Cost of Living in Kuala Lumpur for Foreign Teachers: A 2026 Budget Guide

User avatar placeholder
Written by Zilla Ahmad

June 19, 2026

Introduction

The salary on your international school contract is only half the story. What decides whether teaching in Kuala Lumpur feels like a comfortable adventure or a monthly scramble is the gap between what you earn and what life here actually costs — and for most foreign teachers, that gap is generous. KL routinely ranks among the best-value major cities in the world for the lifestyle it offers, which is a large part of why teachers keep choosing it.

This guide breaks down the real monthly cost of living for a foreign teacher in Kuala Lumpur in 2026: food, transport, utilities, healthcare, leisure, and the one subject that quietly costs new arrivals the most — tax in your first year. It is written for the single or coupled teacher on a typical school package, not for the executive expat or the family of five. Where housing is concerned, this guide stays deliberately brief, because rent is covered in detail in the companion accommodation guide; here the focus is everything else.

The headline figure to hold in your head: a comfortable single expat life in KL costs in the region of RM 3,500 to RM 6,000 a month, including a one-bedroom apartment, a mix of local and Western dining, public transport, and health insurance. Independent estimates land in the same band — one widely used index puts a single person’s total monthly cost at around USD 1,122, while another suggests a single person needs roughly USD 1,000 to USD 1,500 a month to live comfortably, covering rent, food, transport and leisure.

What makes KL such good value for teachers specifically is the combination of low everyday costs and a package that often covers a chunk of housing. Eat local, use the trains, and live near your school, and a meaningful share of your salary can go straight to savings. The sections below show exactly where the money goes — and where it doesn’t have to.

Table of Contents

  1. The Big Picture: What a Teacher Spends Each Month
  2. Food and Groceries
  3. Transport
  4. Utilities and Internet
  5. Healthcare and Insurance
  6. Leisure, Fitness and Lifestyle
  7. The First-Year Tax Trap Every Teacher Should Understand
  8. Putting It Together: A Sample Teacher Budget
  9. Frequently Asked Questions
  10. Conclusion

The Big Picture: What a Teacher Spends Each Month

Before the category detail, here is a realistic monthly budget for a single foreign teacher living sensibly but not frugally, assuming rent is partly covered by a housing allowance:

  • Rent (your share after allowance): RM 800–2,000
  • Food and groceries: RM 1,000–1,500
  • Transport: RM 150–800
  • Utilities and internet: RM 250–400
  • Health insurance and medical: RM 200–500
  • Leisure, dining out, fitness: RM 600–1,200
  • Phone: RM 40–100

That points to an all-in figure broadly in line with the consensus: a single teacher in Kuala Lumpur spends roughly RM 4,500 to RM 5,500 a month. Couples sharing a flat spend less per head. The single biggest lever is the one in the next section — food — because how you eat in KL swings your budget more than almost anything else.

Food and Groceries

Food is where KL’s value is most obvious, and where your habits decide everything. The city’s hawker stalls and local restaurants serve excellent meals for a few ringgit, while imported Western groceries and mall restaurants cost many times more.

At the local end, a full day of eating at hawker stalls and kopitiams runs remarkably cheap. Typical local prices put breakfast at around RM 7 to RM 15, lunch at RM 15 to RM 20, and dinner at RM 15 to RM 30. A teacher who eats mostly local food can keep a daily food spend well under RM 50.

Groceries sit in the middle. For a single person, monthly groceries come to roughly RM 1,100 or so (about USD 267) — a moderate figure, with local markets and supermarkets covering most needs without strict budgeting. The cost climbs sharply if you fill your trolley with imported cheese, wine and Western brands, so the practical move is to buy local produce at wet markets and reserve imported items as treats.

Teacher tip: The fastest way to blow a KL food budget is to default to mall food courts and Western chains. Mixing in local food several times a week — which is genuinely some of the best in Asia — is both cheaper and a big part of why people enjoy living here. Budget RM 1,000–1,500 a month and you can eat very well.

Transport

Transport cost depends almost entirely on whether you live near your school and whether you buy a car. As covered in the accommodation guide, the schools in the Mont Kiara, PJ/Damansara and inner-city clusters are reasonably rail-served, while the southern-corridor schools are car-dependent.

If you go car-free and rely on the LRT, MRT and the occasional Grab, transport is almost trivially cheap. A monthly public-transport pass costs around RM 50 (about USD 12), typically covering unlimited rides on the trains and buses in the main zone. Single train fares run from RM 1.50 up to about RM 9.90 depending on distance. The payoff is real: going car-free instead of owning a vehicle can save RM 800 or more a month.

