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  3. 🇲🇾 Malaezia
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Verificat pe 16 iunie 2026Actualizat pe 16 iunie 2026

Driving License in Malaezia for Expats

Yes, for Short-term visitors may drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP) under the 1949/1968 UN road-traffic Conventions for the duration of the visit. Long-term residents are expected to hold a Malaysian licence; the exact statutory grace period for residents is not officially confirmed, so convert early and check with JPJ.. After that, you must convert to a Malaezia license. Good news: the official test is available in English.

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Key Facts: Malaezia Driving License for Expats

Test Authority
JPJ — Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan (Road Transport Department)
Official Test Language
Bahasa Malaysia, English
Grace Period
Short-term visitors may drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP) under the 1949/1968 UN road-traffic Conventions for the duration of the visit. Long-term residents are expected to hold a Malaysian licence; the exact statutory grace period for residents is not officially confirmed, so convert early and check with JPJ.
Processing Time
For the three categories that can still convert (MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps, and returning Malaysians), the exemption-based conversion is not completed at the counter — it typically takes roughly 30-45 working days once your documents (including the certified English translation) are in order. Check current processing times with your local JPJ branch. Everyone outside those three categories takes the full Malaysian licensing process instead.
Theory Test Required
Not for exchange
Practical Test Required
Not for exchange
Medical Exam
Not required
Total Cost
For an exemption-based conversion (available only to MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps and returning Malaysians): the CDL statutory fee (RM60-120/year for a non-citizen Class D licence — confirm with JPJ) plus the certified translation (estimate ~RM50-150). Short-term visitors who only need an IDP from JPJ pay RM150 per year. Note that most expats can no longer convert and must take the full Malaysian test, which adds course and test fees.

Eligibility by Nationality

🇪🇺EU/EEA Citizens

There is no automatic EU-wide exchange route — Malaysia recognises foreign licences case by case under JPJ (Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan) procedures, not by EU membership. Crucially, on 19 May 2025 JPJ halted foreign-licence conversion for almost all categories: only MM2H (Malaysia My Second Home) participants, the diplomatic corps, and returning Malaysians who held a foreign licence remain eligible to convert. So unless you are an MM2H participant or a diplomat, EU/EEA nationals can no longer convert and must obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way — the KPP theory course, the Computerised Theory Test, and the circuit and road tests. Short-term visitors may instead drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP). Always confirm your situation directly with JPJ.

🇺🇸🇬🇧US/UK Citizens

Since 19 May 2025, ordinary US and UK expats on work or other passes can no longer convert a foreign licence in Malaysia — conversion is now limited to MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps, and returning Malaysians. So unless you hold MM2H or diplomatic status, US/UK residents must obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way (KPP theory course, Computerised Theory Test, circuit and road tests). Malaysia does not publish a single definitive recognised-country list, and JPJ decides each case — confirm with JPJ before relying on any conversion. Short-term US/UK visitors may instead drive on their national licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP).

🌍Other Non-EU Citizens

As of 19 May 2025, JPJ stopped accepting foreign-licence conversion applications for almost all categories. Only three categories remain eligible to exchange a foreign licence: (1) MM2H (Malaysia My Second Home) participants, (2) the diplomatic corps, and (3) returning Malaysians. Employment Pass (EP1/EP2) holders, talent/residence-pass holders, and PhD/student-pass holders are NO LONGER eligible to convert — they must now obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way: the KPP theory course, the Computerised Theory Test, and the circuit and road tests. The 1 June 2026 easing applies to Malaysian citizens only and does not restore any expat conversion route. Confirm your specific situation directly with JPJ.

🎓Students

PhD and other student-pass holders are no longer eligible to convert a foreign licence: JPJ removed this category when it halted most foreign-licence conversions on 19 May 2025. Students who need a Malaysian licence must now obtain one the normal way — the KPP theory course, the Computerised Theory Test, and the circuit and road tests. While resident, a student may drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP) during the authorised short-term stay. Confirm your situation with JPJ.

