The 3× Annual Income Rule of Thumb
A widely used starting estimate: affordable property price ≈ 3–4× your gross annual income. This approximation aligns with typical bank lending limits when DSR is around 30–40%.
- RM3,000/month (RM36,000/year) → affordable range: RM108,000–RM144,000
- RM5,000/month (RM60,000/year) → affordable range: RM180,000–RM240,000
- RM10,000/month (RM120,000/year) → affordable range: RM360,000–RM480,000
These are conservative estimates. In practice, Malaysian banks lend more generously — but borrowing at maximum capacity leaves little financial cushion. The 3× rule keeps your DSR at a safer level.
How Banks Actually Calculate What You Can Borrow
Banks use your Debt Service Ratio (DSR) — the share of gross monthly income committed to all loan repayments. The standard bank cap is 60% DSR. For high-income borrowers (above RM10,000/month) or government employees, some banks allow up to 70%.
The formula: Maximum monthly instalment = Gross income × 60% − Existing commitments
Example: Gross salary RM6,000. Car loan RM700/month. Credit card (RM10,000 limit) = RM500 commitment. Maximum new instalment = (RM6,000 × 60%) − RM700 − RM500 = RM3,600 − RM1,200 = RM2,400/month
At a 4.5% interest rate over 35 years, a RM2,400/month instalment supports a loan of approximately RM430,000. With 10% down, the maximum property price would be around RM477,000.
Income vs Maximum Property Price Table
Assuming: no existing loan commitments, 4.5% interest rate, 35-year tenure, 90% loan margin, DSR capped at 60%.
| Gross Monthly Income | Max Monthly Instalment (60%) | Est. Loan Amount | Est. Max Property |
|---|---|---|---|
| RM 3,000 | RM 1,800 | ~RM 270,000 | ~RM 300,000 |
| RM 4,000 | RM 2,400 | ~RM 360,000 | ~RM 400,000 |
| RM 5,000 | RM 3,000 | ~RM 450,000 | ~RM 500,000 |
| RM 7,000 | RM 4,200 | ~RM 620,000 | ~RM 690,000 |
| RM 10,000 | RM 6,000 | ~RM 890,000 | ~RM 990,000 |
| RM 15,000 | RM 9,000 | ~RM 1,330,000 | ~RM 1,480,000 |
Estimates only. Assumes no existing commitments, 4.5% p.a., 35-year tenure.
Hidden Costs That Reduce Your Budget
Your salary determines your loan eligibility — but buying a house involves upfront costs that must come from savings, not the loan:
- Down payment: 10% of purchase price (standard). RM400,000 home = RM40,000 upfront.
- Stamp duty (Memorandum of Transfer): 1% on first RM100k, 2% on RM100k–RM500k, 3% above RM500k. Exemption for first homes up to RM500k.
- Legal fees (loan agreement): Approximately 0.5–1% of loan amount.
- Valuation fees: RM500–RM2,000 depending on property value.
- MRTA/MLTA: Mortgage insurance (optional but often required by banks) — typically 1–3% of loan amount as a lump sum.
On a RM400,000 property, total upfront costs (down payment + fees) can reach RM55,000–RM65,000. Budget for this separately.
First-Home Buyer Schemes to Know
- My First Home Scheme (Skim Rumah Pertamaku): 100% financing (no down payment) for first-time buyers earning below RM5,000/month individually or RM10,000/month combined. Maximum property price: RM500,000.
- PR1MA: Affordable homes priced RM100,000–RM400,000 for households earning RM2,500–RM15,000/month. Ballot-based allocation.
- Rumah Selangorku / Residensi Wilayah: State-level schemes with price caps and income limits. Check respective state housing departments.
- EPF Akaun Sejahtera withdrawal: Can be used for down payment or to reduce outstanding loan on a first or second property.
- Stamp Duty exemption: First-time buyers of homes priced RM500,000 and below are exempt from stamp duty on MOT and loan agreement under Budget 2023/2024 initiatives.
How Existing Debts Eat Into Your Budget
Every existing loan reduces how much you can borrow for a house. Common examples:
- A RM700/month car loan on a RM5,000 salary reduces your maximum property price by approximately RM125,000.
- An unused credit card with RM10,000 limit counts as RM500/month commitment — reducing your property budget by about RM90,000.
- PTPTN repayments count as a commitment in the DSR calculation.
Before applying for a housing loan, pay off small loans, cancel unused credit cards, and avoid taking new credit for at least 6 months.
Check Your DSR Before House Hunting
See your current Debt Service Ratio and how much room you have to add a housing loan.