A car changes the maths entirely once you add purchase or lease, fuel, insurance, parking and tolls. For teachers at the rail-served schools, the honest advice is to try living car-free first — many manage perfectly well. For those out at Nexus, Epsom or King Henry VIII, a car is usually unavoidable unless the school provides transport, so factor it in from the start.

Teacher budget: RM 150–300 a month if car-free; considerably more with a vehicle.

Utilities and Internet

Utilities are modest, with one big variable: air-conditioning. KL is hot and humid year-round, and how much you run the AC is the main swing factor in your electricity bill.

Basic utilities — electricity, water, cooling and rubbish — for a typical apartment average around RM 280 a month (roughly £49). Run the air-conditioning hard across a larger unit and it climbs; keep it sensible and open the windows when you can, and it stays low.

Home internet is cheap and fast — fibre packages are inexpensive by Western standards and a real selling point of KL life. A mobile plan with generous data costs very little on top.

Teacher budget: RM 250–400 a month for utilities and internet combined, depending on AC use and unit size.

Healthcare and Insurance

This is the category new teachers most often overlook, and it matters. Malaysia’s public healthcare system is generally not available to foreigners, so you rely on private care — which is high quality and English-speaking, but must be paid for or insured.

Routine private care is affordable: a GP visit at a private clinic runs roughly RM 30 to RM 80. The real exposure is hospitalisation and emergencies, which is why private health or travel insurance for hospitalisation is strongly advised for any foreigner living in KL.

The good news for teachers: many school packages include health insurance, so check your contract first. If yours does, your out-of-pocket healthcare cost may be little more than the odd clinic visit. If it doesn’t, budget for a private policy.

Teacher budget: RM 200–500 a month if buying your own insurance; far less if the school covers it.

Leisure, Fitness and Lifestyle

KL packs a lot of lifestyle into a small budget. Most condos near the schools come with a pool and gym included in the rent, so fitness is often free. Beyond that, the city offers a deep bench of cafés, restaurants, malls, cinemas, markets and weekend trips, all at prices that feel like a discount to anyone arriving from a Western city.

Where lifestyle costs add up is Western nightlife and alcohol, which carries high duty in Malaysia and is one of the genuinely expensive things here. A teacher who enjoys regular nights out at Western bars will spend noticeably more than one who sticks to cafés, local eateries and the free condo facilities.

KL’s position in the middle of Southeast Asia is also a lifestyle dividend: cheap regional flights put Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and beyond within easy reach for school holidays.

Teacher budget: RM 600–1,200 a month, heavily dependent on how often you dine and drink at Western venues versus local ones.

The First-Year Tax Trap Every Teacher Should Understand

This is the single most important number in this guide, because it can quietly cost a new teacher tens of thousands of ringgit — and most relocation articles skip it.

Malaysia taxes individuals based on residency, and residency is about days physically in the country, not your visa. The rule is strict: tax residents (182 days or more in a calendar year) are taxed at progressive rates from 0 percent to 30 percent and can claim reliefs, while non-residents (under 182 days) pay a flat 30 percent on Malaysian income with no reliefs or deductions.

Here is the trap. Most teachers arrive in August for the start of the school year. That means in your first calendar year you are physically present for only about five months — under the 182-day threshold — so you can be treated as a non-resident and taxed at the flat 30 percent rate on those first months’ salary. All days physically in Malaysia count, including arrival day, weekends and holidays, and the days do not need to be continuous.

The relief is that this usually corrects itself. If your employment spans at least two consecutive years and you are present for 182 or more days in the adjacent year, you may qualify for resident treatment in the short year, and the difference is reconciled. The gap between the two rates is substantial — qualifying as a resident rather than a non-resident can save an expat earning RM 150,000 a year well over RM 20,000 to RM 30,000 in annual tax.

What this means for you in practice:

  • Expect higher tax deductions in your first few months than you might have budgeted for. Don’t assume your first payslips reflect your steady-state take-home.
  • Your immigration status and your tax residency are separate things — an Employment Pass holder who spends 200 days in Malaysia qualifies as a tax resident regardless of visa type.
  • Ask your school’s HR or finance team exactly how they handle first-year withholding and the resident reconciliation, because schools that hire foreign teachers deal with this every August and should be able to explain it clearly.
  • Build a small buffer into your first-year savings plan so a heavier early tax bill doesn’t catch you out.

