Malaysia's default rule is that 100% foreign equity is permitted in a Sendirian Berhad. The exceptions are sector-specific and administered by the relevant regulator. This guide is a working matrix of the main caps that foreign founders encounter, with links to the specific MSIC codes affected.
How Malaysia regulates foreign ownership
There is no single foreign-equity law. Restrictions arise from three sources:
- Sectoral licensing. Most caps come through licensing — the regulator will not grant a licence above a stated foreign-equity share. Example: PETRONAS licensing for oil & gas.
- Policy guidelines. KPDN's distributive trade guidelines impose Bumiputera conditions for certain retail formats.
- Statute. A small number of activities are restricted by primary legislation (banking, insurance, takaful).
When in doubt, check the licensing regulator for the activity before incorporating. If you are still picking the activity code, see our MSIC code finder.
Distributive trade (MSIC 45–47)
Foreign ownership of distributive trade is regulated by KPDN. The cap depends on the format:
- Hypermarket / superstore (≥ 5,000 sqm): minimum 30% Bumiputera equity.
- Department / specialty / convenience stores: subject to KPDN approval and minimum RM 1M paid-up.
- General wholesale and retail with foreign equity ≥ 51%: KPDN approval required, minimum RM 1M paid-up.
- Pure online retail (e.g. MSIC 47911): 100% foreign equity permitted, no KPDN approval required for online- only models.
Full breakdown in our distributive trade guidelines guide.
Oil & gas (PETRONAS-licensed activities)
Companies seeking a PETRONAS licence (for upstream, OGSE, contracting, or any work in PETRONAS-related supply chain) face foreign-equity conditions imposed by PETRONAS:
- Many licence categories are reserved for 51% Bumiputera-owned companies.
- Some technical/specialist categories allow 30%–49% foreign equity with a Bumi partner.
- PSC (Production Sharing Contract) participation by foreign companies is permitted under separate carriage with PETRONAS.
Maps to MSIC division 06 (extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas) and 09 (mining support service activities).
Financial services (BNM regulated)
- Commercial banks: foreign equity capped at 30% for locally incorporated commercial banks; foreign-owned banks operate via Malaysian-incorporated subsidiaries with BNM-approved shareholders.
- Islamic banks: foreign equity up to 70% permitted.
- Investment banks: 49% foreign equity.
- Insurance / takaful: 70% foreign equity, with conditional approval for higher in strategic cases.
- Money services (remittance, FX dealing): separate licensing under the Money Services Business Act 2011 with foreign- equity discretion.
Activities mapped to MSIC division 64 (Financial service activities) and 65 (Insurance, reinsurance and pension funding).
Telecommunications (MCMC regulated)
Under the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998 and MCMC's equity guidelines:
- Network Facilities Provider (NFP) / Network Service Provider (NSP) licences: foreign equity capped at 49% on aggregate. Higher cases require MCMC approval.
- Application Service Provider (ASP) licences: 100% foreign equity permitted.
- Content Application Service Provider (CASP): generally 100% foreign equity, with sector-specific exceptions.
Maps to MSIC division 61 (Telecommunications).
Freight forwarding and logistics
- Freight forwarding (sea / air / multi-modal): minimum 51% Malaysian equity for licence by Royal Malaysian Customs and the Ministry of Transport.
- Express courier: regulated by MCMC; foreign equity permitted subject to licence terms.
Maps to MSIC division 52 (Warehousing and support activities for transportation).
Professional services
Many regulated professions restrict foreign practice or equity:
- Legal services: Bar Council restrictions; foreign law firms operate through Qualified Foreign Law Firm (QFLF) or International Partnership routes.
- Accounting / audit: regulated by the Malaysian Institute of Accountants — partners must be Malaysian.
- Engineering services: the Board of Engineers Malaysia requires registered Professional Engineers; foreign engineering consultancies typically operate as joint ventures.
- Architecture, quantity surveying, town planning: similar — registered Malaysian professional must be involved.
- Healthcare services: hospitals and clinics under MOH licensing; foreign-equity caps apply.
Education
- Private higher education institutions: regulated by the Ministry of Higher Education; foreign equity permitted with conditions.
- Private schools and international schools: MOE licensing.
- Skills training (HRDC-registered): generally 100% foreign equity permitted.
Activities that are unambiguously 100% open
Foreign founders should look at these for the most frictionless setup:
- Software and IT services (MSIC 62) — often combined with Malaysia Digital Status for tax benefits.
- Most manufacturing (MSIC 10–33), subject to the ICA 1975 Manufacturing Licence conditions.
- Management consulting (MSIC 70200).
- Online retail (MSIC 47911) — see the e-commerce setup guide.
- R&D and scientific services (MSIC 72).
- Business process outsourcing / shared services (MSIC 82).
How to verify before you commit
- Identify the most accurate 5-digit MSIC code via the code finder.
- Identify the regulator(s) for the activity.
- Engage the regulator directly (or via a local advisor) to confirm the latest equity position. Guidelines are revised regularly.
- Confirm capital floor — many caps come with minimum paid-up requirements (RM 250k, RM 500k, RM 1M, RM 2.5M).
- Document the structure (any local partner's economic stake, board composition, signing rights) in the shareholders' agreement before incorporation.
A note on Bumiputera vs general Malaysian equity
Several caps specifically require Bumiputera equity (≥ 30% for hypermarkets, for example), not just Malaysian equity. Bumi status is checked against MIDA / KPDN guidelines on natural persons and on companies that hold ≥ 51% Bumi shareholding upstream.
Sources: KPDN; Bank Negara Malaysia; MCMC; PETRONAS Licensing; MIDA.
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