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Income Tax for RM9,000 Salary in Malaysia

Earning RM9,000 a month (about RM108,000 a year) in Malaysia? Your estimated income tax for YA 2025 is RM 8,450.00, an effective rate of 7.82%, leaving roughly RM 7,263.83 a month in take-home pay. Here is the full breakdown - adjust the figures for your own reliefs to refine it.

RM
RM
Estimated income tax for the year
RM 8,450.00
Annual incomeRM 108,000.00
Total tax reliefs- RM 13,000.00
Chargeable incomeRM 95,000.00
Tax on chargeable incomeRM 8,450.00
Tax rebate- RM 0.00
Tax payableRM 8,450.00
Effective tax rate7.82%

Estimate for a resident individual. Your actual tax depends on your exact reliefs, rebates and type of income. Not a substitute for LHDN e-Filing.

What RM9,000 a month means after tax

Annual gross incomeRM 108,000.00
EPF - your 11% (per year)RM 11,880.00
EPF incl. employer (per year)RM 24,840.00
Chargeable income (after standard reliefs)RM 95,000.00
Estimated income tax (YA 2025)RM 8,450.00
Effective tax rate7.82%
Estimated monthly take-homeRM 7,263.83

After standard reliefs your chargeable income is about RM 95,000.00, so the top slice of your income sits in the 19% band (RM 70,000.00 to RM 100,000.00). Because Malaysia taxes each band separately, your overall effective rate is only 7.82% - an estimated RM 8,450.00 for the year.

After EPF, SOCSO, EIS and estimated monthly PCB, your take-home pay works out to roughly RM 7,263.83 a month. Claiming further reliefs - lifestyle (up to RM2,500), insurance, SSPN or PRS - would lower the tax further; see the full list in our tax reliefs guide.

How income tax works in Malaysia

Malaysia taxes resident individuals on a progressive scale for Year of Assessment 2025. You are not taxed on every ringgit you earn - only on your chargeable income, which is total income minus tax reliefs.

The first RM5,000 of chargeable income is tax-free. Rates then step up from 1% to 30%, and only the portion of income inside each band is taxed at that band rate.

Tax reliefs reduce what you pay

Every resident gets an automatic RM9,000 individual relief. Common additional reliefs include EPF contributions (up to RM4,000), life insurance and voluntary EPF (up to RM3,000), lifestyle spending (up to RM2,500), and reliefs for a spouse, children, parents and medical costs. Totalling your reliefs gives a closer estimate.

The RM400 rebate

If your chargeable income is RM35,000 or below, you receive a RM400 tax rebate, which often cancels the tax entirely.

Frequently asked questions

Who needs to pay income tax in Malaysia?
You generally must register and file if your annual income after EPF deduction exceeds about RM34,000 (roughly RM3,000 a month). Filing is good practice even below that.
What is chargeable income?
Your total annual income minus every tax relief and deduction you qualify for. Income tax is calculated on this figure, not your gross salary.
When is the tax filing deadline?
For employment income, filing usually closes on 30 April, with LHDN e-Filing typically extended to 15 May of the following year. Confirm exact dates with LHDN.
Is this calculator accurate?
It applies the official YA 2025 brackets and the RM400 rebate. It is an estimate - your final tax depends on the exact reliefs you claim, so always confirm with LHDN e-Filing.

Sources & last reviewed

Figures on this page were last reviewed on against official Malaysian sources for YA 2025. Always confirm the current figure at the source before acting:

Reviewed by the KiraDuit editorial team.

Figures are estimates for general guidance only, not financial advice. Rates verified 2026. Always confirm with the relevant authority before making a decision.