Transfer Your UK Pension to Malaysia
Malaysia has no QROPS-qualifying pension schemes. That means a direct offshore transfer is not available, and attempting one triggers a 40% HMRC charge. The structuring challenge is real, but it is solvable. This page sets out what the options are, how the UK-Malaysia DTA treats pension income, and what the tax position looks like on both sides of the equation.
Why pension transfers to Malaysia require a different approach
Malaysia operates the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) as its primary retirement vehicle, not a regulated pension scheme in the HMRC sense. For a jurisdiction to appear on HMRC's QROPS list, it must operate pension schemes that meet specific UK regulatory standards, including member benefit rules, reporting obligations, and scheme structure requirements. EPF does not meet these standards, and no other Malaysian pension arrangement does.
The consequence is straightforward: you cannot transfer a UK pension directly to a Malaysian scheme without triggering an Overseas Transfer Charge (OTC) of 25% on top of income tax, which functionally means most members face a combined charge approaching 40% or more on the transferred value. HMRC introduced the OTC in 2017 specifically to prevent the offshore bond mis-selling that characterised the previous QROPS era.
This is not a planning failure. It is the correct regulatory position. The answer for most UK pension holders in Malaysia is not to transfer offshore, but to restructure what remains in the UK into a self-invested personal pension (SIPP) and manage the tax treatment of drawdown income correctly under the DTA. That approach preserves the pension value, reduces complexity, and makes the cross-border income position legible.
The additional complexity in Malaysia is that from 2022 onwards, foreign-sourced income remitted to Malaysia became subject to Malaysian income tax in principle, subject to a transitional exemption currently extended to 2036. Pension income drawn from a UK SIPP and remitted to Malaysia sits squarely in this question. The DTA treatment determines whether HMRC or LHDN has primary taxing rights, and the remittance question determines whether Malaysia can charge anything at all.
Related pages on this hub
Malaysia Expat Finance Guide Malaysia Tax Quick Reference UK-Malaysia DTA UCITS vs US ETFs ToolQROPS, SIPP, or leave it where it is
Not available for Malaysia
No Malaysian pension arrangement qualifies as a QROPS. Transferring to a non-qualifying overseas scheme triggers the 25% Overseas Transfer Charge, plus income tax on the transfer, producing a combined effective charge that makes it non-viable for any client in a normal tax position. QROPS transfer should not be discussed for Malaysia-based clients.
The recommended structure
A UK SIPP is not an overseas transfer. Consolidating multiple UK pensions into a single SIPP preserves the UK regulatory wrapper, maintains HMRC registration, and gives you control over drawdown timing and investment selection. SIPP drawdown income for non-UK residents is treated as foreign-sourced income in Malaysia. Under the DTA, it is generally taxable only in Malaysia for Malaysian tax residents, not the UK. Getting the withholding position right with the pension provider requires specific structuring.
Sometimes the right answer
Doing nothing is a legitimate choice for clients who expect to return to the UK, who are within five years of taking benefits, or whose pension is a defined benefit scheme where the CETV calculation makes transfer unattractive. The key is making the decision deliberately rather than by default. Unconsolidated pensions across multiple UK providers are difficult to manage, generate unnecessary charges, and create estate complications for beneficiaries outside the UK.
Get the pension transfer checklist
A practical checklist for UK pension holders in Malaysia covering the SIPP consolidation steps, DTA filing process, and common mistakes to avoid.
How the UK-Malaysia DTA treats pension income
The UK and Malaysia signed their first comprehensive double taxation agreement in 1973, with subsequent protocols updating its provisions. The treaty allocates taxing rights by income type, and the pension articles are the most important for planning purposes.
Under Article 17 of the UK-Malaysia DTA, private pension income (personal pensions, SIPPs, occupational pensions from private employers) paid to a Malaysian tax resident is taxable only in Malaysia. The UK has no taxing rights over this income. This means a SIPP holder who is a Malaysian tax resident and takes drawdown from their SIPP should not pay UK income tax on that drawdown. To access this treaty position, the pension holder must submit a double taxation relief claim to HMRC and notify the SIPP provider to pay gross, without PAYE deduction.