This is not a reason to worry — it is a reason to plan. Once you cross the 182-day line and qualify as a resident, your effective tax rate drops considerably and your monthly take-home improves.

Putting It Together: A Sample Teacher Budget

Here is how a realistic month looks for a single teacher living near their school, eating a sensible mix of local and Western food, going car-free, and with the school covering part of rent and health insurance:

  • Rent (share after allowance): RM 1,200
  • Food and groceries: RM 1,200
  • Transport (car-free): RM 250
  • Utilities and internet: RM 320
  • Healthcare (school-insured, clinic visits only): RM 100
  • Leisure and dining out: RM 800
  • Phone: RM 60

That lands around RM 3,900 a month all in — comfortably inside the RM 3,500 to RM 6,000 range for a comfortable single expat life. On a typical international school salary, that leaves real room for savings once you are past the first-year tax adjustment. Spend more on Western dining, alcohol and a car, and you move toward the top of the range; lean local and car-free, and you save aggressively.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. How much does a foreign teacher need to live comfortably in KL?

A comfortable single life runs about RM 3,500 to RM 6,000 a month, covering a one-bedroom flat, mixed local and Western dining, public transport and health insurance. Teachers with a housing allowance and modest habits sit at the lower end.

2. Can I actually save money teaching in KL?

Yes. With all-in single-person costs around RM 4,500 to RM 5,500 a month and a package that often covers part of rent and insurance, sensible teachers save a healthy share of salary — especially once past the first-year tax bump.

3. How cheap is food really?

Very, if you eat local. Hawker meals run around RM 7 to RM 30 depending on the meal, and monthly groceries for one come to roughly RM 1,100. Imported Western food and mall dining cost far more.

4. Do I need a car?

It depends on your school. Rail-served clusters (Mont Kiara, PJ/Damansara, inner city) make car-free life feasible, saving RM 800 or more a month. Southern-corridor schools are car-dependent.

5. How much is public transport?

Cheap — a monthly pass is around RM 50, with single fares from RM 1.50 to about RM 9.90.

6. What about utilities and internet?

Budget RM 250–400 a month combined. Basic utilities average around RM 280, with air-conditioning the main variable; fibre internet is cheap and fast.

7. Is healthcare expensive for foreigners?

Public healthcare generally isn’t open to expats, so you need private cover. A private GP visit is RM 30 to RM 80, but insurance for hospitalisation is strongly advised. Many school packages include health cover — check yours.

8. Why is my first-year tax so high?

Because arriving in August likely leaves you under 182 days that calendar year, making you a non-resident taxed at a flat 30 percent with no reliefs. It usually reconciles to resident rates once your employment spans two years and you cross 182 days — confirm the mechanics with your school.

9. Does my visa make me a tax resident?

No. Tax residency is purely about days present. An Employment Pass holder present for 200 days is a tax resident regardless of visa type — immigration status and tax status are separate.

10. What’s the most expensive part of expat life here?

Western alcohol and nightlife (high duty), imported groceries, and running a car. Lean local on all three and KL is extraordinarily affordable.

Conclusion

For a foreign teacher, Kuala Lumpur offers one of the best lifestyle-to-cost ratios of any major teaching destination. The everyday essentials — food, transport, utilities, internet — are cheap, the quality of life is high, and a typical school package that covers part of your rent and insurance tilts the maths firmly toward savings.

Three things separate teachers who thrive financially from those who don’t. First, eat local often — it is cheaper, better, and central to enjoying the city. Second, live near your school and try going car-free if your cluster supports it; the time and money saved are the biggest single win available. Third, and most importantly, understand the first-year tax position before you arrive, so the flat non-resident rate on your opening months doesn’t catch you unprepared.

Plan around those three, and a comfortable life in KL on a teacher’s salary — with genuine savings on top — is well within reach.

Quick Summary

Common Mistakes

Planning the monthly budget based on home-country spending habits

New teachers frequently create their Malaysia budget by converting their current home-country expenses into ringgit — which almost always produces an overestimate of required spending. Malaysian cost structures are fundamentally different: food from local stalls is 5 to 10 times cheaper than equivalent meals at home, transport costs are lower, utilities are modest, and many services are significantly cheaper. Build a Malaysia-specific budget from local price data rather than converting home-country spending into ringgit.

