From 1 July 2025, many leasing and rental leasing services become subject to an 8% service tax under the Service Tax Act 2018. This change widens the scope of taxable services and affects businesses that lease assets or provide short-term hire.
The Royal Malaysian Customs Department published a guide on 9 June 2025 to help registered persons identify which services are taxable. The guide clarifies the first schedule and the categories that fall within the new scope of service tax.
To know if you must charge service tax, compare your annual value of leasing services provided to the RM500,000 threshold. Registration rules and transition steps come into force in the period July 2025, with some obligations kicking in by September 2025.
Key Takeaways
- From 1 July 2025 an 8% service tax applies to many rental leasing services.
- The Service Tax Act 2018 and the Customs guide (9 June 2025) explain taxable services.
- Compare your annual leasing value to the RM500,000 threshold to check registration need.
- First schedule and service tax regulations will shape which services are taxable.
- Prepare for registration and compliance steps during the July–September 2025 transition.
Understanding the Scope of Rental SST Malaysia
New rules effective 1 July 2025 clarify which use-of-asset agreements fall under the service tax. The Royal Malaysian Customs Department defines leasing as granting the right to use a tangible asset for a set period.
The first schedule was updated in June 2025 to place space hire and passenger vehicle hire in Group K. That means many commercial space and passenger vehicle leasing services become a taxable service from the period July 2025.
The customs department says the service tax applies to the value of the taxable service, excluding specific exemptions like housing accommodations. Businesses must check contracts and monitor leasing services provided to confirm if they are subject service tax at the 8% rate.
| Asset Type | Group | Taxable From | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commercial space | Group K | 1 July 2025 | Subject to 8% service tax; check exemptions |
| Passenger vehicles | Group K | 1 July 2025 | Includes short-term hire; fleet agreements may vary |
| Housing accommodations | Excluded | — | Specified exemption under service tax regulations |
Determining Your Registration Requirements
Before charging service tax, check whether your leasing receipts push you past the RM500,000 mark in any 12‑month period. That one calculation decides if you must register as a registered person under the Service Tax Act 2018.
Threshold for Mandatory Registration
The Royal Malaysian Customs and the malaysian customs department state the registration threshold clearly: RM500,000 in a rolling 12‑month period. If your leasing services exceed this value, register and charge 8% service tax from 1 July 2025.

Monitoring Annual Rental Turnover
Track all leasing income and separate those receipts in your accounts. As a registered person, you must report taxable services in the SST-02 returns and include the service tax value for every period.
| Action | Deadline | Required Filing |
|---|---|---|
| Assess 12‑month turnover | Ongoing | Internal records |
| Register if > RM500,000 | Before September 2025 | Registration application |
| Start charging service tax | Effective July 2025 | SST-02 returns |
Taxable Versus Non-Taxable Leasing Services
Classify each agreement by whether ownership passes at the end of the term. If ownership stays with the lessor, the arrangement is normally treated as an operating lease and is subject to service tax.
Financial leases that transfer ownership at the end of the period are treated differently. These agreements are generally outside the scope of the service tax because they effect a sale, not a pure service.
Distinguishing Between Operating and Financial Leases
- Operating leases: the lessor retains ownership throughout the rental leasing period and the service is taxable.
- Financial leases: transfer of ownership at term end means the arrangement is not a taxable service.
- Non-taxable items include housing accommodations, reading materials, and assets located outside malaysia.
- Review your contracts and assess the value of leasing services provided to confirm if the threshold for registration is met.
Navigating Exemptions and Business-to-Business Relief
Businesses that sublet assets between registered entities may qualify for relief to avoid double charging along the supply chain. This B2B relief helps ensure the 8% service tax does not cascade when one registered person passes a service on to another.
Under the First Schedule, a registered person can claim exemption where qualifying conditions are met. That reduces the net tax impact for firms that frequently engage in rental leasing and subletting.

Non-reviewable contracts signed before 1 July 2025 receive a 12-month exemption from the effective date. This grace period gives businesses time to adjust pricing and update systems without immediate added tax on existing agreements.
- Keep clear records to prove eligibility for B2B relief and the non-reviewable-contract exemption.
- Check the First Schedule for specific conditions that apply to leasing services and rental leasing services.
- Confirm your status as a registered person before claiming these exemptions.
Tip: Review sublease chains and document dates to ensure the exemption period and B2B relief apply. When in doubt, consult the latest guidance to stay compliant while minimizing costs.
Managing the Financial Impact on Your Operations
Prepare your finance team: the 8% service tax will change pricing and cash flow from July 2025. Start by running simple models that show how the tax affects margins on each lease or hire.
Adjusting Pricing Strategies
Review markups and consider phased pass-throughs so customers see smaller increases. Use clear scenarios: absorb part of the tax, pass it on, or split the cost.
Updating Invoicing Procedures
Update invoices to show the 8% service tax as a separate line. This helps customers and makes remittance simpler for the registered person.
Preparing for Customs Audits
The Royal Malaysian Customs Department and the customs department expect clear records. Keep detailed ledgers of all rental leasing services provided, note any non-reviewable contracts, and document exemptions claimed.
- Integrate the tax into accounting systems by effective July 2025.
- Train staff on invoice templates and tax remittance rules.
- Keep copies of sales contracts and registration proofs for audits.
Conclusion
Wrap up your compliance plan by confirming which agreements trigger the 8% service tax. Keep a simple checklist so staff can spot when a contract moves into the taxable category.
Monitor annual receipts to see if the RM500,000 threshold is reached. From July 2025, many rental leasing services are subject to new reporting and invoicing rules.
Distinguish operating from financial leases, use B2B relief where eligible, and apply the non-reviewable contract exemption correctly. Keep clear records so you can show why a service or lease is taxable or exempt.
By staying informed and keeping tidy accounts, your business can meet obligations and reduce surprises when you charge and remit the service tax.
