Is Affiliate Income Taxable in Malaysia? The Inland Revenue Board (LHDN) has updated guidance reminding creators and KOLs to declare earnings tied to promotional work.
If you earn money or receive freebies because you agreed to do content or promotion, that value often counts as reportable income. LHDN treats benefits linked to deliverables — like unboxing or reviews — as taxable when they arise from your work.
This short guide previews what this article covers: when earnings are taxable versus non-taxable, what counts as reportable value, whether to file as an individual or business, which form to use, how to file on MyTax, and the records to keep.
Our goal is simple. Follow a clear checklist to stay compliant, avoid surprises, and make tax season less stressful.
Key Takeaways
- Declare earnings tied to promotional deliverables to LHDN.
- Both cash and certain non-cash rewards can be reportable.
- Guidance applies to creator campaigns, platform payouts, and KOL work.
- Article will explain filing options, forms, and MyTax steps.
- Keep clear records and use the checklist to reduce last-minute stress.
Is Affiliate Income Taxable in Malaysia?
Earnings from links, codes, or paid posts become relevant to tax rules once you have a clear right to them.
When commissions count as taxable: The inland revenue expects you to report value you earn from promotional work when it arises. That means commissions are reportable once you can substantiate them, not only when money hits your bank.
When commissions become taxable income under LHDN rules
If a payment or product ties to a deliverable, LHDN treats it as taxable. This includes platform payouts or freebies that are clearly linked to your promotion.
Side income versus primary income for individuals
Small, occasional earnings may still need reporting on your annual return if they are a gain from your efforts. Regular, commercial activity can shift reporting from a personal form to a business form.
Tax residency basics and why it matters
Being a resident changes rates. Foreigners present 182+ days typically qualify as residents and face progressive rates. Non-residents usually face a higher flat rate.
| Item | Resident | Non-Resident |
|---|---|---|
| Rate type | Progressive | Flat (higher) |
| Common reliefs | Available | Limited |
| Residency test | 182+ days | Under 182 days |
Practical takeaway: Track days and records each year (YA 2024 is filed in 2025). Residency can change your final income tax bill, so keep clear logs if you travel.
What Counts as Affiliate and KOL Income That Must Be Declared
Creators should treat benefits tied to promised deliverables as reportable under LHDN guidance.
Cash earnings to declare include affiliate commissions from networks, sponsorship fees for branded posts, and payouts from platform creator programs. Keep payment records and campaign terms to match amounts to the year they arose.
Non-cash earnings can also be reportable. If you receive skincare for an unboxing video, PR packages with RM0 invoices, vouchers, or a free stay that requires a Reel or review, the value counts as earnings when linked to deliverables.
Mixed deals combine cash plus goods or services. For example, RM2,000 plus a phone should be logged as both cash and the reasonable market value of the phone.
- Free meals or hotel nights provided for content must be tracked and valued.
- Brand-sent items tied to posting obligations are treated as work-related benefits, not personal gifts.
- Keep price lists, campaign briefs, and DMs as proof of value and timing.
| Type | Example | How to record |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | Sponsorship fee, platform payout | Bank transfer slip, invoice, platform report |
| Non-cash | PR package, free stay, vouchers | Campaign brief, RM0 invoice, market price reference |
| Mixed | Fee + product (RM2,000 + phone) | Invoice + item receipt or market value |

Gift vs benefit from work: A handbag from family is a gift; a handbag from a brand that expects a post is a work benefit. Once you identify what must be declared, decide whether activity is occasional or business before filing forms.
Do You File as an Individual or as Business Income?
Your filing choice hinges less on labels and more on whether your activity runs like an organized enterprise. The right form depends on how regular, planned, and profit-driven your work appears.
When Form BE may fit
If you have a job and only get occasional commissions or one-off creator gigs, Form BE usually works. Residents who do not carry on a business report these as other gains or profits.
This is common for side projects: a few commissions a year or single campaign payments. Keep simple records and declare these on your BE return.
When Form B is more appropriate
Use Form B if your activity looks like a business. Examples: a content calendar, multiple campaigns each month, a dedicated website or store, or regular platform payouts.
Form B captures both employment and business income. Filing as business lets you claim more expenses but requires better bookkeeping and documentation.
Common signals LHDN may view as “carrying on a business”
- Repeat transactions and steady revenue streams.
- Regular invoices or formal brand agreements.
- Dedicated admin, marketing spend, or a shop/website.
- Business-like recordkeeping and significant recurring side revenue.
