Malaysia PVIP Investor Visa: Real Estate, Bonds & MIDA 2026
Malaysia’s PVIP investor visa — the Premium Visa Programme — is the most permissive long-term residency available to foreign nationals in Southeast Asia. Unlike the MM2H, it imposes no minimum stay requirement, places no restriction on employment or business ownership, and is valid for 20 years renewable for a further 20. For high-net-worth Western investors who want to work, invest, and build a Southeast Asian base simultaneously, PVIP is a fundamentally different instrument. This guide explains exactly what you get, how the three investment routes compare, and how the MIDA approval process works for applicants targeting strategic business sectors.

Table of Contents
- PVIP vs MM2H: Fundamental Differences
- Core Eligibility Requirements 2026
- Investment Route 1: Real Estate
- Investment Route 2: Malaysian Government Bonds
- Investment Route 3: Bursa Malaysia Equities
- The MIDA Approval Process for Strategic Sectors
- Application Process Step by Step
- Total Cost Modelling
- FAQ
1. PVIP vs MM2H: Fundamental Differences
The most common mistake Western investors make is treating PVIP and MM2H as interchangeable. They are not — they serve entirely different profiles. MM2H is a lifestyle residency for passive residents; PVIP is an active investor and business visa. The distinction is structural, not cosmetic.
| Criterion | PVIP | MM2H Gold | MM2H Platinum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa duration | 20 years (+ 20 renewal) | 15 years | 20 years |
| Fixed deposit (RM) | 1,000,000 | ~2,250,000 | ~4,500,000 |
| Participation fee | RM 200,000 (principal) | None | None |
| Work permitted | Yes — unrestricted | No | Limited* |
| Business ownership | Yes — full rights | No | Limited* |
| Min. stay required | None | 90 days/yr (under 50) | 90 days/yr (under 50) |
| Property purchase | Optional (any type) | Mandatory RM 1M+ | Mandatory RM 2M+ |
| Offshore income req. | RM 40,000/month | None | None |
| Min. age | None | 25 | 25 |
| Dependants | Spouse, children, parents, in-laws, domestic staff | Spouse, children <34 | Spouse, children <34 |
The critical differentiator is the offshore income requirement: PVIP requires demonstrating RM 40,000 per month (~€8,000) in offshore income — a threshold that filters out retirees living off capital but aligns perfectly with active entrepreneurs, executives, and investors managing international portfolios. If you meet this income test, PVIP likely outperforms MM2H on rights-per-ringgit terms.
2. Core Eligibility Requirements 2026
PVIP eligibility is deliberately streamlined. There are no age restrictions, no language tests, and no minimum stay obligations. The programme is administered by Malaysia’s Immigration Department (Jabatan Imigresen Malaysia) and requires submission through an authorised agency.
Financial requirements (principal applicant):
- Offshore income: Minimum RM 40,000/month (approximately USD 9,000 or €8,000) — proven via 3–6 months of bank statements and an income confirmation letter.
- Fixed deposit: RM 1,000,000 placed with a licensed Malaysian bank. The deposit is held in your name and fully refundable upon visa termination. Partial withdrawal of 50% is permitted after 6 months from first PVIP endorsement, for approved purposes: property purchase, medical expenses, or children’s education in Malaysia.
- Participation fee: RM 200,000 (principal) — this is a non-refundable government fee, not a deposit. Dependant fees: RM 100,000 each. For a family of four (spouse + two children), the total participation fee reaches RM 500,000.
Documentation requirements: valid passport (18+ months remaining), police clearance certificate from country of residence for principal and any dependant over 18, medical report, health insurance policy valid in Malaysia, and proof of income. All foreign documents require certified translation into English and notarisation.
A note effective March 2026: a reduced 10-year PVIP option has been introduced at a discounted participation fee of RM 100,000 for the principal (50% reduction). This is designed for applicants who want PVIP rights without the full 20-year commitment, and is particularly relevant for younger investors in their 30s who may reassess their base location within a decade.
3. Investment Route 1: Real Estate
Property investment is the most popular deployment strategy for PVIP holders’ capital — and for good reason. Unlike MM2H, which restricts holders to residential property only, PVIP holders may purchase any property type in Malaysia: residential, commercial, and industrial. This is a substantial advantage for investors who want to combine residency with income-generating commercial real estate.
There is no PVIP-specific minimum property purchase price — PVIP does not mandate a property purchase at all. However, PVIP holders remain subject to each state’s foreign buyer minimum thresholds, which typically range from RM 500,000 to RM 1,000,000 for residential property and higher for commercial, depending on location. Kuala Lumpur and Selangor generally apply a RM 1,000,000 minimum for foreigners on residential purchases; Johor and Penang have their own state-level frameworks.