Required Documents

  • ✓For the three eligible categories (MM2H, diplomatic corps, returning Malaysians) only:
  • ✓Completed JPJ form JPJL1
  • ✓Completed Exemption Application (Method 5 / Appendix B-2) form, obtained at the JPJ office
  • ✓Original passport plus a copy of the biometric page
  • ✓Original valid foreign driving licence
  • ✓A certified English translation of the foreign licence (often via the issuing country's embassy or an authorised translator) — required when the licence is not already in English or Bahasa Malaysia
  • ✓Valid Malaysian immigration status for the eligible category (e.g. an MM2H pass)
  • ✓Note: a medical exam is generally not required for conversion (JPJ may ask case by case). Everyone outside the three eligible categories does NOT convert — they take the full Malaysian KPP theory and practical tests instead.

Costs Breakdown

Conversion/Exam Fee
Malaysian licence statutory fee (JPJ): the Competent Driving Licence (CDL) Class D is RM30 per year for citizens. For non-citizens the JPJ transaction-fee page lists RM60 per year, while the JPJ CDL-application page lists RM120 (non-citizens, all classes) — so budget RM60-120/year and confirm the exact figure with JPJ. A licence replacement/copy is RM20. The IDP for short visits is RM150 per year. A conversion does not require paying for a full driving course; expats who must take the full test instead will pay course fees on top.
Medical Exam
A medical exam is generally not required for a conversion of a valid car licence (JPJ may ask for a medical report case by case). A standard medical check-up, where requested, is typically around RM30 (estimate).
Translation
A certified English translation of the foreign licence is an extra cost that varies by provider — roughly RM50-150 is a rough estimate; confirm with the embassy or an authorised translator.
Total Estimated
For an exemption-based conversion (available only to MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps and returning Malaysians): the CDL statutory fee (RM60-120/year for a non-citizen Class D licence — confirm with JPJ) plus the certified translation (estimate ~RM50-150). Short-term visitors who only need an IDP from JPJ pay RM150 per year. Note that most expats can no longer convert and must take the full Malaysian test, which adds course and test fees.

License Exchange Agreements

Direct Exchange (No Test Required) · 1

Recognition is decided by JPJ case by case — Malaysia does not publish a single definitive list of countries eligible for direct conversion. Confirm with JPJ whether your licence qualifies.

No Agreement (Full Test Required): Malaysia has no published blanket exchange-agreement list. JPJ assesses each foreign licence individually under its conversion SOPs, so a country being absent from any informal guide does not necessarily mean conversion is refused — and being present does not guarantee it. Always confirm directly with JPJ before paying for a certified translation.

Tips for Expats in Malaezia

  • 💡IMPORTANT: as of 19 May 2025, JPJ halted foreign-licence conversion for almost all categories. Only MM2H (Malaysia My Second Home) participants, the diplomatic corps, and returning Malaysians can still convert. Most expats — including Employment Pass holders, talent/residence-pass holders and student-pass holders — must now obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way (KPP theory course, Computerised Theory Test, circuit and road tests).
  • 💡The KPP (Computerised Traffic Law Test) theory test and JPJ counter services are available in English as well as Bahasa Malaysia — a major advantage now that most expats must take the full Malaysian test, and you can practise in English with AutoviaTest first.
  • 💡Short-term visitors may drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP) obtained from their home-country authority under the 1949/1968 UN Conventions. (JPJ itself issues IDPs at RM150 per year, but that is for people already licensed in Malaysia who want to drive abroad.)
  • 💡Malaysia drives on the LEFT with right-hand-drive vehicles and a British-style road system — drivers coming from right-hand-traffic countries should take extra care, especially at roundabouts and on motorcycle lanes.
  • 💡The blood-alcohol limit is a strict 0.05% (50 mg/100 ml), lowered under the Road Transport (Amendment) Act 2020 (in force October 2020), with heavy penalties for drink-driving.
  • 💡Malaysia runs the KEJARA demerit-points system: accumulating demerit points triggers a licence suspension under the official JPJ framework, and probationary ("P") drivers face action at a much lower threshold — drive carefully while you settle in.
  • 💡From 1 June 2026, JPJ accepts foreign-licence conversion applications from Malaysian CITIZENS at all state JPJ offices nationwide — this easing is for citizens only and does NOT add a conversion route for expatriates, who remain bound by the 19 May 2025 rules.
Verificat

De la un expat recent absolvent

O poveste reală a cuiva care a obținut permisul ca străin

Promovat în Chile·3 mai 2026
„I find the service invaluable. It helped me immensely and I am impressed by the format and content. First class!”

