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MM2H for Indonesia: Education & International Schools

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Written by Zilla Ahmad

June 17, 2026

Introduction

This guide examines the Malaysia My Second Home (MM2H) programme through one specific lens — Education & International Schools — for applicants connected to Indonesia. It assumes you already understand that MM2H is a long-stay visa rather than a citizenship route, and it concentrates on the considerations that genuinely change the decision for this profile.

Throughout, the aim is practical: what the rules are in 2026, how they interact with the realities of moving from Indonesia, and where the common mistakes lie. Treat the financial and tax sections as general information rather than personalised advice — the right structure depends on your own assets, income and family situation.

What MM2H Is in 2026

MM2H is a long-term, renewable, multiple-entry visa. It does not grant permanent residency or citizenship, and it does not, by itself, confer the right to work — though the higher tiers carry limited work and business allowances. What it does provide is stability: a legal basis to live in Malaysia for years at a time, to bring dependents, to own property, and to access the country’s private healthcare and education systems.

All applications in 2026 must be filed through an agent licensed by the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture (MOTAC); independent self-filing is not available. As of early 2025 there were more than 80 licensed agencies. The programme has been growing steadily under its revised rules: as of 31 August 2025 there were 5,972 active participants, comprising 2,134 principal holders and 3,838 dependents. Reported approval rates in recent years have sat near 88% for applicants who meet the tightened financial and documentary standards.

The Tier Structure

Malaysia has restructured MM2H into a clearly tiered framework. The pathways available in 2026 are:

  • Silver tier — a fixed deposit of USD 150,000 and a minimum residential property purchase (state-dependent, commonly from RM600,000–RM1,000,000), carrying a five-year renewable visa. This is the entry point for most applicants.
  • Gold tier — a fixed deposit of USD 500,000 and a higher property threshold, in exchange for a 15-year visa and the ability to withdraw a larger share of the deposit for approved uses.
  • Platinum tier — a fixed deposit of USD 1,000,000, the highest property thresholds, a 20-year visa, and the broadest set of privileges, including limited work and business participation rights.
  • SEZ / SFZ pathway — a lower-cost route tied to Special Economic Zones and Special Financial Zones such as the Johor–Singapore SEZ and Forest City. Deposit requirements here are far lower (roughly USD 32,000 for applicants aged 50+ and USD 65,000 for those aged 21–49), reflecting the policy goal of attracting working-age talent and investment into those zones.
  • Choosing a tier is the single most consequential decision in the process. The Silver tier suits most retirees and lifestyle movers; the Gold and Platinum tiers appeal to higher-net-worth applicants who value the longer visa validity and the larger permitted deposit withdrawals; and the SEZ pathway is increasingly attractive to working-age applicants who want a foothold in the Johor–Singapore corridor without locking up a large deposit.

    Eligibility for Indonesia Applicants

    There is no nationality bar singling out Indonesia; MM2H is open to citizens of countries with which Malaysia maintains normal relations. The minimum age is 25 for the Silver, Gold and Platinum tiers and 21 for the SEZ pathway. Beyond age, applicants must demonstrate the fixed deposit and property capacity for their chosen tier, show a clean criminal record, pass a medical examination in Malaysia, and hold valid health insurance.

    In practice, Indonesian applicants should prepare certified copies — and, where the original is not in English or Malay, certified translations — of passports, birth and marriage certificates, and a police clearance certificate issued in Indonesia. Bank statements covering the qualifying period are scrutinised closely; the authorities look for a genuine, traceable source of the funds behind the deposit rather than a recent one-off transfer. A clear, well-documented financial trail is the strongest single predictor of a smooth approval.

    The Property Requirement and the Ten-Year Hold

    Every MM2H participant must purchase residential property in Malaysia. The minimum value is set by tier and by state — commonly from around RM1 million across much of Peninsular Malaysia, though several states and the SEZ routes apply lower floors. This is a binding obligation, not an optional benefit.

    Two rules deserve special attention. First, the property cannot be sold within ten years of purchase. Second, if a participant does sell, they must replace it with a property of equal or higher value to preserve their status. Up to 50% of the fixed deposit may be withdrawn for an approved property purchase, children’s education, or medical expenses, subject to timing rules tied to the Sales and Purchase Agreement date relative to the visa issuance date. Budgeting for the property purchase, the associated legal and stamp-duty costs, and the long hold period is essential before committing.

    Education and International Schools

    Malaysia hosts a large and competitive market of international schools following British, American, Australian and International Baccalaureate curricula, concentrated in the Klang Valley, Penang and Johor. Several foreign universities also operate branch campuses in the country. MM2H dependents can enrol, and approved education expenses are among the permitted uses of the partial fixed-deposit withdrawal — a meaningful offset against tuition for families relocating with school-age children.

