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Chinese buyers are increasingly favouring Malaysia as a place to buy homes and settle families, even while reducing exposure to some other overseas markets. Recent data shows Chinese nationals now form the single largest group of foreign property purchasers in Malaysia, drawn by lifestyle, education, visa options and comparatively affordable prices in cities like Kuala Lumpur and Johor.
Chinese buyers now lead foreign purchases in Malaysia
Reports from 2024–2025 show a clear shift: Chinese nationals have become the largest foreign buyer group in Malaysia’s residential market. One 1H2025 review notes that China property buyers are the top among foreign purchasers, with strong interest in Kuala Lumpur and Johor, particularly for homes priced up to around RM2 million.
At the ultra‑rich level, Malaysia has climbed into the top tier of destinations considered by high‑net‑worth Chinese buyers looking at US$5 million‑plus homes, ranking fourth after Thailand, Australia and Canada in some 2024/2025 surveys. This is a major change from earlier years when Chinese luxury demand focused more heavily on Western markets and closer regional hubs like Singapore and Hong Kong.
Key reasons: education, lifestyle and value
Analysts consistently highlight three core reasons why Chinese families are eyeing Malaysian property:
- Education as a long‑term plan: Malaysia has become a regional education hub, with international schools and universities that are more affordable than in the US, UK or Australia but still English‑medium and globally recognised. Rising Chinese student numbers in Malaysian institutions – reported up by around 35% between 2021 and 2023 – naturally create demand for homes near campuses and in key cities.
- Luxury lifestyle without the heavy price tag: Prime homes in Kuala Lumpur average about US$240 per square foot, far below Singapore (about US$1,810) and Bangkok (around US$1,090), letting buyers enjoy golf clubs, gourmet dining and private healthcare at a fraction of top‑tier global costs. For many families, Malaysia offers a “hidden gem” mix of high lifestyle quality, low living costs and familiar Asian culture.
- Comfortable environment for Mandarin speakers: Malaysia’s large Chinese community, widespread use of Mandarin and Cantonese, and availability of Chinese media, food and schools help new arrivals adapt quickly. Compared with some Western countries tightening on student visas and property purchases, Malaysia’s environment feels more welcoming and culturally comfortable.
MM2H, visas and long‑term settlement
Visa frameworks also play a big role. The Malaysia My Second Home (MM2H) programme, although revised, still offers renewable long‑term stay options and now more directly links residency to property ownership. Chinese nationals already account for about 44% of MM2H pass holders, a sharp rise from 2019, showing how strongly they feature in Malaysia’s long‑stay foreign community.
Recent changes making property purchase a requirement under some MM2H variants further encourage applicants to buy and hold Malaysian homes, especially in Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru and Penang. For many, property is not just an investment but a base for children’s education, healthcare access and eventual retirement in a relatively stable, lower‑pressure environment.
A hedge in a changing global environment
Even as some Chinese investors have sold overseas homes in markets hit by high mortgage rates and policy tightening, interest in Malaysia has stayed strong or even increased. Malaysia offers a combination of more stable property prices, moderate financing costs and a diversified economy that is less overheated than some Western or ultra‑prime Asian cities.
Inquiries from Chinese buyers have reportedly jumped by over 40% in certain periods, with many focusing on properties in Kuala Lumpur’s CBD and leafy suburbs like Damansara Heights and Bangsar, as well as Johor projects linked to Singapore. For these buyers, Malaysia is less about short‑term speculation and more about a medium‑ to long‑term hedge: a place where family can live, study, travel and build a base in Southeast Asia while holding assets in a market with room to grow.
