.8 |
Healthcare
What comprehensive private medical cover costs.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Private healthcare costcountry-level | 1,960USD/year, comprehensive private insurance premium, healthy 35-year-oldiCurated by SettleMetric
| 6.1 |
Money & crypto
Crypto rules and how freely personal money moves.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Crypto regulationcountry-level | Legal regulatediOfficial source
| 8.0 |
| Financial control levelcountry-level | ModerateiCurated by SettleMetric
| 7.0 |
Language
How far English gets you in daily life and services.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| English proficiencycountry-level | HighiEF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia Research
| 7.0 |
Education
International schooling options for families.
| Criterion | Value | Score |
|---|---|---|
| International schools | 22accredited international schools, countiCurated by SettleMetric
| 9.5 |
Demographics
Who else lives here — the share of foreign residents and the largest national communities, from official statistics.
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DOSM — Population estimates, Malaysia (non-citizens vs citizens, 2025)
Open data
- Data as of
- Jan 1, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- DOSM open-data population series: 2025 total population 34,231,700; non-citizens (other_noncitizen) 3,380,700 → 9.88% ≈ 9.9%. (2024: 3,396,900 of 34,052,100 = 9.98%.)
- Notes
- Basis: non-citizens as counted in DOSM population estimates — this includes the large migrant-worker population (documented workers, plus estimated undocumented) and does not separate temporary from permanent residents. Not directly comparable with EU residence-permit-based foreign-share figures. Malaysia hosts a very large low-wage migrant workforce, which dominates this share.
Set to null: the DOSM by-citizenship breakdown of Malaysia's ~3.38M non-citizens exists in the International Migration Statistics 2025 release, but the DOSM PDF/portal was not machine-accessible from this environment (TLS/CDN block) and the DOSM open-data CSV splits population only by ethnicity, not by country of citizenship. Rather than fabricate counts, the value is left null for manual verification. Documented direction (from IOM/World Bank migrant-worker profiles, discovery only): the largest non-citizen groups are Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nepal and Myanmar. Fill from the DOSM release directly.
How you can stay
All requirements & citizenship filterHow you can legally enter and stay. These apply across Malaysia.
- DE Rantau Nomad Pass (digital nomad visa)Digital nomad visaAll citizenshipsincome ≥ 24,000 USD/yearForeign remote worker, freelancer or digital professional with an active contract or clients based OUTSIDE Malaysia1 yr +
- Malaysia My Second Home (MM2H) — tiered long-stay residenceSpecial programAll citizenshipsChoose a tier by fixed deposit + mandatory property purchase: Silver — USD 150,000 fixed deposit + RM 600,000 min property; Gold — USD 500,000 + RM 1,000,000; Platinum — USD 1,000,000 + RM 2,000,000 (Platinum pays a one-off RM 200,000 fee and may work/invest)5 yrs +
- Employment Pass (employer-sponsored work permit)Business visaAll citizenshipsincome ≥ 5,000 MYR/monthA Malaysian company sponsor and an approved job with a minimum salary (typically RM 5,000/month; Category I RM 10,000+ gives longer validity)1 yr +→ PR path
- Visa-free social visit pass (90 days)Visa-free stayUS citizens, UK citizens, EU citizensPassport of a visa-exempt country (US, UK, EU states, and many others), valid ≥ 6 months on entry3 mo
What you'd pay in taxes
Full schemes & calculatorThe tax schemes a freelancer can choose from. Rules are national, the same in Kuala Lumpur as anywhere in Malaysia.
- Resident individual — foreign-sourced income exemption (FSI, to 2036)0% of revenue0.0% burden at €60k
- Resident individual — progressive income tax (Malaysian-sourced income)progressive on profit (allowance 9,000): 0% up to 5,000, 1% up to 20,000, 3% up to 35,000, 6% up to 50,000, 11% up to 70,000, 19% up to 100,000, 25% up to 400,000, 26% up to 600,000, 28% up to 2,000,000, 30% above18.6% burden at €60k
- Non-resident individual — flat 30% (Malaysian-sourced income)30% of profit30.0% burden at €60k
See what you would keep
Your income against Malaysia's real tax schemes — the same engine as the full calculator.
- 1 Resident individual — foreign-sourced income exemption (FSI, to 2036)60,000 EURnet/year0.0% burden
- 2 Resident individual — progressive income tax (Malaysian-sourced income)48,838 EURnet/year18.6% burden
- 3 Non-resident individual — flat 30% (Malaysian-sourced income)42,000 EURnet/year30.0% burden
Who is Kuala Lumpur for?