The most compelling play for a PVIP investor combining the RM 1M fixed deposit with a property purchase: use the 50% FD withdrawal (RM 500,000) after 6 months to partially fund a residential or commercial acquisition in Kuala Lumpur’s prime corridors — KLCC, TRX, Bangsar South, or Mont Kiara. At current KL prime residential yields of 4–6% gross and commercial yields of 5–7% gross, a RM 1,500,000–2,000,000 property financed partly through FD withdrawal delivers meaningful returns while the residency structure is locked in for 20 years.
For a deeper analysis of Malaysia’s prime real estate markets, yields by district, and the legal process for foreign buyers, see our Investing in Malaysia: The Ultimate Guide 2026.
4. Investment Route 2: Malaysian Government Bonds
Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) and Government Investment Issues (GII, the Islamic equivalent) represent the fixed-income deployment option for PVIP investors seeking capital preservation alongside Malaysian residency. While the PVIP does not mandate bond investment — the RM 1M fixed deposit already satisfies the programme’s financial commitment — PVIP holders frequently deploy additional capital into MGS for portfolio diversification.
Why MGS is relevant to PVIP investors: Malaysia’s bond market is Southeast Asia’s most developed, with over RM 1.7 trillion in outstanding government securities as of 2025. MGS yields for 10-year tenors currently range between 3.8% and 4.2% per annum — above the PVIP fixed deposit rate of approximately 3.0% in MYR — with the additional benefit of potential capital appreciation if interest rates fall. MGS are denominated in ringgit, providing currency exposure to MYR, which has historically weakened against EUR and USD over 10-year cycles but offers diversification value for investors concentrated in developed market fixed income.
Retail access to MGS for PVIP holders is available through Bursa Malaysia’s Bond+Sukuk Information Exchange and through licensed Malaysian banks and brokers. The minimum investment for retail MGS varies by issuance but is typically RM 1,000. Importantly, interest income from Malaysian government bonds is tax-exempt for non-resident holders under Malaysia’s territorial tax system — a compelling structural advantage for European investors facing domestic withholding taxes of 25–30% on bond interest at home.
5. Investment Route 3: Bursa Malaysia Equities
Bursa Malaysia is the third major deployment avenue for PVIP investors’ capital, and arguably the most overlooked by Western applicants. With over 900 listed companies and a market capitalisation exceeding RM 1.8 trillion, Bursa offers access to Malaysian growth companies across technology, healthcare, consumer, plantation, and financial services sectors — all accessible to PVIP holders through a Malaysian brokerage account opened following visa approval.
The PVIP’s unrestricted investment rights mean holders can actively trade, hold strategic stakes, or participate in IPOs — rights that MM2H Silver and Gold holders do not enjoy. For investors building a Southeast Asian equity exposure, the combination of PVIP residency and a Malaysian brokerage account creates a genuinely privileged access point: you benefit from local market intelligence, proximity to management teams, and the ability to attend AGMs and engage with listed companies as a Malaysian-based investor rather than a distant foreign portfolio holder.
Key sectors for PVIP equity investors in 2026: technology (particularly semiconductor back-end services — Malaysia produces approximately 13% of global semiconductor packages), healthcare (private hospital networks with regional expansion), and infrastructure REITs listed on Bursa. Dividend income from Malaysian equities is not subject to withholding tax for foreign investors, and Malaysia operates a territorial tax system — only Malaysian-sourced income is taxable for residents.
6. The MIDA Approval Process for Strategic Business Sectors
PVIP holders who intend to establish or invest in a Malaysian business in a strategic sector — manufacturing, technology, healthcare, agro-industry, or logistics — will interact with the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA), the government agency responsible for promoting and approving foreign investment in Malaysia’s industrial and services sectors.
MIDA approval is not required simply to hold a PVIP or to invest in listed equities. It becomes relevant when a PVIP holder wishes to: establish a manufacturing operation; invest in a licensed financial services entity; access investment incentives (tax holidays, capital allowances, import duty exemptions); or operate in a sector reserved for Bumiputera ownership or subject to foreign equity caps.