The exception is government and civil service pensions. Article 18 typically allocates taxing rights on government pensions to the paying state, meaning UK civil service pension income remains taxable in the UK regardless of where the recipient lives. This distinction matters significantly for public sector workers who have moved to Malaysia.
The state pension position under the DTA is that it falls under the private pension article and is therefore taxable only in Malaysia for Malaysian residents. However, note that UK state pension is frozen for Malaysia-based recipients: the annual increases applied in the UK are not passed on to those living in Malaysia, which is a separate but material planning consideration for clients near state pension age.
The interaction with Malaysia's foreign-sourced income rules adds a layer. SIPP drawdown income, once it is not taxed in the UK (because of the DTA claim), may not meet the "subject to tax in the country of origin" condition for the Malaysian FSI exemption. This means the income could in principle be taxable in Malaysia on remittance. The current blanket exemption for individuals (extended to 2036) covers this for now, but the position should be reviewed as the exemption is reassessed.
What you will pay on pension income in Malaysia
Malaysia taxes resident individuals on a progressive scale. The rates below apply to chargeable income after deductions. For a Malaysian tax resident receiving SIPP drawdown as their primary income, the effective rate on moderate drawdown levels is typically between 8% and 20%, which compares favourably with UK income tax rates on equivalent amounts.
| Chargeable Income (MYR) | Rate |
|---|---|
| 0 to 5,000 | 0% |
| 5,001 to 20,000 | 1% |
| 20,001 to 35,000 | 3% |
| 35,001 to 50,000 | 6% |
| 50,001 to 70,000 | 11% |
| 70,001 to 100,000 | 19% |
| 100,001 to 400,000 | 25% |
| 400,001 to 600,000 | 26% |
| Above 600,000 | 28-30% |
Non-residents pay a flat 30%. This is a strong incentive to maintain the 182-day residency threshold, particularly for clients drawing larger pension incomes. The non-resident rate is higher than UK basic rate and approaches the UK additional rate, removing most of the cross-border tax advantage.
Malaysia has no separate capital gains tax on most assets, no inheritance tax, and no gift tax. The pension wrapper decision (SIPP vs direct holdings) is primarily a UK regulatory and DTA optimisation question rather than a Malaysian tax one, at least in the current environment.
CETV and DB transfers: when the numbers work and when they do not
A defined benefit pension pays a guaranteed income for life, typically linked to salary and service length. The Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV) is the lump sum the scheme will pay to transfer that promise elsewhere. Whether to take the CETV and transfer to a SIPP is one of the most consequential financial decisions an expat faces, and it cannot be reduced to a single rule.
The gilt yield environment matters significantly. DB scheme actuaries use gilt yields to discount the future income stream when calculating the CETV. When gilt yields rise, CETVs fall. The period from mid-2022 through 2023 saw significant CETV reductions as yields moved from historically low to historically normal levels. CETVs remain lower than their 2021 peaks in most cases. The multiple, expressed as years of pension income (e.g., 25x annual pension = transfer value of 25 times the annual benefit), varies by scheme and market conditions.
For a Malaysia-based expat specifically, the transfer case is stronger when: the client does not have a spouse with survivor benefit rights to protect, the client expects to live in Asia long-term and wants a portable GBP fund rather than a UK-sited pension promise, currency flexibility matters (drawing in MYR-equivalent tranches when GBP is strong), or the client has health conditions that reduce life expectancy below the breakeven point.
The transfer case is weaker when: the scheme is a public sector final salary pension (often the highest-quality promise available), the CETV multiple is below 20x, the client is within ten years of normal retirement age with good health, or the guaranteed income would cover most baseline spending needs in retirement without the need to actively manage a SIPP.
