The Double Taxation Challenge
When you own property in another country, you potentially owe taxes in two places: the country where the property is located and your home country (Malaysia). Understanding how this works is critical. Getting it wrong can mean paying far more tax than necessary - or worse, facing penalties for non-compliance.
Taxes in the Foreign Country
As a property owner in a foreign country, you will typically face these taxes:
- Income tax on rental income: Most countries tax rental income earned within their borders, even if you are a non-resident. Rates vary from 15% (e.g., US for treaty countries) to 45% (e.g., Australia's top rate for non-residents).
- Property tax / council tax: Annual taxes similar to Malaysia's quit rent and assessment rates. In the US, property taxes can be 1-3% of the property's value per year - much higher than Malaysia.
- Capital gains tax on sale: Most countries tax the profit you make when selling property. The US imposes FIRPTA (withholding 15% of the gross sale price for foreign sellers). The UK charges 18-28% on capital gains for non-residents.
- Inheritance / estate tax: Some countries impose taxes on property transfers upon death. The US has a federal estate tax on worldwide assets of non-residents with US property exceeding USD 60,000.
Taxes in Malaysia
Malaysia operates on a territorial tax system, which means that foreign-sourced income was traditionally exempt from tax. However, recent changes have introduced taxation on foreign-sourced income remitted to Malaysia. Here is what this means for property investors:
- Rental income from overseas property: If you remit the rental income to Malaysia, it may be subject to Malaysian income tax. If you keep it in the foreign country, it may not be taxable in Malaysia (consult a tax advisor for current rules).
- Capital gains from overseas property: Malaysia does not have a general capital gains tax beyond RPGT (which only applies to Malaysian properties). Gains from selling foreign property are generally not taxable in Malaysia, though this is evolving.
Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs)
Malaysia has DTAs with over 70 countries. These agreements prevent you from being taxed twice on the same income. Under a DTA, you typically:
- Pay tax in the country where the property is located (source country)
- Receive a tax credit or exemption in Malaysia for the tax already paid overseas
Key DTA partners for property investors include:
| Country | DTA with Malaysia? | Key Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Yes | Tax credit for UK tax paid on rental income |
| Australia | Yes | Tax credit for Australian tax paid |
| United States | No DTA | No treaty relief; higher risk of double taxation |
| Japan | Yes | Reduced withholding rates |
| Thailand | Yes | Tax credit for Thai tax paid |
| Singapore | Yes | Tax credit for Singapore tax paid |
Note the absence of a DTA between Malaysia and the US. This makes US property investment more complex from a tax perspective for Malaysian investors.
Practical Tax Planning Tips
- Hire a tax advisor who understands both Malaysian and the foreign country's tax laws.
- Keep detailed records of all income, expenses, and taxes paid in both countries.
- Understand whether your investment structure (personal, company, trust) affects your tax treatment.
- Consider the timing of remittances to Malaysia in light of current tax rules on foreign-sourced income.
- Factor all tax costs into your return calculations before investing - not after.
Tax planning is not about avoidance. It is about understanding the rules and structuring your investments legally and efficiently. The cost of a good international tax advisor (RM 2,000-5,000/year) is a fraction of what poor planning can cost you.