MIDA Strategic Sectors and Investment Incentives
Malaysia’s Investment Policy Review identifies several priority sectors for foreign direct investment in 2024–2030 under the NIMP (New Industrial Master Plan). PVIP investors targeting these sectors can access substantial incentive packages through MIDA:
| Sector | Key Activities | Principal Incentive Available |
|---|---|---|
| Advanced Electronics & Semiconductor | Chip design, back-end packaging, testing | Pioneer Status (5–10 yr tax holiday) or Investment Tax Allowance |
| Medical Devices & Pharma | Manufacturing, R&D, clinical trials | Pioneer Status + import duty exemption on inputs |
| Digital Services & Tech | Data centres, fintech, AI/ML platforms | MSC Malaysia status, 10-yr income tax exemption |
| Agro-Food & Food Processing | High-value processed food, aquaculture | Investment Tax Allowance 60–100% on qualifying capex |
| Healthcare Services | Private hospitals, specialist clinics | Pioneer Status in promoted areas |
| Green Technology | Solar, EV components, circular economy | Green Investment Tax Allowance, GTFS financing |
MIDA Application Process — Step by Step
Step 1 — Pre-application consultation. MIDA offers free pre-application consultation through its Investment Services Centre (ISC) in Kuala Lumpur and regional offices. PVIP holders should use this stage to verify sector eligibility, identify applicable incentive packages, and confirm any foreign equity restrictions that apply to their proposed activity. MIDA’s online portal (mida.gov.my) provides downloadable sector guides updated annually.
Step 2 — Application submission. Applications for manufacturing licences and incentives are submitted via MIDA’s InvestMalaysia Portal (investmalaysia.mida.gov.my). Required documentation includes: business plan with 5-year financial projections, proof of proposed premises (ownership or tenancy), environmental compliance declaration, and corporate documents. For a wholly foreign-owned entity, a legal opinion on foreign equity permissibility may be required for regulated sectors.
Step 3 — Processing and approval. MIDA targets a 30-working-day processing timeline for standard manufacturing applications and 14 working days for digital and services sector applications. Complex projects involving environmental assessment or inter-agency coordination (with the Economic Planning Unit for large FDI projects above RM 1 billion) may take longer. MIDA assigns a dedicated investment officer to each application — this relationship is worth cultivating, as it provides direct access to resolution of procedural delays.
Step 4 — Incentive agreement and commencement. Approved incentives are formalised in a Letter of Approval detailing conditions: commencement deadline (typically 2 years from approval), qualifying expenditure thresholds, local employment requirements, and technology transfer obligations for Pioneer Status recipients. Non-compliance with conditions results in incentive clawback — a risk that must be factored into business planning from the outset.
7. PVIP Application Process Step by Step
All PVIP applications must be submitted through an authorised agency registered with Malaysia’s Immigration Department. There is no direct application route — the agency requirement is mandatory, mirroring the post-2024 MM2H reform.
Phase 1 — Document preparation (4–8 weeks). Compile and notarise all required documents in your home country. The most time-consuming element is typically the police clearance certificate, which in France (casier judiciaire) takes 2–4 weeks by post, and income verification if your earnings derive from complex structures such as holding companies, dividends, or investment returns rather than a simple employment contract.
Phase 2 — Submission and conditional approval (60 working days). Your authorised agent submits the complete dossier to the Immigration Department. The standard processing time is 60 working days (~3 months). The conditional approval letter is valid for 6 months — you must travel to Malaysia and complete the in-country steps within this window.
Phase 3 — In-country completion (3–5 working days). Upon arrival in Malaysia: Day 1 — medical check-up at a clinic approved by the Immigration Department; purchase health insurance valid in Malaysia; open a fixed deposit account at your chosen bank (bring your conditional approval letter — most banks accept CIMB, Maybank, Public Bank, or RHB for MM2H/PVIP FDs). Day 2–3 — transfer funds to FD account (international transfers take 1–3 business days). Day 4–5 — submit passport for visa endorsement; collect PVIP sticker. The entire in-country process is typically completed in 3–5 working days with proper pre-planning.
8. Total Cost Modelling — PVIP 20-Year Horizon
Unlike MM2H, the PVIP’s cost structure is dominated by the non-refundable participation fee rather than the fixed deposit opportunity cost — because the RM 1M FD requirement is significantly lower than MM2H Gold or Platinum in absolute terms.
