Founders setting up in Malaysia have several long-stay options that sit alongside the standard Employment Pass route. The right choice depends on the founder's income profile, how committed they are to staying long-term, and whether they need to actively run the Malaysian business. This guide compares MM2H, DE Rantau, and the Premium Visa Programme (PVIP).
MM2H — Malaysia My Second Home (2024 refresh)
MM2H is administered jointly by the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture and the Immigration Department. The 2024 refresh introduced three tiers — Silver, Gold, and Platinum — each with its own deposit, income, and stay-duration parameters.
| Tier | Fixed deposit | Liquid assets | Pass duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Silver | USD 150,000 | USD 500,000 | 5 years renewable |
| Gold | USD 500,000 | USD 1,000,000 | 15 years renewable |
| Platinum | USD 1,000,000 | USD 2,000,000 | 20 years renewable |
- Monthly offshore income: minimum USD 5,000 (Silver), USD 5,000 (Gold), USD 10,000 (Platinum). Verified against bank statements for the preceding 6 months.
- Minimum stay: Silver requires 60 days/year in Malaysia; Gold and Platinum require 90 days.
- Property purchase: mandatory minimum property value of RM 600,000 – RM 2,000,000 depending on tier and state.
- Dependents: spouse, children under 34 (unmarried), and parents may be included.
- Right to work: MM2H pass holders may serve on company boards and own businesses, but cannot actively employ themselves locally without a separate Employment Pass. A founder who wants to run day-to-day operations usually still applies for an EP through their Sdn Bhd.
DE Rantau — Malaysia's digital nomad pass
Launched by MDEC in 2022, DE Rantau is purpose-built for digital professionals and remote workers. It is the lightest of the three programmes:
- Eligibility: digital professionals (IT, software, digital marketing, content, design, blockchain, AI, etc.) earning at least USD 24,000 per year. Non-digital professionals can also apply with USD 24,000+ income.
- Duration: 3 to 12 months, renewable once for another 12 months (effective 24-month maximum).
- Dependents: spouse and children allowed under the same application.
- Right to work: for foreign employers or clients only. A DE Rantau holder cannot be employed by a Malaysian company. They can, however, own and direct a Malaysian Sdn Bhd as a shareholder/director (the Sdn Bhd itself can then hire local staff).
- Tax treatment: foreign-sourced income remitted is generally taxable under the Income Tax Act 1967 (subject to treaty/CESTAT exemptions and the foreign-sourced income gazette orders).
DE Rantau is the best fit for a solo founder validating product- market fit in Malaysia before committing to incorporation. Many founders use it as a "trial year" and convert to an Employment Pass once revenue and capital are in place.
Premium Visa Programme (PVIP)
PVIP is Malaysia's most generous long-stay programme — a 20-year multiple-entry pass aimed at high-net-worth individuals.
- Offshore income: ≥ RM 40,000 per month or RM 480,000 per year.
- Fixed deposit: RM 1,000,000 in a Malaysian bank. RM 500,000 of this can be drawn down after the first year for property purchase, education, or medical expenses.
- Stay flexibility: no minimum stay requirement.
- Right to work: can engage in business and investment activity in Malaysia. PVIP holders frequently combine PVIP with a directorship in a Sdn Bhd and use the Sdn Bhd for local operations.
- Dependents: spouse, children, and parents may be included with separate fees.
Comparison summary
| Programme | Best for | Cost floor | Active work in MY |
|---|---|---|---|
| DE Rantau | Digital nomads validating MY | USD 24k income | No (foreign clients only) |
| MM2H Silver | Semi-retired founders | USD 150k deposit + property | Limited — board/ownership |
| MM2H Gold/Platinum | HNW long-term residents | USD 500k–1M deposit | Limited — board/ownership |
| Premium Visa (PVIP) | HNW investors | RM 1M deposit | Yes |
| Employment Pass | Operational founders | Sdn Bhd + min salary | Yes |
Combining options with a Sdn Bhd
For most founders, the long-stay programme is one piece of a larger setup that also involves choosing the right legal structure (a Sdn Bhd in almost all cases) and confirming the activity is not under a sectoral cap (see the foreign equity rules guide). The practical combination is usually:
- Phase 1 (validation): DE Rantau, work remotely with foreign clients while exploring Malaysia.
- Phase 2 (incorporation): incorporate the Sdn Bhd (see our foreign Sdn Bhd setup guide), capitalise it to ≥ RM 500k, hire local staff.
- Phase 3 (operating): apply for an Employment Pass through the new Sdn Bhd (Category I ≥ RM 10,000/month, Category II RM 5,000–9,999, Category III RM 3,000–4,999).
- Phase 4 (long-term): optionally convert to MM2H Silver/Gold or PVIP once income and asset profile is in place. This unlocks board-only roles and reduces dependence on the company for immigration status.
Tax implications
All four passes are immigration-side instruments and do not by themselves create Malaysian tax residency. Residency is established under section 7 of the Income Tax Act 1967 — generally, ≥ 182 days physical presence in a calendar year. Tax-resident individuals are taxed on Malaysia-sourced income at progressive rates (0–30%), and foreign-sourced income remitted is subject to the prevailing exemption gazette orders (currently a 5-year exemption for foreign-sourced income remitted, subject to conditions — verify current status with LHDN as the framework has been adjusted several times since 2022).
Common mistakes
- Using DE Rantau to draw a Malaysian salary. Not permitted — DE Rantau allows foreign-sourced income only.
- Assuming MM2H grants the right to operate the business. MM2H is a residence pass; it does not authorise the holder to be an employee of the Malaysian company.
- Ignoring the MM2H minimum-stay requirement. Especially Gold and Platinum's 90 days per year — falling short can void renewal.
- Treating PVIP as cheap residence-by-investment. The RM 1M deposit is locked; the income requirement is verified annually.
Sources: Immigration Department of Malaysia; MM2H Programme; DE Rantau (MDEC); Premium Visa Programme guidelines (Ministry of Home Affairs).
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