UK-Malaysia Tax Treaty

Is your UK pension taxed in Malaysia? What the treaty actually says.

The UK-Malaysia double taxation agreement determines which country has the right to tax your income. Most British expats in Malaysia have never read it. This page covers the pension article, the private vs government pension distinction, withholding rates on dividends and interest, and how the treaty interacts with Malaysia's FSI exemption.

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The UK-Malaysia DTA: what it covers and how it works

The double taxation agreement between the United Kingdom and Malaysia was signed in 1973 and has been updated through subsequent protocols. The treaty follows the OECD Model Convention structure, allocating taxing rights between the two countries across income categories including employment income, business profits, dividends, interest, royalties, and pensions.

The treaty prevents the same income from being taxed in full in both countries simultaneously. It does not necessarily eliminate all tax. In some cases, it allocates exclusive taxing rights to one country. In others, it allows both countries to tax, with the country of residence providing a credit for tax paid in the source country.

The treaty applies to Malaysian tax residents who are UK nationals or who have UK-sourced income, and to UK residents who have Malaysian-sourced income. Malaysian tax residency requires spending 182 days or more in Malaysia in a calendar year. The treaty does not override this domestic threshold.

For British expats in Malaysia, the most practically significant provisions are the pension article, the employment income article (particularly for those working for UK employers while based in Malaysia), and the dividend and interest withholding provisions which affect investment portfolio returns.

"Knowing which treaty applies, and correctly claiming its protections, is the difference between paying tax once and paying it twice. Most expats in Malaysia have not reviewed their treaty position."
DTA 1973 OECD Model Taxing Rights Malaysian Tax Resident Credit Method

Pensions under Articles 17 and 18: the critical distinction

The pension provisions of the UK-Malaysia DTA draw a sharp line between private pensions and government pensions. Getting this distinction wrong is the most common treaty error made by British expats in Malaysia.

Private pension income (Article 17) includes SIPP drawdown, personal pension payments, occupational DC scheme drawdown, and annuity income from insurance companies. Under the treaty, private pension income paid to a Malaysian tax resident is taxable only in Malaysia. The United Kingdom has no right to tax it. This means a UK non-resident who is a Malaysian tax resident and draws down a SIPP should receive that income free of UK income tax, with any tax owed to Malaysia (subject to the FSI exemption interaction discussed below).

Government and civil service pension income (Article 18) is treated differently. Pensions paid by or on behalf of the UK government, or pensions in respect of services rendered to the UK government, remain taxable in the United Kingdom. A former civil servant, NHS employee, teacher, or local authority worker receiving their occupational pension will have that pension taxed in the UK, not Malaysia, regardless of their Malaysian tax residency.

Defined benefit schemes from private sector employers (a bank, an oil company, a manufacturing group) are private pensions for treaty purposes and fall under Article 17. DB schemes from public sector employment fall under Article 18. The employer type, not the scheme structure, determines the classification.

Pension Type Treaty Article Taxed In
SIPP / Personal pension Article 17 Malaysia only
Private sector DB / DC scheme Article 17 Malaysia only
Government / civil service pension Article 18 UK only
NHS pension Article 18 UK only
State Pension Article 17 Malaysia only (see note below)

Note: The UK State Pension is typically treated under Article 17, though LHDN's application has not been formally tested at scale. In practice, most advisers structure on this basis.

"The pension article allocates taxing rights based on whether the pension originates from government service. Private sector pensions go to Malaysia. Civil service pensions stay in the UK."
Article 17 Pensions Article 18 Government Pensions SIPP Malaysia Tax Civil Service Pension State Pension Malaysia NHS Pension Tax

Dividend, interest, and royalty withholding under the treaty

The UK-Malaysia DTA specifies maximum withholding tax rates on cross-border passive income. These rates are ceilings, not automatic deductions. To access treaty rates rather than domestic default rates, the recipient must claim the treaty protection formally, typically by providing a Certificate of Residency from LHDN to the UK-based paying entity, or vice versa.

Income Type Domestic Rate (UK Source) Treaty Rate (UK to MY Resident)
Dividends from UK companies 0% (UK no WHT on dividends) N/A (no UK dividend WHT)
Interest from UK sources 20% 10% under treaty
Royalties from UK sources 20% 8% under treaty
Private pension income (Art. 17) 20% (basic rate, non-resident) 0% (taxed in Malaysia only)
Government pension (Art. 18) 20%+ (taxed in UK) Taxed in UK regardless

For Malaysian-sourced income received by UK residents, Malaysia does not impose dividend withholding tax on companies under the single-tier tax system. Malaysian interest paid to UK residents is subject to a 15% withholding tax, which may be reduced under the treaty to 10% with a Malaysian Certificate of Residency.

How the treaty interacts with Malaysia's foreign income exemption

Malaysia's foreign-sourced income (FSI) exemption (extended to 31 December 2036) exempts foreign income from Malaysian tax where that income has been subjected to tax in the country of origin before remittance. The interaction with the UK-Malaysia pension article creates a specific planning question.

Private pension income allocated to Malaysia under Article 17 is not subject to UK income tax for non-UK residents. SIPP drawdown is received gross in most cases where a valid NT (No Tax) coding has been applied by HMRC. This means there is no UK tax paid on the income before it arrives in Malaysia. When that income is remitted to Malaysia, the FSI exemption requires proof of foreign tax paid. If no UK tax was deducted, the exemption condition is not automatically satisfied.

The practical implication is that SIPP drawdown remitted to Malaysia may be subject to Malaysian income tax, not because the treaty is wrong, but because the FSI exemption's "taxed at source" condition is not met when the source country correctly applies the treaty and pays the income gross. The quantum of Malaysian tax depends on the total Malaysian chargeable income and the progressive rate schedule.

For most retirees with SIPP drawdown as their primary income and limited other Malaysian-sourced income, the effective Malaysian tax rate on that drawdown will be well below the UK basic rate. The outcome is typically more favourable than paying UK income tax directly. The issue is administrative: the income must be correctly declared to LHDN, and the position must be understood rather than assumed to be entirely tax-free.

"SIPP drawdown paid gross to a Malaysia-based expat is allocated to Malaysia by the treaty. Whether the FSI exemption then applies depends on whether UK tax was deducted at source."
FSI Exemption Malaysia SIPP Drawdown Tax Malaysia NT Tax Code HMRC LHDN Declaration Foreign Income Malaysia 2036

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