    Why Indonesia Applicants Choose Malaysia

    Malaysia’s appeal to Indonesian applicants rests on a combination that is hard to find elsewhere in one place. English is widely spoken in business, healthcare and education, which flattens the relocation learning curve. The country is politically stable, religiously plural and accustomed to a large expatriate population. Kuala Lumpur International Airport offers direct connections across Asia, the Gulf and beyond, making trips home straightforward. And the climate, food and pace of life consistently rank well among long-stay expatriates.

    For families, the draw is often the schools and the safety; for retirees, the healthcare and the cost base; for investors and entrepreneurs, the location and the relatively open property market. The point of MM2H is that it packages legal, long-term access to all of that into a single renewable visa, rather than forcing applicants to renew short-stay passes or rely on tourist entries.

    Banking, Currency and Moving Money

    Opening a Malaysian bank account is part of the process, and the fixed deposit itself is held with a licensed local bank. Applicants should plan the mechanics of the international transfer carefully: exchange-rate timing on a six-figure deposit can move the all-in cost by a meaningful amount, and large inbound transfers should be documented so the source of funds is clear to both the bank and the MM2H authorities.

    Currency exposure does not end at the deposit. Anyone living on income or a pension denominated in their home currency carries ongoing ringgit exposure on day-to-day spending. Some applicants mitigate this by holding a buffer in local currency or by timing larger transfers; the right approach depends on how much of your wealth and income sits outside Malaysia.

    Settling In: Practical Living Logistics

    Beyond the visa, the practical steps of settling in are straightforward but worth sequencing. Most new arrivals rent before they buy, using the first months to learn the neighbourhoods — the Klang Valley around Kuala Lumpur, Penang for a more relaxed island setting, and increasingly Johor for the Singapore corridor. Driving is on the left, ride-hailing is cheap and ubiquitous, and the rail network in the capital is steadily expanding.

    Domestic help, private healthcare and international schooling are the services that most change quality of life relative to higher-cost countries, and all three are widely available. The expatriate community is large and well-organised, which makes the social side of relocation easier than many applicants expect.

    The Application Process, Step by Step

    The process is sequential and document-heavy, but predictable when handled through a competent agent:

  • Engage a MOTAC-licensed agent. Verify the licence directly rather than relying on marketing.
  • Select your tier based on budget, desired visa length and intended use.
  • Assemble documents — passport, financial proofs, medical report, insurance, police clearance and certified translations.
  • Submit through the agent to the MM2H Centre.
  • Await conditional approval, typically three to six months depending on completeness and seasonal volume.
  • Place the fixed deposit and complete the in-country medical and insurance requirements.
  • Receive the visa endorsement in your passport.
  • Complete the qualifying property purchase within the permitted window.
  • Timelines stretch most often because of incomplete or poorly translated paperwork, so front-loading the documentation work pays off.

    Common Pitfalls for Indonesia Applicants

    The recurring mistakes are consistent across markets. Indonesian applicants most often run into trouble by underestimating the ten-year property hold, assuming MM2H grants work rights, providing bank statements that show funds appearing suddenly rather than a clean source of wealth, neglecting certified translations, and failing to plan for the annual minimum-stay requirement that applies under the revised rules.

    A second cluster of avoidable errors is financial: not budgeting for stamp duty, legal fees and the real all-in cost of the property purchase; misjudging currency exposure between the home currency and the ringgit; and choosing a tier on headline deposit alone without modelling the withdrawal rules. A reputable agent and, where money is significant, independent tax and legal advice neutralise most of these risks.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does MM2H lead to permanent residency or citizenship? No. It is a long-stay visa, renewable by tier, and does not convert to PR or a Malaysian passport.

    Can Indonesian applicants work in Malaysia on MM2H? Not in the ordinary sense. The base visa does not grant work rights; the higher tiers carry limited allowances, and operating a business requires separate corporate and immigration arrangements.

    Can the whole family come? Yes. Spouses and dependent children can be included, and parents can be added in some circumstances, subject to documentation.

    Is the property purchase really mandatory? Yes, under the revised programme, with minimums set by tier and state and a ten-year hold before sale.

    How long does approval take? Typically three to six months for a complete, well-prepared application filed through a licensed agent.

    Will I become a Malaysian tax resident automatically? No — tax residency depends on the 182-day physical presence test, not on holding the visa.

    Conclusion

    MM2H in 2026 is a more structured and transparent programme than the version many applicants remember from a few years ago. For Indonesia applicants who comfortably meet the financial threshold and want a long, renewable, low-cost base in a well-connected and English-friendly country, it remains one of the strongest long-stay options in Asia.

    The keys to a smooth outcome are choosing the right tier, preparing documentation meticulously, understanding the property and stay obligations before committing, and getting cross-border tax advice where the sums justify it. Handled deliberately, MM2H can deliver exactly what most Indonesian applicants are looking for: stability, comfort and flexibility, without the cost base of home.

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