Quick Comparison
| Feature | Personal Loan | Housing Loan | Better for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest Rate | 6%–18% p.a. (flat/effective) | 4.0%–4.6% p.a. (floating) | Housing loan |
| Maximum Tenure | Up to 10 years | Up to 35 years | Housing loan |
| Maximum Loan Amount | Typically RM150,000–RM300,000 | Up to 90% of property value | Housing loan |
| Collateral Required | None (unsecured) | Yes — the property itself | Personal loan |
| Approval Speed | 1–5 working days | 2–8 weeks | Personal loan |
| Purpose Restriction | Any purpose | Property purchase / construction | Personal loan |
| Down Payment Required | None | 10% (or 30% for 3rd property) | Personal loan |
| Total Interest Cost | Very high (flat rate) | Lower over same period | Housing loan |
| DSR Impact | Reduces future borrowing capacity | Same, but typically larger amount | Situational |
Interest Rates: The Biggest Difference
Housing loans in Malaysia are typically priced at 4.0%–4.6% per annum (floating rate, linked to Base Rate). Personal loans range from 6% to 18% per annum — with lower-income or higher-risk borrowers paying more.
The difference compounds dramatically over time. On a RM100,000 loan over 10 years:
- Housing loan at 4.5%: Total interest ≈ RM25,000. Monthly instalment ≈ RM1,037.
- Personal loan at 10% (flat rate): Total interest = RM100,000. Monthly instalment ≈ RM1,667.
This is why housing loans are almost always cheaper for property purchase — but they require the property as collateral, which creates a different type of risk.
Flat Rate vs Reducing Balance: Read the Fine Print
Personal loans in Malaysia are often quoted at a flat rate. This is misleading. A 6% flat rate personal loan has an effective interest rate (reducing balance rate) of approximately 11–12%, because interest is calculated on the original principal even as you repay the balance. Housing loans are quoted on a reducing balance basis — a fairer representation of cost.
Always ask for the Effective Lending Rate (ELR) when comparing loans. Banks are required to disclose this in Malaysia.
When to Use a Personal Loan vs a Housing Loan
Use a housing loan when:
- You are purchasing a residential property (this is the intended purpose)
- You have equity in your home and need large funds for renovation — a top-up on your existing housing loan at housing loan rates is far cheaper than a personal loan
- You have time (2–8 weeks for approval) and can provide property collateral
Use a personal loan when:
- You need funds quickly and without collateral (medical emergency, urgent home repair, car breakdown)
- The amount is small (below RM50,000) and short-term (under 5 years) — where total interest difference is less material
- You need to bridge a cash flow gap (expected large income, insurance payout, bonus)
- You are funding a non-property purpose (education, travel, business) where housing loan financing is not available
Renovation — The Grey Area
Renovation is the most common grey area. If you already own a property:
- Best option: Top-up on your existing housing loan at housing loan interest rates (requires a valuation and may take 3–4 weeks)
- Second option: Some banks offer specific renovation loans (rates between personal and housing loan rates)
- Last resort: Personal loan (highest cost but fastest)
How Each Loan Affects Your DSR
Both personal loans and housing loans add to your DSR. But personal loans at high monthly instalments can block you from getting a housing loan later. If you plan to buy a house within 2–3 years, think carefully before taking a personal loan — especially a large one with a long tenure.
Calculate Loan Repayments & DSR
Use our calculators to compare costs and check how a new loan affects your Debt Service Ratio.