Malaysia Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Malaysia — the JPJ system, the computerised KPP theory test (50 questions, 42/50 pass mark), all-in driving-institute cost (approximately RM1,500–2,500), 0.05% BAC limit, speed limits, KEJARA demerit points, and the 2-year P-plate probation period.
6,537
Road deaths in Malaysia (2025)
About 18 deaths a day; 66.4% (4,340) are motorcyclists — Ministry of Transport / PDRM, announced 27 Jan 2026
~13.9
Deaths per 100,000 (WHO estimate, 2021)
WHO estimate; GBD models put Malaysia higher (~23.7). Thailand ~25.4, Vietnam ~17.7, USA ~12.2, Japan ~2.2
RM1.5–2.5K
Typical all-in cost for a Class D/DA car licence
Via a JPJ-approved driving institute — market range, not an official tariff
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Key Findings
One computerised theory test (the KPP / Computerised Traffic Law Test, often called the Undang-undang test): 50 multiple-choice questions for the car-only version, pass mark 42/50 (84%), with a 45-minute time limit. It is offered in Bahasa Malaysia and English. You first complete a compulsory ~6-hour KPP01 course within the overall Kurikulum Pendidikan Pemandu (KPP) at a JPJ-approved institute before sitting the computerised test. The JPJ computerised theory-test (KPP01) fee is RM27 for the car version (RM17 for motorcycle), plus SST.
Reported all-in cost via a JPJ-approved driving institute (institut memandu) for a Class D/DA car is approximately RM1,500–2,500, covering the institute package, theory course, practical training and test/licence fees. Post-2025 fee revisions push the upper end toward RM2,500. Motorcycle packages are cheaper (Class B2 ~RM350–450; full Class B ~RM900–1,100). These are market ranges, not an official JPJ tariff.
6,537 fatalities for 2025 (full-year figure announced by the Transport Minister on 27 January 2026), about 18 deaths a day, of which 66.4% (4,340) were motorcyclists. Deaths fell sharply in 2020 (4,634, down 24.9% on 2019's 6,167) under COVID movement restrictions, then rose back above the pre-pandemic level (6,443 in 2023).
0.05% BAC (50mg per 100ml blood; 22µg per 100ml breath; 67mg per 100ml urine) since October 2020, under the Road Transport (Amendment) Act 2020, which lowered the limit from the previous 0.08% and raised penalties. Drink-driving over the limit is non-compoundable — it goes to court, with a first offence carrying a fine of RM10,000 to RM30,000, up to 2 years' imprisonment, and a driving ban of at least 2 years.
Malaysia's demerit-point system is KEJARA (Sistem Mata Demerit), run under AWAS alongside AES speed/red-light cameras. Full and CDL holders face graduated suspensions starting at 20 demerit points: first suspension 3–6 months, then 6–8, 8–10 and 10–12 months for repeats; a licence is revoked after 3 suspensions within 5 years. Points count once the related compound is paid or a court conviction is obtained. A probationary (P) licence is instead revoked outright on reaching 20 demerit points, with no graduated suspension. Per-offence point values are gazetted in the Road Transport (Demerit Points) Rules.
WHO estimate ~13.9 deaths per 100,000 (2021), though GBD modelling puts Malaysia higher (~23.7). Malaysia drives on the left (British heritage), uses right-hand-drive vehicles, and has dedicated far-left motorcycle lanes on many roads. Tolls are cashless (Touch 'n Go, SmartTAG, RFID), transitioning to barrier-less Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) tolling targeted around 2027.
Malaysia Road Safety: Recent Trend (2019, 2020, 2023, 2025)
According to figures cited by the Ministry of Transport and the police (PDRM), Malaysia recorded 6,537 deaths in 2025 (the latest full-year figure, announced by the Transport Minister on 27 January 2026) — about 18 deaths a day, of which 66.4% (4,340) were motorcyclists. Road fatalities fell sharply during the COVID period (6,167 in 2019, down to 4,634 in 2020), then rose back above the pre-pandemic level (6,443 in 2023). There is no clean full-year national total for 2024.
2019→2020
−24.9%
2020→2023
+39.0%
2023→2025
+1.5%
Deaths per 100,000 Population (WHO estimates)
The latest full-year death total is 2025 (6,537; 4,340 motorcyclists, 66.4%), announced by the Transport Minister on 27 January 2026. Per-capita figures are WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety (2023) estimates: Malaysia ~13.9 per 100,000 (2021), Thailand ~25.4, Vietnam ~17.7, USA ~12.2, Japan ~2.2. Note that other models give markedly different results — the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study puts Malaysia's rate higher, at around 23.7 per 100,000 — so the rate depends on methodology. Annual death totals are reported by the Ministry of Transport and PDRM.