Practical trade-off: Treating work as business income gives valid expense relief but raises recordkeeping duties. When in doubt, err on the side of filing correctly.
This short guide moves next to which form to pick in MyTax and how to submit your return on the portal.
Which LHDN Form to Use and How to Submit Your Tax Return via MyTax
Before you log into MyTax, decide whether your activity was business-like or occasional to pick the right form.
Choose the correct form
BE: For residents with casual creator gigs and no business setup.
B: For residents who run a regular business or have steady campaigns.

Key timing and e-Filing rules
The year of assessment (YA) 2024 covers earnings made during 2024 and must be filed in 2025.
Starting YA 2024, LHDN requires electronic submission through the MyTax portal. Use EzHasil Services → e-Filing and pick the correct year before entering details.
Deadlines and first-time steps
| Form | manual deadline | e-Filing deadline |
|---|---|---|
| BE (resident, non-business) | 30 Apr 2025 | 15 May 2025 |
| B (resident, business) | 30 Jun 2025 | 15 Jul 2025 |
| M (non-resident) | Matches relevant schedule | Use MyTax e-Filing |
- First-time: register for a TIN via e-Daftar and obtain the one-time PIN to enable e-Filing.
- Log in, select the correct form and year, complete your entries, and submit electronically.
- Make sure your mobile number is current for TAC and your bank details are set so refunds can be credited smoothly.
Practical tip: Reconcile platform dashboards and campaign records after year-end so figures you enter match supporting documents. Keep receipts and contracts to back every figure on your tax return.
Records, Receipts, and Proof: What to Keep for LHDN
Documenting deals and deliveries protects you long after a post goes live. Good files make audits easier and help you claim valid deductions later.
Seven-year retention baseline
Keep supporting documents for seven years. LHDN may ask for past details long after a campaign ends, so retain folders for at least seven years.
What to save for paid payouts
Save payment gateway statements, platform payout summaries, affiliate network reports, and any invoices you issue for collaboration work.
Also keep sales confirmations and bank entries that show deposits and payout IDs.
What to save for non-cash perks
Keep campaign briefs, screenshots of agreed deliverables, DMs or emails that confirm posting obligations, and item receipts or booking notes.
If a brand issues an RM0 invoice, save it—LHDN expects proof and supporting details that show the benefit tied to a deliverable.
Audit-friendly valuation notes and simple filing
- Write a short valuation note for each item: retail price, date received, and a link or screenshot of the listed price.
- Create one folder per campaign with a clear name: YYYY-MM-DD_Brand_Name.
- Reconcile bank statements and payment reports so cash deposits match payout IDs and invoices.
Quick tip: organized records let business filers support expense claims and cut time when completing tax returns.
Claiming Expenses and Deductions for Affiliate Marketing Work
Turning regular promotional activity into a business changes how you record costs and which spending you can deduct.
When expense claims matter
Claiming costs is mainly for those filing as business income via Form B. The tax system looks at profit, not just gross receipts. That means well-documented expenses lower taxable profit.
Typical deductible items
- Website: maintenance, domain renewal, and hosting or server rental.
- Digital tools: editing software, analytics subscriptions, and creator platforms.
- Connectivity and kit: a reasonable portion of internet bills, cameras, and microphones used for work.
What you generally can’t claim
You cannot claim purely personal spending or domestic bills that don’t support the business. For example, household water or family groceries are non-allowable.
Tip: keep receipts and a short note linking each cost to your business activity. Monthly tracking makes it easy to see if a side project is turning into a real business. Responsible reporting can also help your credit when you apply for loans.
Conclusion
Creators who receive payments or freebies tied to deliverables should record and declare their benefits. This guide’s core point: work-linked cash and non-cash rewards normally count as reportable under LHDN rules.
What to include: cash commissions, sponsorship fees, and items like PR packages, vouchers, or stays when they come with posting obligations. Treat brand-provided items as benefits from work, not personal gifts.
Pick the correct form when filing your tax return: BE for resident, occasional activity; B for business-style operations; M for non-residents. Remember YA 2024 is filed in 2025 and e-Filing via MyTax is required starting that year.
Mini checklist: track every stream, save receipts and campaign briefs for seven years, add simple valuation notes for non-cash perks, and reconcile totals before submitting your return.
If earnings grow, deals span multiple platforms, or residency is unclear, consider seeking a licensed tax professional. Use this guide and related articles as a yearly reference when codes, platforms, or collaborating entities change.
