Key Numbers for a RM500,000 Property
RM500,000 marks the boundary of the first-time buyer stamp duty exemption — properties priced at or below RM500,000 receive a full exemption on stamp duty for first-time buyers. Above RM500,000, the exemption is partial. This makes RM500,000 a significant price point in Malaysian property.
- Property price: RM500,000
- Down payment (10%): RM50,000
- Loan amount (90%): RM450,000
- Monthly instalment at 4.0%, 30 years: ~RM2,148
- Total interest paid (30 years): ~RM323,000
- Minimum salary (60% DSR, no other debt): ~RM3,580
- Stamp duty (first-time buyer): RM0 (full exemption)
DSR Calculation for Different Income Scenarios
Your DSR is calculated as: (Total monthly debt commitments ÷ Gross monthly income) × 100. For a RM500k loan with a RM2,148/month instalment:
- Gross salary RM4,000, no other debt: DSR = 53.7% — borderline, likely approved if credit is clean
- Gross salary RM4,000, car loan RM700/month: DSR = 71.2% — likely rejected by most banks
- Gross salary RM6,000, no other debt: DSR = 35.8% — very comfortable
- Combined income RM8,000, two car loans RM1,200/month total: DSR = 41.9% — comfortable
The lesson: for a RM500,000 property, a single earner ideally needs RM5,500–RM7,000+ gross with manageable other commitments. A dual income of RM7,000–RM10,000 combined gives comfortable eligibility. Use our DSR Calculator for your specific numbers.
Total Upfront Cash Required
The down payment is just one component. For a RM500,000 subsale property:
- Down payment (10%): RM50,000
- SPA legal fees: ~RM4,500–RM5,500
- SPA stamp duty: RM0 (first-time buyer, property ≤RM500,000)
- Loan agreement legal fees: ~RM3,000–RM4,000
- Loan stamp duty: RM0 (first-time buyer exemption)
- Valuation fee: ~RM1,500–RM2,000
- MRTA or life insurance: ~RM12,000–RM25,000 depending on age
Total upfront cash needed: approximately RM71,000–RM86,500. This is the typical "hidden cost" that surprises many buyers — the total cash outlay is significantly more than just the 10% down payment.
Saving the Down Payment: Timeline
Saving RM50,000 for a down payment is a significant milestone. At different saving rates:
- Save RM1,000/month: 50 months (4 years 2 months)
- Save RM1,500/month: 33 months (2 years 9 months)
- Save RM2,000/month: 25 months (2 years 1 month)
This assumes you have no existing savings. If you have RM20,000 saved already and can save RM1,500/month, you reach RM50,000 in approximately 20 months. Our guide on saving your first RM10,000 covers the strategies to accelerate this. Also consider using EPF Account 2 (Akaun Sejahtera) for the down payment — check your balance in i-Akaun to see if this is an option.
RM500,000 in Different Malaysian Cities
RM500,000 buys very different properties depending on location. In Kuala Lumpur city centre, RM500,000 typically gets a studio or small 1-bedroom condominium (400–600 sq ft). In Petaling Jaya or Subang Jaya, it gets a 2-bedroom condominium. In Shah Alam, Klang, or Cheras, it may reach a smaller terraced house. In Johor Bahru, Penang island, or Ipoh, it can approach a 3-bedroom terrace or semi-detached home. In Sabah or Sarawak, RM500,000 opens up to larger properties and even landed homes in some areas.
Location choice dramatically affects both your lifestyle and your property's long-term capital appreciation. For full context on what banks look at, read Housing Loan Eligibility — What Banks Check and our First Home Buyer Guide.