Malaysia Theory Test Format (KPP)
The computerised theory test is taken at a JPJ-approved driving institute (institut memandu)
Malaysia requires a single computerised theory test — the KPP (Kurikulum Pendidikan Pemandu) / Computerised Traffic Law Test, often called the Undang-undang test. The car-only version has 50 multiple-choice questions, the pass mark is 42 out of 50 (84%), and the time limit is 45 minutes. The test is offered in Bahasa Malaysia and English. Before sitting it you must complete a compulsory ~6-hour KPP01 course within the overall Kurikulum Pendidikan Pemandu (KPP) at a JPJ-approved institute. The published study material covers traffic rules and regulations, accident prevention (berhemat), and the Road Transport Act 1987 together with the KEJARA demerit system. A combined car-and-motorcycle version (70 questions, pass 56/70) also exists. The JPJ computerised theory-test (KPP01) fee is RM27 for the car version (RM17 for motorcycle), plus SST.
Questions
50
Car-only KPP (84% pass mark)
Duration
45 Min
Time limit for the 50-question car test
Pass Mark
42/50
84% — at least 42 correct
Test Fee
RM27
JPJ KPP01 car-test fee (+SST); motorcycle RM17
What the Theory Test Covers
- Traffic signals, road signs, and road markings
- Right-of-way rules and junction priority
- Speed limits by road type
- Parking, stopping and lane discipline
- Pedestrian crossings and school zones
- Seatbelt and child-restraint requirements
- Defensive driving and safe following distance
- Wet-weather and monsoon driving hazards
- Sharing the road with motorcyclists
- Basic vehicle roadworthiness and tyres
- Road Transport Act 1987 offences and penalties
- Alcohol limit (0.05% BAC) and drink-driving law
- The KEJARA demerit-point system
- Compounds (saman), AES/AWAS enforcement and MyJPJ
- Probationary 'P' licence rules and obligations
How to Get Your Malaysia Driving Licence
From enrolment to a full Competent Driving Licence (CDL) — the step-by-step process
Enrol at a JPJ-Approved Driving Institute
Register at an institut memandu (driving institute) for Class D/DA
You must learn through a JPJ-approved driving institute. Bring your MyKad (IC), or passport for foreigners. The minimum age is 17 for a car (Class D/DA). A medical check-up is part of the standard package. You will be guided through the curriculum and registered for the learner stages.
Complete the KPP01 Theory Course (~6 Hours)
Compulsory KPP01 theory course (Kurikulum Pendidikan Pemandu)
KPP01 is the compulsory ~6-hour theory course within the overall Kurikulum Pendidikan Pemandu (KPP) covering traffic rules, accident prevention (berhemat), the Road Transport Act 1987 and the KEJARA demerit system. It prepares you for the computerised theory test. The course is delivered in Bahasa Malaysia and English.
Pass the Computerised Theory Test (KPP)
50 multiple-choice questions, pass mark 42/50 (84%)
Sit the computerised Traffic Law Test (the Undang-undang test) at your institute. The car-only version has 50 questions, a 45-minute time limit, and you must score at least 42 (84%) to pass. It is offered in Bahasa Malaysia and English. The JPJ computerised theory-test (KPP01) fee is RM27 for the car version (RM17 for motorcycle), plus SST. You can retake it if you do not pass.
Get Your Learner Licence (LDL / 'L')
The Learner's Driving Licence lets you train on the road
After passing the theory test you receive the Learner's Driving Licence (LDL). It is issued in 3- or 6-month blocks up to a maximum aggregate of 2 years and lets you train under the institute. The 'L' plate must be displayed while learning. JPJ statutory LDL fee for Class D is RM30 (3 months) or RM60 (6 months).
Complete KPP02 Circuit + KPP03 Road Training
Practical training: driving-circuit then on-the-road
KPP02 is the driving-circuit (manoeuvring) training — slope start, three-point turn, parking and the S-course/crank-course. KPP03 is on-the-road practical training in traffic. You must complete the required practical training before attempting the JPJ practical test.
