Landlord Guide · Updated June 2026

Stamp Duty Tenancy Agreement
Malaysia 2026: New Rates,
Calculator & How to Stamp Online

8 min read Last updated: June 2026 Finance Act 2024 rates

In This Guide

  1. What Changed in 2025 — and Why It Matters Now
  2. The New 2026 Stamp Duty Rates
  3. Calculate Your Stamp Duty
  4. How to Stamp Online via e-Duti Setem (Step by Step)
  5. Late Stamping Penalties
  6. Who Pays — Landlord or Tenant?
  7. What Happens If You Don't Stamp?
  8. Quick FAQ

If you signed or renewed a tenancy agreement in 2025 or 2026 and the stamp duty amount looks different from what you used to pay — you're not imagining things. The rules changed.

Under the Finance Act 2024, effective 1 January 2025, two things happened that directly affect every Malaysian landlord: the stamp duty rates were revised, and the old RM2,400 annual rent exemption was removed entirely. On top of that, from 1 January 2026, the old STAMPS portal was decommissioned and replaced by e-Duti Setem on MyTax.

So if your go-to stamping process suddenly stopped working, or if you're not sure how much you owe — this guide has all the answers.

1. What Changed in 2025 — and Why It Matters Now

Previously, tenancy agreements with annual rent below RM2,400 were exempt from stamp duty. Most landlords with modest rental units didn't have to worry about it at all.

That exemption? Gone. From 1 January 2025, stamp duty is charged on the full annual rent from the first ringgit — no minimum threshold, no free tier.

At the same time, the rates themselves were restructured based on tenancy duration. This means a 2-year tenancy now costs more to stamp than a 1-year tenancy at the same rent — not just proportionally, but at a higher per-RM250 rate.

Why This Catches Landlords Off Guard Many landlords copy their old tenancy agreement template and assume the stamp duty process is the same as before. It's not — both the calculation and the portal have changed. If you stamped your last TA before 2025, please read this guide before stamping your next one.

2. The New 2026 Stamp Duty Rates

The rate you pay depends on how long your tenancy is. Here's the full table:

Tenancy Duration Rate per RM250 of Annual Rent Example: RM1,800/month
1 year or less RM1 per RM250 RM87
More than 1 year, up to 3 years RM3 per RM250 RM261
More than 3 years, up to 5 years RM5 per RM250 RM435
More than 5 years RM7 per RM250 RM609

Minimum stamp duty: RM10 on all dutiable instruments. Each additional copy of the TA: flat RM10. Annual rent for RM1,800/month = RM21,600.

How the Calculation Works

The formula is straightforward:

The Formula Stamp Duty = ⌈ Annual Rent ÷ 250 ⌉ × Duration Rate

The ⌈ ⌉ symbol means you round up to the next whole number.

Example: Monthly rent RM1,500, 1-year tenancy
Annual rent = RM1,500 × 12 = RM18,000
RM18,000 ÷ 250 = 72 (exact, no rounding needed)
72 × RM1 = RM72 stamp duty

3. Calculate Your Stamp Duty

Don't want to do the maths yourself? Use the calculator below — it applies the Finance Act 2024 rates automatically.

Stamp Duty Calculator

Based on Finance Act 2024 rates. Effective January 2025.

Monthly rent-
Annual rent-
Rate applied-
Units (annual rent ÷ 250, rounded up)-
Additional copy (optional)RM10
Stamp Duty Payable-

4. How to Stamp Online via e-Duti Setem (Step by Step)

From 1 January 2026, the old STAMPS portal is gone. Everything is now done through e-Duti Setem, which you access through MyTax at mytax.hasil.gov.my.

What You Need Before You Start MyDigital ID or LHDN account login · Signed tenancy agreement (PDF) · Both parties' IC numbers · The exact monthly rent and tenancy dates · Your calculated stamp duty amount
Remember the 30-Day Deadline You must stamp within 30 days of the date the tenancy agreement was signed. Miss this and penalties kick in immediately. Don't leave it until the last minute — the portal sometimes has queues near month-end.

5. Late Stamping Penalties

If you miss the 30-day window, LHDN will charge you a penalty on top of the stamp duty owed. The penalty scales up the longer you wait:

How Late You Are Penalty
Within 3 months after deadline RM50 or 10% of deficient duty — whichever is higher
More than 3 months after deadline RM100 or 20% of deficient duty — whichever is higher

The penalties are non-negotiable and statutory — LHDN won't waive them for first-timers or "didn't know" excuses. Just stamp on time, senang cerita.

6. Who Pays — Landlord or Tenant?

Legally, the obligation to stamp falls on whoever holds the instrument — which in practice is usually the tenant, who holds the original tenancy agreement.

In real life, most landlords specify in the tenancy agreement itself that the tenant bears the stamp duty cost. This is the most common arrangement in Malaysia. But it's negotiable — some landlords split it 50/50, some absorb it fully as a goodwill gesture when the market is slow.

Whoever pays, make sure it's clearly stated in your tenancy agreement. Ambiguity here is a common source of disputes, especially when tenants later claim they didn't know they had to pay.

7. What Happens If You Don't Stamp?

This is the part most landlords underestimate until it's too late.

An unstamped tenancy agreement is not admissible as evidence in court. What this means practically:

Real Consequence Malaysia has no dedicated Residential Tenancy Act as of 2026. Your stamped tenancy agreement is literally your only legal protection as a landlord. Without it, you're collecting rent on pure trust. That's a lot of faith to place in a stranger — especially when RM3,600 in deposits and months of rental income are on the line.

8. Quick FAQ

Does stamp duty apply to month-to-month rentals with no formal agreement?

If there's no written tenancy agreement, there's nothing to stamp. But then again, there's also nothing to protect you legally. A written, stamped TA is always the safer option.

My tenant is renewing — do I stamp the renewal agreement too?

Yes. A renewal is a new instrument and must be stamped separately. Use the current 2026 rates — don't assume it's the same as last time.

Can the tenant stamp it themselves without involving the landlord?

Yes. Either party can initiate the e-Duti Setem process. You just need the signed agreement and both parties' IC numbers. Only one payment is required per instrument.

What if the monthly rent changes mid-tenancy?

If the rent changes and you draw up a supplementary agreement, that new instrument may need to be stamped separately. Consult your solicitor or check with LHDN directly.

My last TA was stamped via STAMPS portal — is it still valid?

Yes, fully valid. The switch to e-Duti Setem only affects new stamping from 1 January 2026 onwards. Your existing stamped agreement remains legally binding.

One More Thing

Stamp Duty Sorted.
What About the Rent Itself?

You've done the hard part — proper TA, stamped and ready. Now comes the monthly part that most landlords actually dread: chasing rent, monitoring utility bills, and keeping track of it all.

No more awkward "eh, you bayar dah ke?" texts. No more unpaid utility bills you find out about 3 months too late. MyRentAssist handles the whole monthly cycle automatically — and the service fee comes out of what your tenant pays, so nothing comes out of your pocket.

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