The Numbers for a RM300,000 Property
A RM300,000 property is one of the most searched price points for Malaysian first-time buyers — it sits at the top of the My First Home Scheme (100% financing) eligibility threshold and captures the affordable landed terrace and condominium market in second-tier cities and suburban Klang Valley.
Here are the key numbers at standard 90% LTV (10% down payment), 4.0% interest rate, 30-year tenure:
- Property price: RM300,000
- Down payment (10%): RM30,000
- Loan amount (90%): RM270,000
- Monthly instalment: ~RM1,289
- Total interest paid (30 years): ~RM194,000
- Minimum salary (30% DSR, no other debt): ~RM4,300 gross
- Minimum salary (60% DSR, no other debt): ~RM2,150 gross
Understanding DSR for a RM300k Loan
Banks approve home loans based on your Debt Service Ratio (DSR) — the percentage of your gross monthly income consumed by debt repayments. Most Malaysian banks use a DSR threshold of 60%–70%. This means your total monthly debt payments (home loan + car loan + credit card minimum + any other loans) must not exceed 60–70% of your gross salary.
If you have no other debts, the RM1,289/month instalment on its own needs to fall within your 60–70% DSR threshold. Working backwards: RM1,289 ÷ 60% = RM2,148 minimum gross salary. Most banks in practice also apply internal scoring criteria and may be more conservative than the pure DSR math suggests, so aiming for a gross salary 25–30% higher than the minimum gives you a comfortable buffer.
If you have a car loan of RM600/month: (RM1,289 + RM600) ÷ 60% = RM3,148 minimum gross salary. Use our DSR Calculator Malaysia to calculate your exact position including all your current commitments.
Can You Get a RM300k Loan on RM3,000 Salary?
Yes, potentially — if you have no other debt. A RM3,000 gross salary with zero other commitments gives you a DSR capacity of RM1,800/month (at 60%). The RM1,289 instalment on a RM270,000 loan represents 43% DSR — within the 60% threshold. However, most people earning RM3,000 have at least a car loan or PTPTN repayment, which would push the DSR up significantly.
The My First Home Scheme specifically targets this income group — allowing 100% financing for buyers with gross income ≤ RM5,000/month (or RM10,000 combined for couples) for properties up to RM300,000. Under this scheme, no down payment is required, making RM300k homes accessible to buyers with salaries as low as RM2,500–RM3,000 gross.
Total Upfront Costs for a RM300,000 Property
Beyond the 10% down payment, budget for these additional upfront costs (estimates for a standard subsale property):
- SPA legal fees: ~RM3,000–RM4,000
- SPA stamp duty: RM0 (first-time buyer exemption for properties ≤RM500,000)
- Loan agreement legal fees: ~RM2,000–RM3,000
- Loan stamp duty: RM0 (first-time buyer exemption)
- Valuation fee: ~RM1,000–RM1,500
- MRTA/life insurance: ~RM5,000–RM10,000
Total additional costs: approximately RM11,000–RM18,500. Combined with the RM30,000 down payment, you need roughly RM41,000–RM48,500 in cash before getting keys. If using the My First Home Scheme (zero down payment), you still need RM11,000–RM18,500 for legal fees and insurance.
RM300,000 vs RM500,000: Which Should You Target?
The decision depends on your salary trajectory and life goals. RM300,000 properties offer lower monthly commitments, quicker path to debt-free ownership, and eligibility for government schemes. RM500,000 properties are typically better located (closer to KL city centre or established suburbs), larger, and have stronger capital appreciation potential.
If your salary is currently RM3,500–RM4,500 gross and likely to grow significantly in 3–5 years, targeting a RM300,000 property now is wise — get into the market at a manageable level, benefit from price appreciation, and refinance or upgrade later. Compare the numbers for a higher price point in our Salary for RM500,000 House guide. For the full first-home buying process, read our First Home Buyer Guide Malaysia.