Pass the JPJ Practical Test → 2-Year 'P' Probation → CDL
Practical test, then the probationary licence, then the full licence
Pass the JPJ practical test (a circuit/manoeuvring component, KPP02, fee ~RM30; and an on-road component, KPP03, fee ~RM75). You then receive a 2-year Probationary Driving Licence (PDL) and must display the 'P' plate throughout. After the 2-year probation completes you can upgrade to the Competent Driving Licence (CDL), renewable in multi-year blocks (1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 years) at the JPJ statutory rate.
Malaysia Driving Licence Fees
All-in driving-institute cost typically reported at approximately RM1,500–2,500 for a Class D/DA car
Two kinds of figures are mixed here. The JPJ statutory licence transaction fees (LDL, PDL, CDL, IDP, replacement RM20) are OFFICIAL, from the JPJ fee-rate page. The JPJ computerised theory-test (KPP01) fee (RM27 car / RM17 motorcycle, plus SST) is also official; the practical-test and ancillary fees (circuit ~RM30, road ~RM75, medical ~RM30) are reported by reputable Malaysian motoring/finance guides and are ESTIMATES — confirm them with your institute. The RM1,500–2,500 all-in total is a market range for a driving-institute package, not an official tariff; post-2025 fee revisions push the upper end higher. Motorcycle packages are cheaper (Class B2 ~RM350–450; full Class B ~RM900–1,100). CDL fees are per-year and bought in multi-year blocks (1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 years).
See how ready you are — practice with real exam questions
Try Free QuestionsLicence Categories & Minimum Age
Class B / B2 — Motorcycle
16 years — B2 ≤250cc; full Class B covers all displacements
16
years
Class D — Manual car (≤3,500 kg)
17 years — manual transmission
17
years
Class DA — Automatic car (≤3,500 kg)
17 years — automatic transmission only
17
years
Class E — Truck / heavy lorry
21 years — must already hold a CDL Class D
21
years
Licence Validity
Renewable in blocks up to a 2-year aggregate
'P' plate displayed for the full probation
Renewable in multi-year blocks at the JPJ rate
KEJARA Suspension & Revocation
- KEJARA (Sistem Mata Demerit) is run under AWAS, alongside AES speed and red-light cameras
- Official JPJ action threshold: 20 demerit points triggers suspension
- Suspension escalates with repeats: 1st 3–6 months, 2nd 6–8, 3rd 8–10, 4th+ 10–12 months
- A licence is revoked if it is suspended 3 times within a 5-year period
- Demerit points count once the related compound (saman) is paid or a court conviction is obtained
KEJARA Demerit-Point System
- KEJARA = Sistem Mata Demerit, administered by JPJ; from 2017 and being revamped with MyJPJ integration in 2026
- Official JPJ threshold for action: 20 demerit points
- Repeat suspensions escalate: 3–6 months, then 6–8, 8–10, and 10–12 months
- Licence revoked after 3 suspensions within 5 years
- Points are recorded once the compound (saman) is paid or a court conviction is obtained
- A probationary ('P') licence is revoked outright on reaching 20 demerit points — no graduated suspension
- From January 2026, KEJARA is being integrated into MyJPJ with blacklisting enforcement
- Per-offence point values are gazetted in the Road Transport (Demerit Points) Rules
Malaysia's default limits are 110 km/h on expressways (lebuhraya), 90 km/h on federal and state roads (reduced to 60 km/h through town areas), and roughly 50–60 km/h in urban/town areas. School zones are 30–35 km/h during school rush hours. Local authorities can set lower limits on specific stretches, and some expressway sections are reduced to 80–90 km/h. During major festive holidays the limit on federal and state roads is cut nationwide to 80 km/h on set dates. AES/AWAS cameras enforce limits nationwide and heavy vehicles run at the lower band.
| Road Type | Cars | Heavy/Trailers | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expressway (lebuhraya) | 110 | 90 | Default 110; reduced to 80–90 on some stretches |
| Federal & state roads | 90 | 80 | Default 90; 60 through town areas |
| Urban / town areas | 50–60 | 60 | Typically 50–60 |
| School zones | 30–35 | 30–35 | 30–35 during school rush hours |
Expressway (lebuhraya)
110
Cars
90
Heavy
Default 110; reduced to 80–90 on some stretches
Federal & state roads
90
Cars
80
Heavy
Default 90; 60 through town areas
Urban / town areas
50–60
Cars
60
Heavy
Typically 50–60
School zones
30–35
Cars
30–35
Heavy
30–35 during school rush hours
Heavy-vehicle limits are the lower band (approximately 80–90 km/h on expressways, 70–80 on federal/state roads, 60 urban) and partly approximate; heavy vehicles must carry a Speed Limiter Device (SLD) hard-capped at 90 km/h along with its verification documents, enforced from 1 October 2025. Local authorities may set lower limits on specific stretches. During major festive holidays the limit on federal and state roads is cut nationwide to 80 km/h on set dates. AES/AWAS speed cameras enforce limits and e-summons are increasingly issued via the MyJPJ app. Always observe posted signs.
