Getting a notice from the tax authority can feel urgent. In Malaysia, notices cover tax clearance, missing returns, or follow-ups after audits. Most employees, employers, and registered taxpayers see these around income reporting or when someone leaves a job.
First step: identify the notice type. A tax clearance (SPC/TCL) asks for action tied to exit events. Compliance notes point to missing filings or gaps and set deadlines.
After that, confirm who must respond. Some cases need employer help. Others require the individual or next-of-kin to act. Meet deadlines, gather documents early, and use the right channel to avoid penalties.
Good news: most issues are fixable if handled quickly. This guide walks through interpreting the notice, confirming your situation, collecting records, filing via CP forms or MyTax (e-SPC/ezHASiL), and paying any tax due.
Key Takeaways
- Identify the notice type to set the right deadline and action.
- Prepare documents early to avoid delays and penalties.
- Use employer or individual channels as required for filing.
- Most cases close quickly when handled promptly.
- Verify legitimacy before paying or sharing personal data to avoid scams.
Understanding the type of LHDN letter you received
Begin with a quick scan to spot identifying terms and codes. Look for labels such as SPC, TCL, CP21, CP22A or CP22B. These tell you if the notice is about payroll clearance or filing compliance.
Tax clearance-related letters
Surat Penyelesaian Cukai (SPC) and similar notices are issued to employers under the Income Tax Act 1967. This tax clearance usually affects final pay, refunds, or release of benefits. Employers handle submission and follow-up with the inland revenue.
Tax compliance letters and emails
Compliance notices target registered taxpayers with missing returns or reporting gaps. These messages often request missing forms, clarifications, or voluntary disclosure to resolve outstanding issues quickly.
Key items to extract from the notice
- Letter date and the reference number
- Stated requested action and response method (portal, employer, or office)
- Keep a PDF/photo of the notice and any email headers to preserve the timeline
If the category is unclear, contact inland revenue for clarification rather than guessing. Clear classification speeds resolution and avoids withheld payments or penalties.
What Happens After You Receive an LHDN Letter?
Treat the notice like a task list: identify the action, the form needed, and the closing date.
Read the requested action and gather documents early
First 60 minutes: read the notice, note the deadline, find the named form, and create a document folder (digital + physical).
Confirm the case type: filing, payment, or clearance
Check whether the note asks for a missing return (filing), a payment (outstanding tax), or a tax clearance tied to resignation or departure.
If it mentions SPC/TCL or CP forms, treat it as clearance and loop in the employer.
Decide who must respond: employee, employer, or next-of-kin
Employees should verify income records and file or pay as needed. Employers handle CP submissions and withholding for final pay.
For death cases, next-of-kin must apply within 30 days from date of death and supply supporting documents.
- Communicate promptly with HR/payroll for final salary, bonuses, or withholding.
- Acknowledge receipt within the stated days if more time is needed—this shows good-faith compliance.
When tax clearance is required in Malaysia (and why it matters)
Before travel plans or a new job start, check whether a clearance is needed to avoid withheld pay.
Tax clearance ensures income tax obligations are settled before a person exits the payroll system or leaves the country. The rule protects both the taxpayer and the employer by preventing unpaid tax from being carried forward.
Leaving Malaysia for more than three months
If an individual plans to be outside the country for over three months, a tax clearance is usually required. This covers residents and expatriates. Employers may be asked to report the departure and hold final payments until obligations are resolved.
Changing jobs within Malaysia
When an employee resigns, retires, or is terminated, the previous employer often seeks a tax clearance letter. This clears any tax due from prior employment before payroll is finalised and before the new employer begins reporting.
Foreign workers leaving after employment ends
Foreign workers must complete clearance as part of the exit process. Employers should coordinate submission so last salary, benefits, and work permit closure are not delayed.
Tip: align resignation or travel dates with clearance timelines to avoid payment holds and onboarding delays.
- Why it matters: delays in final payment, complications with new employers, and the risk of penalties.
- Practical step: notify payroll early and gather income documents to speed up clearance.
Key deadlines and timelines to track from the letter date
Start by laying out a simple timeline from event to clearance. Note the notice date and the announced deadlines. Use this to plan submission and follow-up steps.