Underestimating air conditioning electricity costs

Air conditioning is not optional in Malaysia — the heat and humidity make it a daily necessity. However, air conditioning is the single largest variable in electricity bills. Teachers who run air conditioning continuously in a large apartment can generate electricity bills of RM400 to RM600 per month. Those who use it selectively — cooling bedrooms at night and turning off when out — typically pay RM150 to RM250. This is a controllable cost that significantly affects monthly savings rates and is frequently underestimated by new arrivals.

Not accounting for first-month setup costs as separate from ongoing monthly costs

The first month in Malaysia involves one-time costs that inflate the apparent monthly budget: rental deposit (2 months’ rent plus 0.5 month utility deposit), first month’s rent in advance, initial food and household supplies, transportation setup, and SIM card. These do not recur but can make the first month look financially much worse than subsequent months. Treat first-month setup costs as a separate category from the ongoing monthly budget, and ensure you have sufficient upfront funds to cover both.

Spending food budget on delivery apps rather than eating locally

Local food in Malaysia — eaten at hawker stalls and kopitiams — costs RM6 to RM15 per meal. The same meal ordered through GrabFood or Foodpanda costs RM18 to RM30 after delivery fees and service charges. Teachers who eat predominantly via delivery apps spend 2 to 3 times more on food than those who eat locally. This difference — RM1,000 to RM2,000 per month — is one of the most impactful and controllable elements of the Malaysia cost-of-living calculation.

Not comparing the true cost of car ownership against Grab use

Car ownership in Malaysia is often assumed to be the cheaper option for daily transport, but the full cost — loan repayments or depreciation, insurance, road tax, petrol, tolls, and servicing — typically amounts to RM1,500 to RM3,000 per month. For teachers who can commute by rail or who use Grab for most trips, the monthly Grab spend is often lower than the true cost of car ownership. Calculate both scenarios honestly before deciding to buy a car.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to live in Kuala Lumpur as a foreign teacher in 2026?

Total monthly living costs for a single foreign teacher in KL range from approximately RM3,500 to RM6,500 depending on lifestyle, accommodation location, and whether a car is involved. A teacher living in a well-priced furnished apartment (RM2,500 to RM3,500 rent), eating predominantly local food (RM800 to RM1,200), using Grab and public transport (RM400 to RM700), and spending modestly on leisure can live comfortably at the lower end of this range. Those replicating a fully Western lifestyle — Western restaurants, regular international travel, premium gym, imported food — spend considerably more.

What is the biggest monthly expense for foreign teachers in Malaysia?

For teachers without a housing allowance, rent is the largest single monthly expense — RM2,500 to RM5,000 for a furnished apartment in the main expat areas of KL. For families without a school fee waiver, school fees are the dominant cost item. For teachers who have a housing allowance and fee waiver, the remaining costs are significantly lower, and food and transport become the primary monthly controllable expenses. The housing benefit or lack thereof is the single biggest driver of financial outcomes in Malaysia.

How much should I budget for food per month in Malaysia?

A teacher eating predominantly at local hawker stalls and kopitiams can expect to spend RM600 to RM1,000 per month on food. Mixing local and Western dining — some local meals plus 2 to 3 Western restaurant meals per week — typically costs RM1,200 to RM1,800 per month. Eating primarily at Western restaurants in KL expat areas costs RM2,500 to RM4,000 per month or more. The gap between the local and Western food budgets is substantial — food choices are the most impactful lifestyle variable in Malaysia’s cost-of-living calculation.

Is public transport affordable in Malaysia?

Yes — public transport in Malaysia is very affordable by international standards. A single MRT or LRT journey costs RM0.90 to RM5.90 depending on distance, with monthly unlimited travel passes available for specific lines. Grab fares for typical city trips range from RM6 to RM25. A teacher commuting primarily by rail and Grab can manage total monthly transport costs of RM300 to RM600. This compares very favourably to the RM1,500 to RM3,000 monthly cost of car ownership for daily commuting.

How much do utilities cost in a Malaysian apartment?

Monthly utility costs in a standard 2-bedroom furnished KL apartment: electricity RM150 to RM400 (depending heavily on air conditioning usage), water RM30 to RM80, internet RM100 to RM180. Total utility costs of RM300 to RM650 per month are typical. Some landlords include certain utilities in the rent (particularly for smaller studios) — clarify what is and is not included in the lease before signing. Electricity is the primary variable — air conditioning management is the most effective way to control utility spending.

How much should I save per month as a foreign teacher in Malaysia?