Traffic Fines & Penalties
Common offences and reported compound (saman) amounts in Malaysia — in RM
Malaysia enforces traffic law through compounds (saman) issued by PDRM and JPJ, AES/AWAS automated cameras, MyJPJ e-summons, and the courts for serious offences. The RM1,000 court maximum for speeding is a long-standing ceiling (set in 1999, not a 2025 change), while the court ceiling for red-light running and phone use is RM2,000. The real 2025–26 changes were new drug-driving penalties, mandatory heavy-vehicle speed limiters, and a tiered saman (compound) discount scheme. Drink-driving over the limit is non-compoundable and goes to court. Compounds are tiered, with the lowest amount for early payment (commonly within 15 days), and PDRM/JPJ periodically run discount campaigns. Per-offence KEJARA demerit points are gazetted in the Road Transport (Demerit Points) Rules but are not reproduced here, so the points column reads '—'.
| Violation | Fine (RM) | Points | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding — up to 40 km/h over | RM80–300 (court max RM1,000) | — | Compound |
| Speeding — more than 40 km/h over | RM300 (court max RM1,000) | — | Compound |
| Running a red light | RM300 (court max RM2,000) | — | Compound |
| Mobile phone use while driving | RM300 (court max RM2,000) | — | Compound |
| No seatbelt | RM150–300 | — | Compound |
| Illegal parking | From RM150 | — | Compound |
| No valid licence / no 'P' plate | RM70–150 | — | Compound |
| Drink-driving (over BAC) | Court (non-compoundable) | — | Court |
| Misusing the emergency lane / queue-jumping | Compound | — | Compound |
| Not giving way to an emergency vehicle | Compound | — | Compound |
| Defective tyres or lights | Compound | — | Compound |
| Overloading | Compound | — | Compound |
Speeding — up to 40 km/h over
Speeding — more than 40 km/h over
Running a red light
Mobile phone use while driving
No seatbelt
Illegal parking
No valid licence / no 'P' plate
Drink-driving (over BAC)
Misusing the emergency lane / queue-jumping
Not giving way to an emergency vehicle
Defective tyres or lights
Overloading
The RM1,000 court maximum for speeding is a long-standing ceiling (set in 1999), not a 2025 increase; the court ceiling for red-light running and phone use is RM2,000. The everyday compound for these offences is typically RM300. The real 2025–26 changes were new drug-driving penalties, mandatory heavy-vehicle speed limiters, a tiered saman discount scheme, and expanded AES/AWAS and MyJPJ e-summons enforcement; illegal parking starts from RM150. Amounts shown are reported compounds (saman) from Malaysian motoring press, not an exhaustive official tariff. Compounds are tiered, with the lowest amount for early payment (commonly within 15 days), and PDRM/JPJ periodically run discount campaigns. Drink-driving over the 0.05% BAC limit is non-compoundable: it goes to court, with a first offence carrying a fine of RM10,000 to RM30,000, up to 2 years' imprisonment, and a driving ban of at least 2 years (Road Transport Act 1987, section 45A). Per-offence KEJARA demerit points are gazetted in the Road Transport (Demerit Points) Rules and are not reproduced here.
Know these rules before your theory test
Traffic fines, speed limits, BAC rules and the KEJARA demerit system are frequently tested in the KPP. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practising FreeImportant Driving Rules in Malaysia
Drive on the Left
Malaysia drives on the left (British heritage) and uses right-hand-drive vehicles. Overtake on the right. At roundabouts, traffic circulates clockwise — give way to traffic already on the roundabout (from your right).
No Phone While Driving
Using a mobile phone while driving is an offence — the everyday compound is around RM300, with a court maximum of RM2,000 (and possible imprisonment). Use a hands-free system instead. AES/AWAS cameras and MyJPJ e-summons support enforcement.