Quick timeline tracker
| Event date | Notification deadline | Submission date | Expected processing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Termination / resignation / retirement | At least 30 days before | As soon as HR confirms | About 14 working days |
| Death | Apply within 30 days from date | Next-of-kin submission | About 14 working days |
Employer rule: HR should notify the tax office at least 30 days before termination or departure. This helps avoid last-minute payroll holds.
Tip: Employers may hold final payments for up to 90 days or until clearance is issued. Coordinate early if travel or a new job start date is fixed.
Keep records of every step: submission confirmations, emails, and portal screenshots. These prove timelines if a dispute over days or payments arises.
Documents and information you’ll likely need to prepare
A tidy file of key records speeds review and lowers the chance of follow-up queries.
Start with three core proof types: proof of income, proof of employment status, and proof of past compliance. These help officers confirm totals and clear matches against portal records.
Income statements and annual summaries
Provide EA for the private sector and EC for government staff. These statements show reported income for the year and feed straight into e-filing.
Employment and identity documents
Include the employment contract, termination letter if relevant, and a passport copy for expatriates or travel-related clearance. These documents often unblock payroll or exit cases.
Prior filings and recent updates
Attach past tax returns, noted relief claims, and disclosures. Highlight salary changes, allowances or residency updates that affect income tax calculations.
Organize everything in one folder with subfolders: Income, Employment, ID, Prior Returns, Payments. Reconcile EA/EC totals against filed numbers before submission to reduce back-and-forth.
How to apply for a Tax Clearance Letter (TCL/SPC) through your employer
Notify your payroll or HR team promptly to trigger the employer-led clearance submission. The employee raises the case, but the employer files the correct paperwork and receives the final letter.
Choosing the right CP form
Use CP21 if the individual will leave Malaysia. Use CP22A for private sector resignation, termination, retirement, or death. Use CP22B when the case involves government staff.
Private vs government submission roles
In the private sector, coordinate with HR or payroll. In the government sector, a specific officer or finance unit typically manages submission. Confirm who will sign and upload the documents.
What happens after submission
After the employer submits the form, the tax office reviews documents, may request clarifications, and assesses any outstanding tax. If all is clear, the SPC or tax clearance letter is issued to the employer—usually within ~14 working days.
Tip: avoid delays by checking names, ID numbers, employment dates, and attached proof before submission. Ask HR for confirmation and the expected review time.
The issued clearance letter lets the employer finalise payroll and decide on withheld payments. Stay in touch with employers so payroll closure or onboarding dates are not disrupted.
Submitting through MyTax: e-SPC and ezHASiL options (current process)
The e-SPC workflow on MyTax centralises employer updates and speeds processing.
How the portal and system work in practice
MyTax is the online portal and system used for tax tasks, including e-SPC for clearance-related employer actions and ezHASiL functions.
Mandatory e-SPC updates from Sept 1, 2024
From Sept 1, 2024, any amendment or addition to employee records must use the e-SPC system. Employers should not file those changes manually.
Online vs office actions
- Online via e-SPC/ezHASiL: most submissions, status tracking, and basic updates.
- HASiL office visit: cancellation requests and file-specific investigations.
HR will typically ask for: ID number, employment dates, last working day, and EA/EC details to complete a correct e-SPC submission.
| Action | Online (e-SPC / ezHASiL) | In-person (HASiL office) |
|---|---|---|
| Amend/add employee info | Required via e-SPC | Not accepted for amendments |
| Cancellation of case | Not recommended | Handled manually at office |
| Status queries | Track in portal | Use if file-specific issue persists |
Tip: save portal receipts and screenshots. If stuck, contact the inland revenue careline to avoid duplicate submissions that may delay clearance.
Paying outstanding income tax to unlock clearance
A verified payment of due taxes is the usual trigger for finalising a clearance. In most cases the tax office must first identify any outstanding tax before it moves to issue a clearance letter.

How the office calculates the amount
Shortfalls often come from unfiled years, underpaid installments, or mismatched income reporting. Late adjustments or missing EA/EC totals also create a balance that shows as an amount due.
Why full payment is needed
Their rule is clear: full settlement is required before the clearance is released. Until then, employers may continue withholding final pay or benefits.
Quote: “Settle the assessed balance and keep proof; it speeds the final payroll process.”