UK regulations require that any client transferring a DB pension with a CETV above GBP 30,000 receives advice from a FCA-regulated financial adviser. The advice requirement exists precisely because the stakes are high. The guarantee, once surrendered, cannot be recovered.
Irish UCITS within a SIPP: the architecture that works for Malaysia
The SIPP is a wrapper, not an investment. The investment selection within a SIPP for a Malaysia-based client should apply the same logic as any cross-border portfolio: avoid US-domiciled ETFs (US estate tax exposure on holdings above USD 60,000 for non-US persons), and default to Irish-domiciled accumulating UCITS equivalents. This is not a performance consideration. It is a structural one that protects the portfolio against a tax event at death that would otherwise apply regardless of which country the client lived in.
Irish UCITS funds tracking the same indices as their US counterparts perform nearly identically before costs. The structural difference is that on death, a non-US person holding IWDA (iShares Core MSCI World UCITS ETF, Ireland-domiciled) owes no US estate tax. A non-US person holding VTI (Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF, US-domiciled) potentially owes 40% US estate tax on the US-sited portion above USD 60,000. Inside a SIPP, the holdings are more shielded than in a general account, but the principle remains: Irish UCITS is the correct default.
Currency is the second structural consideration. A SIPP denominated in GBP, drawn down for spending in MYR, creates a real currency exposure. Clients approaching drawdown should consider whether to hold a portion of the SIPP in GBP-hedged global equity funds or to accumulate a short-term MYR buffer outside the SIPP for near-term spending, drawing down GBP selectively when the rate is advantageous.
National Insurance voluntary contributions remain one of the strongest risk-adjusted financial decisions available to British expats. Class 2 or Class 3 contributions purchased for gap years in the NI record provide up to GBP 11,502 per year in state pension income (current full rate) at a cost of GBP 824 per year for Class 3 contributions. The payback period is typically six to eight years from state pension age. Most clients should complete their NI record before allocating capital elsewhere.
Common mistakes when managing UK pensions from Malaysia
Attempting a QROPS transfer to a non-qualifying scheme
Malaysia has no QROPS-qualifying schemes. A transfer to an EPF account or any other Malaysian structure triggers the OTC automatically. Advisers who suggest this route either do not understand the regulatory position or are not acting in the client's interest. The OTC is not recoverable and does not require HMRC to make an error for it to apply.
Not claiming the DTA position and paying PAYE at source
Most UK pension providers default to PAYE deduction on drawdown. Malaysian tax residents entitled to the Article 17 relief must actively file the correct HMRC forms to receive pension gross. Without this, the client pays UK income tax to HMRC and potentially faces a Malaysian assessment too, without the treaty protection in place. Recovering overpaid PAYE through HMRC can take over a year.
Remitting pension income carelessly without tracking the FSI position
Malaysia's foreign income exemption is currently in place but is not permanent. Remitting pension income with no record of its treatment in the UK creates a tax position that is difficult to defend if the exemption is restricted in future. Clients should maintain documentation of the DTA claim, the pension provider's gross payment status, and the remittance history, treated as a formal tax file rather than administrative paperwork.
Ignoring the pension commencement lump sum timing
The pension commencement lump sum (PCLS, commonly called the 25% tax-free cash) is a one-time entitlement. The optimal time to take it depends on the client's residency status, the DTA position, and the Malaysian FSI exemption status at the time of taking. Taking PCLS while UK-resident and paying UK income tax on the taxable portion is a different calculation from taking it as a Malaysian resident where the taxable portion falls under Malaysian progressive rates. The timing and staging of PCLS alongside drawdown has material tax consequences.
Map your UK pension position in Malaysia
Whether you have a SIPP, a DB scheme, or several unconsolidated pensions at former employers, the planning questions for Malaysia-based expats are specific and consequential. A planning session covers your current structure, the DTA position, and what restructuring looks like for your situation.
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