A single teacher on a mid-tier salary of RM9,000 to RM12,000 per month, with a housing allowance, paying Malaysian tax, and living reasonably locally, can realistically save RM3,000 to RM6,000 per month. At Tier 1 schools with stronger packages, monthly savings of RM6,000 to RM10,000 are achievable for single teachers. Family savings vary considerably depending on the fee waiver and whether a spouse works. These savings rates are significantly higher than most equivalent-tier teaching roles in the UK, Australia, or Europe provide.

Are there hidden costs in Malaysia that teachers often miss?

Commonly overlooked costs include: condo maintenance or management fees (sometimes separate from utilities), service charges on tenancy agreements, condo guest parking (which is separate from your own allocated bay), vehicle road tax and insurance renewal timing, first-year accounting for pro-rated salary in the first month, and the cost of regional travel during school holidays (which is often a significant annual spend for teachers who take full advantage of Malaysia’s travel access). These are not necessarily large costs individually, but they are genuine recurring or periodic expenses that should be in the budget.

Conclusion

For a foreign teacher, Kuala Lumpur offers one of the best lifestyle-to-cost ratios of any major teaching destination. The everyday essentials — food, transport, utilities, internet — are cheap, the quality of life is high, and a typical school package that covers part of your rent and insurance tilts the maths firmly toward savings.

Three things separate teachers who thrive financially from those who don’t. First, eat local often — it is cheaper, better, and central to enjoying the city. Second, live near your school and try going car-free if your cluster supports it; the time and money saved are the biggest single win available. Third, and most importantly, understand the first-year tax position before you arrive, so the flat non-resident rate on your opening months doesn’t catch you unprepared.

Plan around those three, and a comfortable life in KL on a teacher’s salary — with genuine savings on top — is well within reach.

Quick Summary

Common Mistakes

Similar Articles

How much does it cost to live in Kuala Lumpur as a foreign teacher in 2026?

Total monthly living costs for a single foreign teacher in KL range from approximately RM3,500 to RM6,500 depending on lifestyle, accommodation location, and whether a car is involved. A teacher living in a well-priced furnished apartment (RM2,500 to RM3,500 rent), eating predominantly local food (RM800 to RM1,200), using Grab and public transport (RM400 to RM700), and spending modestly on leisure can live comfortably at the lower end of this range. Those replicating a fully Western lifestyle — Western restaurants, regular international travel, premium gym, imported food — spend considerably more.

What is the biggest monthly expense for foreign teachers in Malaysia?

For teachers without a housing allowance, rent is the largest single monthly expense — RM2,500 to RM5,000 for a furnished apartment in the main expat areas of KL. For families without a school fee waiver, school fees are the dominant cost item. For teachers who have a housing allowance and fee waiver, the remaining costs are significantly lower, and food and transport become the primary monthly controllable expenses. The housing benefit or lack thereof is the single biggest driver of financial outcomes in Malaysia.

How much should I budget for food per month in Malaysia?

A teacher eating predominantly at local hawker stalls and kopitiams can expect to spend RM600 to RM1,000 per month on food. Mixing local and Western dining — some local meals plus 2 to 3 Western restaurant meals per week — typically costs RM1,200 to RM1,800 per month. Eating primarily at Western restaurants in KL expat areas costs RM2,500 to RM4,000 per month or more. The gap between the local and Western food budgets is substantial — food choices are the most impactful lifestyle variable in Malaysia’s cost-of-living calculation.

Is public transport affordable in Malaysia?

Yes — public transport in Malaysia is very affordable by international standards. A single MRT or LRT journey costs RM0.90 to RM5.90 depending on distance, with monthly unlimited travel passes available for specific lines. Grab fares for typical city trips range from RM6 to RM25. A teacher commuting primarily by rail and Grab can manage total monthly transport costs of RM300 to RM600. This compares very favourably to the RM1,500 to RM3,000 monthly cost of car ownership for daily commuting.

How much do utilities cost in a Malaysian apartment?

Monthly utility costs in a standard 2-bedroom furnished KL apartment: electricity RM150 to RM400 (depending heavily on air conditioning usage), water RM30 to RM80, internet RM100 to RM180. Total utility costs of RM300 to RM650 per month are typical. Some landlords include certain utilities in the rent (particularly for smaller studios) — clarify what is and is not included in the lease before signing. Electricity is the primary variable — air conditioning management is the most effective way to control utility spending.

How much should I save per month as a foreign teacher in Malaysia?