The same place reads differently depending on why you move. Each lens pulls the facts that matter most for that plan — with sources, and the trade-offs stated plainly.
Contract or freelance in tech, billing clients abroad.
Works in your favour
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jan 1, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
- Notes
- The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
i
EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia
Research
- Data as of
- Nov 1, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Notes
- Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2022
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
- Notes
- Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
i
Pos Malaysia (Pos Laju) and major courier coverage pages (J&T, Ninja Van, GDEX, DHL) — composite
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2025
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Pos Laju (Pos Malaysia) is the only courier with coverage in every district (900+ outlets, 80%+ of populated areas); J&T Express, Ninja Van, GDEX, City-Link and KEX provide dense e-commerce coverage with real-time tracking and cash-on-delivery; next-working-day delivery is available in Peninsular urban areas. Rated 'good' rather than 'excellent' because East Malaysia (Sabah/Sarawak) and rural areas are slower and parcel-locker density is far lower than locker-first markets.
- Notes
- Peninsular urban delivery is fast (1–2 days); East Malaysia and remote areas take longer. Tracking and COD are standard across the major carriers.
Watch-outs
i
M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia)
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2023
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Median of daily medians over 343 days of 2023 (231,846 download samples), computed by log-interpolation within the median histogram bucket of M-Lab's public country-daily-stats API (latest full year available; 2024 file covers only 86 days). Bucket-midpoint method gives ≈37 Mbps as an upper alternative.
- Notes
- M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads well below Ookla-style figures (Ookla-based sources report Malaysian fixed download ~100+ Mbps) — comparable only within this criterion. Malaysia's fibre (Unifi, Maxis, TIME) is fast and widely available in cities; the M-Lab figure understates real fibre-plan speeds.
Relocating with a partner and school-age children.
Works in your favour
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jul 4, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Count of distinct international schools in the KL / Klang Valley metro (Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, Subang, Shah Alam, Ampang, Mont Kiara, Sungai Buloh, Bandar Sunway) accredited by or member of an eligible body. Verified anchors: IB — Malaysia has 20 IB World Schools (IBO by-country page); ~8–9 are in the KL metro (ISKL, Mont'Kiara International, EtonHouse KL, IGB International (Sungai Buloh), Fairview KL, Stella Maris (Medan Damansara), Sri KDU, Sunway (Bandar Sunway), St Joseph's Institution International). AEFE — Lycée Français de Kuala Lumpur (confirmed on aefe.gouv.fr). German Auslandsschulwesen/ZfA — Deutsche Schule Kuala Lumpur (KMK-recognised 'Excellent German School Abroad'). CIS — International School of Kuala Lumpur (re-accredited 23 Apr 2024, cois.org). COBIS/Cambridge — British School of Kuala Lumpur (COBIS + Cambridge), The Alice Smith School (British/Cambridge), Garden International School (Cambridge). Conservative distinct-school count across these accreditors ≈ 22.
- Notes
- ±3 uncertainty. The IB find-an-ib-school finder and IB by-country page returned HTTP 403 to the fetch tool this cycle, so the KL-metro IB subset and the Cambridge/CIS/COBIS rosters were verified from each accreditor's public statements and school pages rather than machine-enumerated against a downloaded registry. Count deliberately excludes IB schools outside the metro (Marlborough College — Johor; Nexus — Putrajaya, borderline; Raffles American / Sunway Iskandar — Johor; Uplands — Penang). Refine by enumerating the Cambridge International and CIS/COBIS Malaysia registries directly on next verification.
i
World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2023
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
- Notes
- UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
Watch-outs
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jul 4, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Comprehensive plans that include inpatient/hospitalisation plus outpatient cover for a resident foreigner run ≈ RM400–1,200/month across major insurers (AIA, Great Eastern, Allianz, AXA/Prudential); a healthy 35-year-old midpoint ≈ RM650–700/month ≈ RM8,000/year ≈ $1,960 at USD/MYR 4.08 (range ≈ $1,180–$3,530). Premiums are individually underwritten and quoted on request, so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote.
- Notes
- Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient) basis, chosen for cross-country comparability. Malaysian citizens/PRs access heavily subsidised public healthcare; foreigners typically buy private cover or use the (higher) foreigner tariff at public hospitals. International (IPMI) plans with global coverage cost substantially more. Insurers quote on request.
i
WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (June 2026) — Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2019
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (GlobalCity_Db_V8.0_2026-06-28), Malaysia (ISO3 MYS) row for Kuala Lumpur, year 2019: pm25_concentration = 28.27 µg/m³ (2 sub-urban stations, PM10 36.04, NO2 0.02). The database's only other KL entry is 2010 = 21 µg/m³ (1 station).
