For Landlords

Landlord Rights Without a Tenancy Act: What Malaysian Law Actually Gives You (2026)

Short answer: Malaysia has no Tenancy Act. As of 2026, the Residential Tenancy Bill is still in draft and has not been tabled. Your rights as a landlord are pieced together from the Contracts Act 1950, Specific Relief Act 1950, Distress Act 1951, and Stamp Act 1949 — plus whatever is written into your tenancy agreement. Get the agreement right and you have most of what a Tenancy Act would give you. Skip it and you have very little.

Regional note: Laws cited in this article — including the Specific Relief Act 1950 and Distress Act 1951 — apply to Peninsular Malaysia. Sarawak and Sabah operate under separate state legislation (Sarawak Tenancy Ordinance Cap. 70; Sabah state statutes). If you are in East Malaysia, verify the applicable laws in your state before taking action. This is general information, not legal advice.

Where the “Tenancy Act” actually stands in 2026

The Residential Tenancy Bill has been in active drafting since 2017, with the Ministry of Housing and Local Government announcing several rounds of public consultation. As of April 2026, no Bill has been tabled in Parliament. Searches for “Malaysia Tenancy Act” return news articles from 2018, 2021, and 2023 announcing its imminent arrival — none of which led to a passed law.

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What this means in practice: every dispute, every deposit, every eviction in Malaysia today is governed by general contract and property law, not by a tenancy-specific statute. Landlords who assume “the law will protect me” without a properly drafted, stamped agreement are exposed.

The four Acts that actually do the work

ActWhat it gives the landlordWhat it does not cover
Contracts Act 1950Tenancy is a contract. Both sides are bound by what they signed. Breach gives a right to damages and, where the contract permits, termination.Doesn’t define standard tenancy terms. If your agreement is silent on rent escalation, late-payment penalty, or notice period, the Act does not fill the gap with a sensible default.
Specific Relief Act 1950 (Section 7(2))The protection most landlords miss until they need it: self-help eviction is illegal. You cannot change locks, cut utilities, or remove a tenant’s belongings yourself, even if rent is unpaid and the term has expired. Eviction must go through a court order.Doesn’t tell you how fast the court will hear you. Realistic timeline for a Magistrates’ Court eviction order in 2026: 3–6 months if uncontested, 9–18 months if the tenant defends.
Distress Act 1951Lets a landlord apply to court for a Warrant of Distress to seize the tenant’s movable property to recover up to 12 months of unpaid rent. Property is held by the court bailiff and sold if rent isn’t paid.Available only for arrears, not for breach of other terms. Not available against residential premises occupied by the tenant’s family in some circumstances. Process still takes weeks, not days.
Stamp Act 1949 (as amended by Finance Act 2024)Stamping makes the agreement admissible in court. Without stamp duty paid, you cannot enforce the agreement in any Malaysian court. Current rates (per RM250 of annual rent): RM1 (under 1 year), RM3 (1–3 years), RM5 (over 3 years), RM7 (no defined term). The RM2,400 stamp-duty exemption was removed in January 2025.Stamping does not validate unfair clauses. Doesn’t extend the term. Doesn’t waive a defective notice. Pay it within 30 days of execution or face penalties of up to RM100 plus 4× the original duty.

Six concrete landlord rights in 2026 — and how to actually use them

1. Right to receive rent on time

Comes from the contract, not statute. If your agreement specifies a payment date and a late-payment penalty (commonly 8–10% per annum on the unpaid amount), that’s enforceable. If it doesn’t, you can still claim the unpaid rent but have a harder time on the penalty.

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2. Right to deduct from the security deposit for verifiable damage

Comes from the contract plus general contract law. Deductions stick if you have: a written condition report at move-in, dated photographs, a contractor’s quote or receipt, and a written breakdown sent to the tenant. Tenants who reach Tribunal Tuntutan Pengguna Malaysia (TTPM) over disputed deductions usually win when the landlord cannot produce these documents.

3. Right to enter for repairs and inspection — but only with notice

The tenant’s right to quiet enjoyment limits this. Standard agreements give the landlord 24-hour written notice to enter for inspection or maintenance, except in genuine emergencies. Walking in unannounced, even to your own property, can be argued as breach by the tenant.

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4. Right to evict — only via the court

Section 7(2) of the Specific Relief Act 1950 makes self-help eviction illegal. Process: serve a notice to quit (length per the agreement — typically 1 month), if not vacated, file an originating summons or writ in the Sessions Court or Magistrates’ Court for possession, attend hearings, obtain order, then engage the court bailiff to enforce. There is no faster legal route. Landlords who cut electricity or change locks expose themselves to a counter-suit for trespass, harassment, and damages.

5. Right to recover rental arrears via Distress Act 1951

Where rent is in arrears and the tenant still occupies the unit, the landlord can apply to court for a Warrant of Distress to seize the tenant’s movable property. Useful as both recovery and pressure tool. Engage a lawyer — DIY distress applications get rejected on procedural grounds.

6. Right to refuse renewal — but not to discriminate

You can decline to renew at the end of the term for any non-discriminatory reason. Recent AOD Malaysia data (April 2026) showed 43.6% of Peninsular Malaysia rental listings carried racial or religious exclusions — these are unenforceable as contract terms and are increasingly flagged as discriminatory under emerging policy. A “no renewal” decision based on rent payment history, property condition, or change of personal circumstances is fine. One based on race, religion, or national origin is not.

What a Tenancy Act would change (and why it matters less than you think)

The expected Residential Tenancy Bill, based on published consultation drafts, would: standardise notice periods, cap deposit amounts, mandate a tribunal for tenancy disputes (faster than ordinary court), and clarify discrimination rules. It would not eliminate the Specific Relief Act 1950 protection against self-help eviction. It would not let you skip stamp duty. It would not invalidate a properly drafted current tenancy agreement.

Translation: a well-drafted, properly stamped tenancy agreement signed in 2026 already covers most of what a future Tenancy Act would standardise. The landlords who get hurt are the ones using verbal agreements, generic templates, or unstamped contracts.

Practical 2026 checklist before signing any tenancy

  • Written agreement with rent, term, deposit, utility deposit, late-payment penalty, notice periods, repair obligations, and inventory.
  • Stamp duty paid via e-Duti Setem (mytax.hasil.gov.my) within 30 days of execution. Stamping is what makes the agreement enforceable in court.
  • Move-in condition report with dated photos signed by both parties.
  • Tenant identity verification — NRIC or passport copy, employment proof, prior landlord reference where possible.
  • Bank account details for rent — never accept cash without a stamped receipt.
  • Clear renewal/exit clauses so neither party is surprised at end of term.

The absence of a Tenancy Act in 2026 isn’t a legal vacuum. It’s a system that rewards landlords who treat the tenancy agreement as the most important document in the relationship — because it is.

Related guides: tenancy agreement Malaysia | eviction laws in Malaysia | rental agreement stamp duty calculator | landlord guide Malaysia

Reviewed by SPEEDHOME Operations · Last updated April 2026 · Legal references current as of April 2026; Malaysian rental law is evolving (RTA proposed). Cross-check official sources before final decisions.

Wong Whei Meng

Wong Whei Meng is the CEO and co-founder of SPEEDHOME, Malaysia's largest zero-deposit rental platform. He has operated over 50,000 tenancies and built SPEEDHOME's tenant screening, digital tenancy agreement, and deposit insurance systems from the ground up. His writing on Malaysian rental law, landlord rights, and tenancy practice is based on direct operational experience running one of Malaysia's most active rental platforms.

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