Safe steps to settle the balance
- Confirm the reference number on the notice and match the amount against filed returns.
- Use authorised payment channels listed by the tax office and keep receipts.
- Send proof of payment to HR so payroll can update the clearance status.
Paying quickly helps the timeline, but final processing still depends on review and document completeness. If the stated amount does not match your records, contact the tax office promptly to resolve discrepancies.
If your letter is about missing returns or tax compliance issues
A compliance message often signals gaps in submitted returns or mismatches in reported income.
Why notices go to registered taxpayers
Authorities flag registered taxpayers who do not file regularly or show reporting gaps. Triggers include missing years, mismatched EA/EC totals, or unusual entries that raise risk indicators.
How to respond quickly
Step-by-step:
- Verify the note and reference number against your records.
- Identify which year(s) or income types are missing.
- Prepare to file or amend returns rather than waiting for escalation.
Voluntary disclosure and lower penalties
Voluntary disclosure lets taxpayers correct underreported income and may reduce penalties. In special programmes, reported penalty rates around 10%–15% of the assessed tax have applied.
If you already settled within the stipulated period
If you filed or paid within days specified in the letter, keep acknowledgments and receipts. Often a resolved case requires no further action; retain proof in case of follow-up.
Note: verify any payment requests through official channels and beware of scammers asking for personal data or immediate transfers.
What employers must do after an LHDN letter about an employee
Employers must act quickly when a tax-clearance process affects an employee’s payroll. Compliance is not optional; prompt filing protects both staff and the company.
Which form to submit
For termination or death cases, the employer files the correct form: CP22A for private sector staff and CP22B for government staff. Ensure all employee details are accurate on the form to avoid delays.
Withholding and payroll coordination
Employers may withhold final payments for up to 90 days or until a clearance letter is issued. Plan payroll and cashflow to account for this hold and advise affected employees or next-of-kin about expected timelines.
Issue EA (private) or EC (public) statements by Feb 28 so staff can e-file from March 1 with correct income figures. Keep clear records of communications, required documents, and receipts.
- Build a checklist and assign ownership (HR vs payroll vs finance).
- Keep submission proof and track the employee’s tax file status.
- Communicate clearly about withheld payments, needed documents, and next steps.
Tip: late or incorrect submissions can cause enforcement and operational friction; a simple checklist reduces risk.
Avoiding penalties, delays, and scams during the LHDN process
A single missed deadline can start a chain of enforcement steps that affect payroll and travel plans. Treat any official note seriously, verify quickly, and act within the stated days to reduce risk.
Consequences of leaving Malaysia with unpaid tax
Leaving without settling assessed tax carries real legal exposure. For tax defaults, penalties can range from fines of RM200 to RM20,000 and may include imprisonment for up to six months.
These are factual sanctions, not mere warnings. Plan time to clear balances before travel to avoid enforced returns or denied exit.
How delays can trigger enforcement for both employer and employee
Slow responses lengthen processing and can keep final pay on hold. A missed deadline may prompt stronger actions by authorities against an employee and the employer if withholding or notification rules were not followed.
- Extended processing = prolonged payroll holds and administrative checks.
- Repeated noncompliance can escalate to formal assessments or legal steps.
Verifying legitimacy and avoiding scams
Confirm any note before paying or sharing data. Use official channels to verify the reference and amounts.
- Call careline: 1-800-88-5436 (Malaysia) or +603-7713 6666 (overseas).
- Visit the nearest HASiL office if in doubt and keep a written note of call details (date, time, officer name, guidance).
- Scams checklist: check sender, confirm reference numbers, do not click unknown links, and never pay into suspicious accounts.
Quick tip: swift verification and timely action protect both employee and employer. Save payment proof and submission receipts to show compliance later.
Conclusion
Wrap up: check deadlines, confirm who must act, and match the required form to the stated action on the notice.
Keep key timelines in mind: notify authorities or the employer at least 30 days for terminations or travel over three months. Typical processing runs about 14 working days, and employers may withhold payments for up to 90 days.
Tax clearance matters for job changes, long absences from the country, and foreign workers leaving. Employers submit via the portal and handle most form submission steps. Employees provide income proof and documents to speed review.
Final tips: double-check relief claims and prior returns, verify legitimacy through official channels, and keep receipts and screenshots as proof of compliance.