| Cost Item | Amount (RM) | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed deposit placed | 1,000,000 | Refundable |
| FD interest earned (3% p.a. × 20 yrs) | +600,000 | Income |
| Opportunity cost (5% × RM 1M × 20 yrs) | −1,000,000 | Cost |
| Participation fee (principal) | −200,000 | Non-refundable |
| Agent fee (est.) | −25,000–40,000 | Non-refundable |
| Document legalisation + translation | −6,000 | Non-refundable |
| Medical + insurance (RM 6,000/yr × 20) | −120,000 | Non-refundable |
| Renewal fee (year 20) | −200,000 est. | Non-refundable |
| Net non-recoverable cost (20 yrs) | ~−951,000–966,000 | |
| Annual equivalent | ~−47,500–48,300/yr |
The annual equivalent non-recoverable cost of PVIP (approximately RM 48,000/year, or ~€9,600) is remarkably close to MM2H Gold (approximately RM 54,720/year) — yet PVIP delivers substantially superior rights. For any applicant who meets the RM 40,000/month income threshold, the PVIP’s rights premium over MM2H Gold at comparable annual cost makes it the dominant choice on a financial basis.
The calculus shifts for applicants who cannot demonstrate RM 40,000/month in offshore income — retired investors living off capital drawdowns, for instance — for whom MM2H remains the appropriate vehicle. For a complete cross-programme comparison, see our MM2H Application Guide and our MM2H Tier Comparison: Silver, Gold & Platinum.
9. FAQ — PVIP Investor Visa Malaysia
Does PVIP lead to permanent residency or citizenship?
No. PVIP is a long-stay visa, not a permanent residency or citizenship pathway. It does not confer a Malaysian identity card (MyKad) equivalent or a path to naturalisation. Malaysia’s citizenship rules require, among other criteria, 10+ years of permanent resident status — a status that PVIP does not provide. Applications from Israeli citizens are not accepted under the current programme framework.
Can a PVIP holder set up a Malaysian company and be its director?
Yes. PVIP holders have full rights to incorporate a Malaysian company (Sdn Bhd), serve as director, hold shares, and operate the business. This is a core differentiator from MM2H. The company incorporation process (via SSM — Companies Commission of Malaysia) is straightforward and takes 1–3 days online. Sectors requiring additional licensing — financial services, legal, medical practice — carry their own regulatory requirements independent of PVIP status.
How is offshore income defined for PVIP eligibility?
Offshore income means income derived from sources outside Malaysia. This includes salary from a foreign employer paid into a foreign bank account, dividends from non-Malaysian companies, rental income from foreign properties, and investment returns from non-Malaysian portfolios. Following a March 2026 update, proof via net worth of at least RM 1 billion is also accepted as an alternative financial qualifier — relevant for ultra-high-net-worth individuals whose income is primarily capital-based rather than recurring.
Is the RM 200,000 participation fee refundable if the application is rejected?
The participation fee is typically paid in stages — a deposit of RM 2,000 at application submission, with the balance due upon conditional approval. If the application is rejected before conditional approval, the RM 2,000 deposit may be forfeited but the full RM 200,000 is not at risk. Your authorised agent will clarify the exact payment schedule and refund policy at the time of engagement. PVIP approval is not guaranteed even for technically eligible applicants — the Immigration Department retains discretionary authority.
Can PVIP and MIDA incentives be combined?
Yes — and this combination is one of the most compelling aspects of the PVIP for serious investors. A PVIP holder establishing a manufacturing or technology company in Malaysia can simultaneously benefit from PVIP’s residency rights and a MIDA-approved incentive package (Pioneer Status, Investment Tax Allowance, import duty exemption). The two frameworks are administered by different agencies — Immigration Department for PVIP, MIDA for investment incentives — and there is no conflict between them. This is precisely the profile PVIP was designed to attract: active foreign investors who live and work in Malaysia while deploying capital into strategic sectors.
Is PVIP Right for Your Malaysia Strategy?
The Malaysia PVIP investor visa is the most powerful long-stay instrument available to foreign nationals who can demonstrate RM 40,000/month in offshore income and commit RM 1,000,000 to a Malaysian fixed deposit. Its combination of full work rights, zero minimum stay, 20-year duration, and MIDA incentive compatibility makes it structurally superior to MM2H for active investors and entrepreneurs — at a comparable annual non-recoverable cost to MM2H Gold. The three investment routes — real estate, government bonds, and Bursa equities — offer genuine diversification within a single residency framework that few other Asian programmes can match.
Our network includes authorised PVIP agents and MIDA-experienced corporate advisory firms with specialist knowledge of Western investor profiles. Contact us for a personalised assessment — at no charge.
Disclaimer: This article provides financial and procedural information for illustrative purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or immigration advice. Programme requirements, fees, and incentive structures are subject to change by the Malaysian government. Verify all current requirements with Malaysia’s Immigration Department (imi.gov.my), MIDA (mida.gov.my), and a licensed authorised agent before making any financial commitment. Last updated: February 2026.