I have now passed my driving theory test. The course and information was great and very helpful. The reason I had to take the test is because I am living in Chile which does not recognise the driver licence of my mother country.


AS🇨🇱
Antony StaceyExpat
Verificat

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I drive in Malaysia on my foreign licence?
Short-term visitors can drive on a valid foreign licence accompanied by an International Driving Permit (IDP) issued under the 1949 or 1968 UN road-traffic Conventions, for the duration of the visit. Long-term residents are expected to convert to a Malaysian licence rather than rely on a foreign licence indefinitely — the exact grace period for residents is not officially confirmed, so convert early and check with JPJ. Remember that Malaysia drives on the left.
Do I need an International Driving Permit (IDP)?
If you are a short-term visitor, yes — drive on your national licence together with an IDP issued by your home-country authority under the 1949/1968 UN Conventions. (JPJ issues IDPs at RM150 per year, but that is for Malaysia-licensed drivers going abroad — visitors carry the IDP from their own country.) If you are a resident converting to a Malaysian licence, you do not need an IDP once your Malaysian licence is issued.
Who is eligible to convert a foreign licence in Malaysia?
As of 19 May 2025, JPJ halted foreign-licence conversion for almost all categories. Only three groups can still convert: (1) MM2H (Malaysia My Second Home) participants, (2) the diplomatic corps, and (3) returning Malaysians. Employment Pass (EP1/EP2) holders, talent/residence-pass holders, and PhD/student-pass holders are no longer eligible — they must obtain a Malaysian licence the normal way (KPP theory course, Computerised Theory Test, circuit and road tests). From 1 June 2026, Malaysian citizens with a valid foreign licence can convert at any state JPJ office nationwide, but that easing is for citizens only and does not restore any expat conversion route. Confirm your situation directly with JPJ.
What documents do I need to convert my licence?
These documents apply only to the three categories that can still convert (MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps, and returning Malaysians): form JPJL1 plus the Exemption Application (Method 5 / Appendix B-2) form, your original passport and a copy of the biometric page, your original valid foreign licence, a certified English translation of that licence (often via your embassy or an authorised translator), and your valid Malaysian immigration status for the eligible category. A medical exam is generally not required, though JPJ may ask case by case. Everyone outside the three categories does not convert and instead takes the full Malaysian KPP theory and practical tests. Check the current checklist with JPJ before you go.
Do I need to take a theory or practical test to convert?
If you are in one of the three categories that can still convert (MM2H participants, the diplomatic corps, or a returning Malaysian), the exemption-based conversion does not require the theory or practical test. However, since 19 May 2025 most expats can no longer convert at all and must take the full Malaysian test — the KPP theory course, the Computerised Theory Test, and the circuit and road tests. The KPP theory test is available in English as well as Bahasa Malaysia, so you can practise in English with AutoviaTest first. Confirm your situation with JPJ.
Do I need a medical exam to convert?
A medical exam is generally not required for a straightforward conversion of a valid car licence, but JPJ may require a medical report in some cases. Where a check-up is requested, it is typically inexpensive (around RM30 as a rough estimate). Confirm with JPJ whether a medical report is needed for your application.
How much does it cost to convert my licence?
For the three categories that can still convert, the main statutory cost is the Malaysian licence fee: the Competent Driving Licence (CDL) Class D is RM30 per year for citizens; for non-citizens the JPJ transaction-fee page lists RM60 per year while the JPJ CDL-application page lists RM120, so budget RM60-120 per year and confirm with JPJ (a licence replacement/copy is RM20). Add a certified English translation of your foreign licence (varies by provider, roughly RM50-150 as an estimate). Most expats, however, can no longer convert and must take the full Malaysian test, which adds course and test fees. Short-term visitors who only need an IDP from JPJ pay RM150 per year.

Surse oficiale

Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan (JPJ) / Road Transport Department

https://www.jpj.gov.my/en/

License Conversion Info

https://www.jpj.gov.my/en/jpj-service-information/competent-driver-license-cdl-application/

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