BAC Limit 0.05%
Since October 2020 the limit is 0.05% BAC (50mg per 100ml blood; 22µg breath; 67mg urine), lowered from 0.08% under the Road Transport (Amendment) Act 2020. Drink-driving over the limit is non-compoundable and goes to court, with a first offence carrying a fine of RM10,000 to RM30,000, up to 2 years' imprisonment, and a driving ban of at least 2 years (section 45A).
2-Year 'P' Probation
New drivers serve a 2-year probation on a Probationary Driving Licence (PDL) and must display the 'P' plate throughout. Failing to display it is a compoundable offence (reported RM70–150). The full Competent Driving Licence (CDL) is issued after the probation completes.
KEJARA Demerit Points
The KEJARA demerit-point system, run under AWAS, escalates full and CDL holders to suspension at the 20-point threshold (1st 3–6 months, then 6–8, 8–10, 10–12 months), with revocation after 3 suspensions in 5 years. Points count once the compound is paid. A probationary 'P' licence is instead revoked outright on reaching 20 demerit points, with no graduated suspension.
Child Restraints Mandatory
Child restraints (car seats) have been mandatory since 2020 for young children in private cars. The driver is responsible for ensuring passengers are properly restrained. Use an approved restraint appropriate to the child's age and size.
Motorcycle Lanes & Give Way
Many federal roads and expressways have dedicated far-left motorcycle lanes separated by black-and-white striping. Motorcyclists are everywhere — check blind spots and the far-left lane carefully when turning or changing lanes.
Seatbelts for All Occupants
All occupants must wear a seatbelt, front and rear. The reported compound for not wearing a seatbelt is around RM150–300. The driver is responsible for ensuring all passengers are belted.
AES Camera Enforcement
AWAS (Automated Awareness Safety System) operates AES speed and red-light cameras nationwide, with AI-powered cameras and e-summons increasingly issued through the MyJPJ app. Observe posted limits — enforcement is automated and widespread.
Common Road Hazards in Malaysia
About 18 road deaths a day in Malaysia — know these hazards to stay safe
Motorcyclists Everywhere
Motorcyclists and pillion riders make up roughly 65–68% of Malaysia's road deaths, and motorcycles are a huge share of the vehicle fleet. Heavy mixed motorcycle/car traffic is a constant hazard. Always check blind spots and the far-left motorcycle lane before turning or changing lanes.
Monsoon Rain & Flash Floods
Seasonal monsoons bring sudden torrential rain that reduces visibility and causes hydroplaning, and flash floods that can sweep vehicles away. Reduce speed sharply in heavy rain, keep a longer following distance, and never drive through fast-moving floodwater.
Wildlife on Rural & East-Malaysia Roads
On rural roads — especially in Sabah and Sarawak (East Malaysia) — animals can stray onto the carriageway, particularly at dawn, dusk and night. Scan ahead, slow down in forested or unlit areas, and be ready for sudden obstacles.
Expressway Fatigue on Long Drives
Long north–south expressway journeys (such as the PLUS highway) invite driver fatigue and monotony. Take regular breaks at rest-and-service areas (R&R), avoid driving when drowsy, and watch for slower vehicles and lane changes over long stretches.
Night Driving on Unlit Federal Roads
Many federal and rural roads are poorly lit at night, with oncoming headlight glare on undivided stretches. Rain at night compounds the problem. Use headlights at night, reduce speed, and take extra care at junctions and on bends.
Congestion in KL & the Klang Valley
Kuala Lumpur and the wider Klang Valley have dense peak-hour congestion with frequent stop-and-go traffic and sudden lane changes. Keep a safe following distance, anticipate merging motorcycles, and stay patient in heavy traffic.
Malaysia Driving Cost Guidance
Learning is done through JPJ-approved driving institutes nationwide — these are typical market ranges
| Package | Availability | Typical Cost (RM) |
|---|---|---|
| Driving institute (institut memandu) — Class D/DA car | Nationwide (JPJ-approved) | ~RM1,500–2,500 all-in |
| Motorcycle Class B2 | Nationwide | ~RM350–450 |
| Full motorcycle Class B | Nationwide | ~RM900–1,100 |
Driving institute (institut memandu) — Class D/DA car
Nationwide (JPJ-approved) · ~RM1,500–2,500 all-in
Motorcycle Class B2
Nationwide · ~RM350–450
Full motorcycle Class B
Nationwide · ~RM900–1,100
Malaysia has no regional differences in driving law — it is national, administered by JPJ. Learning is done through JPJ-approved driving institutes (institut memandu) nationwide. The figures shown are typical market ranges reported by Malaysian motoring/finance guides, NOT official JPJ tariffs; actual prices vary by institute, state and year, and post-2025 fee revisions push the upper end higher.
