What is Margin of Finance (LTV)?
Margin of finance (also called Loan-to-Value ratio or LTV) is the percentage of a property's value that a bank is willing to lend. If a property is worth RM500,000 and the bank offers 90% LTV, the bank lends RM450,000 and you must provide RM50,000 (10%) as a down payment from your own funds.
In Malaysia, the margin of finance for residential properties is regulated by Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) under the Financial Services Act 2013. Individual banks can apply stricter internal limits (they may offer only 80% on certain property types or in certain market conditions), but they cannot exceed BNM's maximum.
BNM's LTV Rules at a Glance
| Property Number | Maximum LTV | Min. Down Payment |
|---|---|---|
| 1st residential property | 90% | 10% |
| 2nd residential property | 90% | 10% |
| 3rd+ residential property | 70% | 30% |
| Non-residential (commercial) | No BNM cap | Bank determines |
How Banks Count "Number of Properties"
The LTV limit applies to the number of outstanding residential property loans you currently have, not the number of properties you have ever owned. If you previously owned a property that you have fully paid off or sold, it does not count toward the LTV restriction. The bank checks your CCRIS to see how many active residential property loans exist when you apply.
A fully paid-off home is not counted — even if it is still in your name. A jointly-owned property (with your spouse) counts as one property loan for both parties. Two co-borrowers applying for a joint loan have the property count assessed based on each individual's existing outstanding residential loans. If one partner already has 2 outstanding loans, the joint application may still get 90% LTV if the other partner has none — each bank interprets this differently.
The 70% Rule for Third Properties
The 70% LTV cap for third and subsequent properties was introduced by BNM in November 2010 specifically to curb property speculation. It requires a 30% cash down payment — which for a RM500,000 property means RM150,000 in cash, vs only RM50,000 for a first or second property.
This is a significant barrier to casual property investment and is specifically designed to be one. For serious property investors, the 30% down payment rule means each additional property requires substantial capital. It also means the investor's DSR must be strong enough to service all outstanding loans. Use our DSR Calculator to see if your income supports multiple property loans.
Valuation vs Purchase Price
The LTV is calculated against the lower of purchase price or bank valuation. If you overpay for a property (above market value), the bank lends against market value, and you must cover the difference out-of-pocket in addition to the down payment. Example: purchase price RM520,000, bank valuation RM480,000. The 10% down payment on the valuation is RM48,000. But you also pay the RM40,000 price-vs-valuation gap in cash. Total cash needed: RM88,000 + legal fees + insurance, not just RM52,000.
This is why it is critical to request a bank valuation before finalising any property purchase offer above your estimate of market value. For the full property purchase process, read our First Home Buyer Guide and for refinancing implications, our Refinancing Guide Malaysia.