A single teacher on a mid-tier salary of RM9,000 to RM12,000 per month, with a housing allowance, paying Malaysian tax, and living reasonably locally, can realistically save RM3,000 to RM6,000 per month. At Tier 1 schools with stronger packages, monthly savings of RM6,000 to RM10,000 are achievable for single teachers. Family savings vary considerably depending on the fee waiver and whether a spouse works. These savings rates are significantly higher than most equivalent-tier teaching roles in the UK, Australia, or Europe provide.

Are there hidden costs in Malaysia that teachers often miss?

Commonly overlooked costs include: condo maintenance or management fees (sometimes separate from utilities), service charges on tenancy agreements, condo guest parking (which is separate from your own allocated bay), vehicle road tax and insurance renewal timing, first-year accounting for pro-rated salary in the first month, and the cost of regional travel during school holidays (which is often a significant annual spend for teachers who take full advantage of Malaysia’s travel access). These are not necessarily large costs individually, but they are genuine recurring or periodic expenses that should be in the budget.

Planning the monthly budget based on home-country spending habits

New teachers frequently create their Malaysia budget by converting their current home-country expenses into ringgit — which almost always produces an overestimate of required spending. Malaysian cost structures are fundamentally different: food from local stalls is 5 to 10 times cheaper than equivalent meals at home, transport costs are lower, utilities are modest, and many services are significantly cheaper. Build a Malaysia-specific budget from local price data rather than converting home-country spending into ringgit.

Underestimating air conditioning electricity costs

Air conditioning is not optional in Malaysia — the heat and humidity make it a daily necessity. However, air conditioning is the single largest variable in electricity bills. Teachers who run air conditioning continuously in a large apartment can generate electricity bills of RM400 to RM600 per month. Those who use it selectively — cooling bedrooms at night and turning off when out — typically pay RM150 to RM250. This is a controllable cost that significantly affects monthly savings rates and is frequently underestimated by new arrivals.

Not accounting for first-month setup costs as separate from ongoing monthly costs

The first month in Malaysia involves one-time costs that inflate the apparent monthly budget: rental deposit (2 months’ rent plus 0.5 month utility deposit), first month’s rent in advance, initial food and household supplies, transportation setup, and SIM card. These do not recur but can make the first month look financially much worse than subsequent months. Treat first-month setup costs as a separate category from the ongoing monthly budget, and ensure you have sufficient upfront funds to cover both.

Spending food budget on delivery apps rather than eating locally

Local food in Malaysia — eaten at hawker stalls and kopitiams — costs RM6 to RM15 per meal. The same meal ordered through GrabFood or Foodpanda costs RM18 to RM30 after delivery fees and service charges. Teachers who eat predominantly via delivery apps spend 2 to 3 times more on food than those who eat locally. This difference — RM1,000 to RM2,000 per month — is one of the most impactful and controllable elements of the Malaysia cost-of-living calculation.

Not comparing the true cost of car ownership against Grab use

Car ownership in Malaysia is often assumed to be the cheaper option for daily transport, but the full cost — loan repayments or depreciation, insurance, road tax, petrol, tolls, and servicing — typically amounts to RM1,500 to RM3,000 per month. For teachers who can commute by rail or who use Grab for most trips, the monthly Grab spend is often lower than the true cost of car ownership. Calculate both scenarios honestly before deciding to buy a car.

References

  1. Wise (Cost of Living in Kuala Lumpur 2026)
  2. Pacific Prime (Cost of Living in Malaysia 2026)
  3. CityCost (Kuala Lumpur)
  4. Nomads.com (Cost of Living)
  5. KL Nomad (Cost of Living in Kuala Lumpur 2026)
  6. Numbeo (Cost of Living in Kuala Lumpur)
  7. Teach Across Asia (Teaching Jobs in Malaysia 2026)
  8. Ringgit Calculator (Expatriate Tax Calculator Malaysia 2026)
  9. Deel (Malaysia Income Tax Guide)
  10. HSBC Expat (Tax in Malaysia)
  11. Lembaga Hasil Dalam Negeri Malaysia (Inland Revenue Board)
  12. PwC Tax Summaries (Malaysia)

Ready to Teach in Malaysia?

Browse our full library of guides on teaching in Malaysia — covering work passes, salary and tax, school tiers, accommodation, and daily life — to make sure every aspect of your move is planned and prepared.

Image placeholder

I’m Zilla Ahmad, a registered estate agent helping foreign teachers find the right home across the Klang Valley — from condos near major international schools to family-sized rentals that fit your budget and commute.