Emergency Numbers
999 is the national emergency line (MERS 999) for police, ambulance and fire.
999
Police / Ambulance / Fire / Civil Defence (MERS 999; 991 & 994 merged into 999 in 2007)
112
Emergency from any mobile (routes to 999)
03-8315 9200
JPJ enquiries (Road Transport Department)
1-800-88-7723
Ministry of Transport (MOT) hotline
Myth: A cup of coffee sobers you up enough to drive
Fact: Coffee does not lower your blood-alcohol level — only time does. Malaysia's limit is 0.05% BAC since October 2020, and drink-driving over the limit is non-compoundable: it goes to court, with a first offence carrying a fine of RM10,000 to RM30,000, up to 2 years' imprisonment, and a driving ban of at least 2 years. The only safe approach is not to drink and drive.
Myth: As a resident, you can drive indefinitely on a foreign licence
Fact: Short-term visitors may drive on a valid foreign licence (with an International Driving Permit under the 1949/1968 Conventions), but long-term residents are expected to hold a Malaysian licence. As of 19 May 2025, JPJ halted foreign-licence conversion for almost all categories: only MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps and returning Malaysians can still convert. Most expats — including Employment Pass (EP1/EP2) and student-pass holders — can no longer convert and must obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way (the KPP theory course, the Computerised Theory Test and the practical tests). The 1 June 2026 change applies to Malaysian citizens only. The exact statutory grace period for residents is not officially confirmed.
Myth: The 'P' plate is optional once you can drive
Fact: The 'P' (probationary) plate is mandatory for the full 2-year probation period after you pass your test. Failing to display it is a compoundable offence (reported around RM70–150). Only after the 2-year probation completes — and you upgrade to the Competent Driving Licence (CDL) — can you drive without the 'P' plate.
Myth: AES speed and red-light cameras aren't really enforced
Fact: AES cameras are real and operate nationwide under AWAS (Automated Awareness Safety System), with AI-powered cameras and e-summons increasingly issued through the MyJPJ app. The 2025–26 changes added drug-driving penalties, mandatory heavy-vehicle speed limiters and a tiered saman discount scheme, and from January 2026 KEJARA is being integrated into MyJPJ with blacklisting enforcement.
Myth: Class DA (automatic) lets you drive a manual car
Fact: Class DA covers automatic-transmission cars only. To drive a manual car you need Class D. The two are separate licence classes — you cannot drive a manual on a DA licence without obtaining the manual class.
Myth: All toll lanes still take Touch 'n Go cards and SmartTAG
Fact: Malaysia is moving to barrier-less Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) tolling. The Works Ministry has directed concessionaires to phase out Touch 'n Go card and SmartTAG lanes from 2025, with full nationwide MLFF targeted around 2027 (a target that has slipped). Touch 'n Go's 'Titan Flow' is one of several competing MLFF proposals — using RFID plus ANPR, LiDAR and AI — and no single nationwide provider has been officially confirmed. Check which payment method each highway currently accepts.
KEJARA revamp — MyJPJ integration and blacklisting
From January 2026, the KEJARA demerit-point system is being revamped and integrated into the MyJPJ app, with blacklisting enforcement. This tightens how demerit points, suspensions and outstanding compounds are tracked and acted on.
Foreign-licence conversion eased for citizens
From 1 June 2026, the Transport Ministry and JPJ widened foreign-licence conversion eligibility for Malaysian citizens, with applications accepted at all state JPJ offices nationwide (subject to JPJ record checks and SOPs).
New drug-driving penalties, speed limiters and saman discounts
The 2025–26 changes introduced new drug-driving penalties, mandatory heavy-vehicle speed limiters (SLD, hard-capped at 90 km/h, enforced from 1 October 2025), and a tiered saman (compound) discount scheme — alongside expanded AES/AWAS enforcement and MyJPJ e-summons. (The RM1,000 speeding court ceiling is long-standing, not a 2025 increase.)