- Notes
- The latest year WHO publishes for Kuala Lumpur is 2019 (28.27 µg/m³) — about 5.7× the WHO 2021 guideline (5 µg/m³) and above Malaysia's own 15 µg/m³ standard. Malaysia's DOE continuous-monitoring network reports more recent, somewhat lower single-year KL annual means (national/city figures in the ~16–18 µg/m³ range for 2024–2025 per DOE-fed reports), but the DOE Environmental Quality Report was not machine-accessible this cycle; commercial aggregators (IQAir, aqi.in) are excluded by sourcing policy. Recorded value is the authoritative WHO open-data figure; treat as an upper-bound/older reading. Regional biomass-burning haze (typically Aug–Oct) spikes PM2.5 well above these annual means.
Optimising tax, banking and crypto rules.
Works in your favour
i
Official source
- Data as of
- Jul 4, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Notes
- Holding and trading digital assets is legal but regulated: the SC regulates digital-asset trading, issuance and custody, and licenses Recognized Market Operator exchanges (registered DAX) trading an approved list of tokens. Bank Negara Malaysia does not recognize crypto as legal tender. Tax: Malaysia has no capital gains tax, so a long-term individual holder's gains are generally untaxed; frequent/active trading can be recharacterized as business income under LHDN's 'badges of trade' (LHDN crypto guideline). Not 'legal-friendly' because it is standard licensing/regulation rather than an explicit favourable regime.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Nov 15, 2024
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Composite of BNM Foreign Exchange Policy (FEP, formerly FEA): (1) the ringgit is non-internationalised — MYR may not be traded or settled offshore; (2) a resident WITH domestic ringgit borrowing may invest only up to RM1,000,000 equivalent per calendar year in foreign-currency assets (residents without ringgit borrowing: unlimited); resident FCA borrowing capped (RM10m from onshore/non-resident); (3) an active exchange-control apparatus exists (FEP Notices, BNM approvals, penalties). Offsetting liberalisations: non-residents may freely open ringgit/foreign-currency accounts and repatriate funds; current-account flows are free; no cash-transaction reporting comparable to FBAR for individuals. BNM (Apr 2024) publicly ruled out crisis-style capital controls.
- Notes
- Between 'low' (fully free personal fund movement) and 'high': personal current-account and non-resident flows are liberal and banking access for foreigners is straightforward, but the non-internationalised ringgit and resident foreign-asset investment limits are real state controls on money flows, so classified 'moderate'. Cross-check via IMF AREAER not retrieved this cycle.
i
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Jan 1, 2026
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
- Notes
- The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
Prioritising safety, air, and an easy daily life.
Works in your favour
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World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2023
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
- Notes
- UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
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Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2022
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
- Notes
- Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
Watch-outs
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WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (June 2026) — Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Open data
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2019
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- WHO Ambient Air Quality Database v8.0 (GlobalCity_Db_V8.0_2026-06-28), Malaysia (ISO3 MYS) row for Kuala Lumpur, year 2019: pm25_concentration = 28.27 µg/m³ (2 sub-urban stations, PM10 36.04, NO2 0.02). The database's only other KL entry is 2010 = 21 µg/m³ (1 station).
- Notes
- The latest year WHO publishes for Kuala Lumpur is 2019 (28.27 µg/m³) — about 5.7× the WHO 2021 guideline (5 µg/m³) and above Malaysia's own 15 µg/m³ standard. Malaysia's DOE continuous-monitoring network reports more recent, somewhat lower single-year KL annual means (national/city figures in the ~16–18 µg/m³ range for 2024–2025 per DOE-fed reports), but the DOE Environmental Quality Report was not machine-accessible this cycle; commercial aggregators (IQAir, aqi.in) are excluded by sourcing policy. Recorded value is the authoritative WHO open-data figure; treat as an upper-bound/older reading. Regional biomass-burning haze (typically Aug–Oct) spikes PM2.5 well above these annual means.
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SettleMetric computation over climate-normals (Subang WMO 48647)
Curated by SettleMetric
- Data as of
- Dec 31, 2020
- Verified
- Jul 4, 2026
- Method
- Criterion rule: count months with mean daily maximum 15–28°C AND precipitation < 150mm. Kuala Lumpur's mean daily maximum sits at 32.0–33.7°C every month (always above the 28°C ceiling) and only June falls below 150mm rain (145.8mm). No month satisfies both conditions, so pleasant months = 0. This reflects the criterion's temperate-comfort band, not local livability: KL's climate is stable and warm year-round without a cold season.
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Full country picture: Malaysia overview