Quick Answer: The core document set includes your original degree, teaching qualification, signed employment contract, passport, police clearance, and FOMEMA medical results. Certified copies are required throughout — photocopies are not accepted. Missing or incorrectly certified documents are the most common and most preventable cause of EP delays.
Table of Contents
- Why Documents Are the Most Preventable Delay
- Category A: Always Required
- Category B: Commonly Required
- Category C: Situation-Specific
- Understanding Certification vs Apostille
- Documents Not in English
- Organising Your Document Pack
- The Five Most Common Document Mistakes
- FOMEMA Documentation
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line
Why Documents Are the Most Preventable Delay
Missing, incorrectly certified, or outdated documents are the single most common cause of Employment Pass delays. HR departments at established international schools see the same mistakes repeatedly. This guide tells you exactly what you need, in what form, so you can build a complete, correctly prepared document pack from day one of your job search.
Category A: Always Required
Required for every EP application regardless of nationality, school, or role:
1. Original degree certificate — physical parchment or official university-issued document
2. Certified true copy of degree
3. Teaching qualification certificate (PGCE, B.Ed, state licence, or equivalent)
4. Certified true copy of teaching qualification
5. Signed employment contract with your Malaysian school
6. Current passport — minimum 18 months validity from application date
7. Recent passport photographs — white background (ask HR for exact specifications)
Category B: Commonly Required
Required by most schools and most ESD applications:
1. Police clearance from home country — dated within 3–6 months of application
2. Professional employment references — 2–3 years teaching experience on headed paper
3. Academic transcripts — some schools and ESD applications request separately from degree
4. Working With Children Check or equivalent safeguarding document
Category C: Situation-Specific
Required depending on individual circumstances:
Apostille — required by some schools and nationalities; must be arranged in home country
Marriage certificate / name change document — if documents are in different names
Certified translation — for any document not in English or Bahasa Malaysia
MQA equivalency documentation — if primary degree institution is not on MQA list
| Document | Always Needed? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Original degree | Yes | Cannot be substituted |
| Certified degree copy | Yes | Solicitor or notary certification |
| Police clearance | Yes | Must be recent (3–6 months) |
| Apostille | Sometimes | Arrange in home country pre-departure |
| Certified translation | If applicable | Non-English documents only |
Understanding Certification vs Apostille
Certification: a solicitor, notary, or authorised official confirms a copy is a true reproduction of the original. This is the minimum standard for most EP documents.
Apostille: a higher form of international authentication under the Hague Apostille Convention. Must be applied in the country that issued the original document — it cannot be arranged in Malaysia after arrival. Some schools and some nationalities require apostilles; confirm with your school’s HR before departure.
Documents Not in English
All documents submitted to ESD must be in English or Bahasa Malaysia. Documents in any other language require certified translation by an approved certified translator. Do not use online translation tools or informal translations. Your school’s HR can recommend approved translation services in Malaysia.
Organising Your Document Pack
Create a physical and digital document pack the day you receive your conditional offer. Digital: scan everything at high resolution, save to cloud storage, email a backup set to yourself. Physical: originals in a secure folder at your Malaysia accommodation — never carry originals in your everyday bag. Make three sets of certified copies: one for the EP application, one for school HR records, one as your personal backup.
The Five Most Common Document Mistakes
1. Submitting a photocopy without certification — ESD does not accept uncertified copies.
2. Police clearance dated more than 6 months ago.
3. Degree and passport in different names without a name change document.
4. Unofficial university-generated transcripts instead of certified transcripts.
5. Forgetting to confirm whether an apostille is required before departure — this cannot be fixed in Malaysia.
FOMEMA Documentation
For the FOMEMA medical examination, you will need: your original passport; a copy of your VDR or entry stamp; your employer’s company letter (HR provides); your FOMEMA registration number (HR provides through the system before your appointment); and payment (RM150–250). The clinic submits results electronically to ESD — no separate document submission is required from you.
Frequently Asked Questions
How recent does my police clearance need to be?
Most schools and ESD require a police clearance within 3–6 months of your EP application date. Check your school’s specific requirement — some are strict about the 3-month window.
Can I submit digital copies of my degree to ESD?
No. ESD requires certified true copies of physical documents with original certification signatures and seals. Digital copies are for your personal records only.
Bottom Line
Your document pack is the foundation of your EP application. Build it from day one: certify everything properly, check whether apostilles are needed before departure, get a fresh police clearance, ensure names match across all documents, and maintain three complete sets. A clean, complete document submission processes faster and avoids the RFI delays that add weeks to unprepared applications.
References
ESD — Documentation Requirements — www.esd.imi.gov.my
MQA — www.mqa.gov.my
Hague Conference — Apostille Convention — www.hcch.net