MLFF tolling transition begins
The Works Ministry directed concessionaires to phase out Touch 'n Go card and SmartTAG lanes from 2025 as Malaysia moves toward barrier-less Multi-Lane Free Flow (MLFF) tolling, with full nationwide rollout targeted around 2027. Touch 'n Go's 'Titan Flow' (using RFID, ANPR, LiDAR and AI) is one of several competing MLFF proposals; no single national provider has yet been confirmed.
BAC limit cut to 0.05%
The Road Transport (Amendment) Act 2020 lowered the general blood-alcohol limit from 0.08% to 0.05% (80mg to 50mg per 100ml blood) and raised drink-driving penalties, aligning Malaysia with WHO standards.
How Malaysia Compares Globally
Malaysia driving regulations compared to other countries — data compiled from official and reputable sources
| Parameter | Malaysia | Japan | UAE | Germany | USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.05% | 0.03% | 0.0% | 0.05% | 0.08% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 17 | 18 | 18 | 18 | 16 |
| Driving Side | Left | Left | Right | Right | Right |
| Highway Speed | 110 | 100 | 120–140 | No limit* | 105–137 |
| Test Questions | 50 | 100 | 35 | 30 MCQ | 20–50 |
| Licence Cost | RM1.5–2.5K | ¥250–350K | AED 4.5–7K | €2–3.5K | $30–90 |
| Road Deaths/yr | 6,537 | 2,678 | 352 | 2,839 | 40,901 |
| Deaths/100K | ~13.9 | ~2.2 | ~3.5 | ~3.4 | 12.2 |
Same as Germany. Japan 0.03%, UAE zero tolerance, USA 0.08%. Cut from 0.08% in Oct 2020; drink-driving is non-compoundable.
Lower than Japan, UAE and Germany (18). USA allows from 16. Class D/DA car licence at 17.
Malaysia's expressway default is 110 km/h. Japan 100, UAE 120–140, Germany no limit* on Autobahn.
Typical all-in institute package (market range). JPJ statutory licence fees are separate and much lower.
2025 figure; ~13.9 per 100K (WHO est., GBD ~23.7). Japan ~2.2, UAE ~3.5, Germany ~3.4, USA 12.2.
Road deaths: Malaysia 6,537 (Ministry of Transport / PDRM, 2025; the 2023 figure was 6,443), Japan 2,678 (NPA 2023), UAE 352 (MOI 2023), Germany 2,839 (Destatis 2023), USA 40,901 (NHTSA 2023). Malaysia's deaths-per-100K is shown as the WHO estimate (~13.9, 2021); other models (GBD) put it higher (~23.7). *Germany has no general speed limit on certain Autobahn sections. Malaysia's licence cost shown is a typical driving-institute package (market range); JPJ statutory licence fees are separate.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- JPJ — Driving licences, fees, classes, ages, IDP — Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan / Road Transport Department (jpj.gov.my)
- PDRM — Traffic enforcement and road-accident statistics — Royal Malaysia Police (pdrm.gov.my)
- KEJARA — Demerit-point framework and thresholds — JPJ KEJARA Information (jpj.gov.my/en/kejara-information)
- MIROS — Road-safety research and fatality analysis — Malaysian Institute of Road Safety Research (miros.gov.my)
- WHO — Global Status Report on Road Safety (rate per 100K) — World Health Organization (who.int)
- Road Transport Act 1987 — Traffic law, offences and BAC — Laws of Malaysia (lom.agc.gov.my)
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official JPJ pages (fees, classes, ages, KEJARA), the Road Transport Act 1987, and PDRM/Ministry of Transport statistics
- Cross-verified against WHO and MIROS road-safety data, with reputable Malaysian motoring press used only for figures (such as test fees) not itemised officially — and clearly flagged as estimates
- National regulations apply uniformly across Malaysia — no state-by-state variation in traffic law
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on June 16, 2026
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to get a driving licence in Malaysia?
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How does the KEJARA demerit-point system work?
How are tolls paid in Malaysia?
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What is the 'P' plate requirement for new drivers?
What is the minimum age to drive in Malaysia?
What is the fine for using a phone while driving?
What is the difference between Class D and Class DA?
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Cite This Page
Use these citations to reference this page in academic papers, articles, or reports.
APA 7th
MLA 9th
Chicago 17th
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Data sourced from JPJ (jpj.gov.my), PDRM (pdrm.gov.my), JPJ KEJARA information, MIROS (miros.gov.my), the WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, and the Road Transport Act 1987 (Laws of Malaysia, lom.agc.gov.my).
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