Malaysian trade compliance has entered a new era. Between sweeping SST changes, the digitisation of supporting documents through MyCIEDS, stricter environmental regulations, and updated prohibited items lists, the regulatory landscape for importers and exporters has undergone its most significant transformation in over a decade. If your business moves goods across Malaysian borders, this guide is essential reading.

MyCIEDS: The End of Paper-Based Supporting Documents

Launched in 2025 and mandatory nationwide since January 2026, the Malaysia Customs Import-Export Document System (MyCIEDS) digitises the supporting documents required for customs clearance. It eliminates the need to physically present documents such as invoices, packing lists, certificates of origin, and permits. Note that MyCIEDS handles supporting documents only — the customs declaration itself (K1, K2, K8, K9) is still filed through SMK via Dagang Net's National Single Window.

Under MyCIEDS, importers and exporters — or their authorised freight forwarders — upload supporting documents to a centralised repository linked to each declaration. Customs officers access these documents digitally during the clearance process. The key implications are:

For manufacturers who handle dozens of shipments monthly, MyCIEDS is a genuine improvement — provided your internal documentation processes are robust enough to meet the platform's requirements. Incomplete or inconsistent documents will cause delays just as surely as before, except now the rejection is instantaneous rather than discovered at the port counter.

SST Expansion: The July 2025 Changes Still Affecting Trade

Malaysia's Sales and Service Tax (SST) expansion took effect on 1 July 2025 and, as of July 2026, remains the operative framework for importers and manufacturers. The gazetted Sales Tax orders moved roughly 4,800 additional tariff lines of goods into the 5% band (with some categories at 10%) — the vast majority of Malaysia's tariff schedule. It is the broadest expansion of indirect taxation since SST replaced GST in 2018. A year on, the scope of goods is unchanged, but a set of service-tax refinements took effect on 1 January 2026 (covered below).

Sales Tax Changes

Sales tax now operates on a tiered structure of 0%, 5% and 10%. Essential goods consumed by the public remain exempt at 0% — that rate was deliberately left unchanged so everyday necessities were not hit. Previously exempt discretionary and non-essential items — including certain building materials, basic hardware, selected food processing inputs, and imported fruits — are now subject to 5% or 10% sales tax. The 10% rate applies to most manufactured goods, while essential or semi-processed goods attract the lower 5% rate.

Critically, any manufacturer with annual sales turnover exceeding RM500,000 is now required to register for sales tax. This threshold catches many small and medium manufacturers who previously flew under the radar. Non-registration carries penalties of up to RM30,000 or imprisonment, or both.

Service Tax Changes

Service tax has been restructured with rates between 6% and 8%. Logistics services, including certain warehousing and handling activities, now fall within the expanded service tax scope. This means that some costs in your supply chain that were previously tax-free now carry an additional 6-8% charge.

Schedule C Exemptions: Timing Is Everything

For manufacturers who import raw materials for further processing, the Schedule C exemption under the Sales Tax (Persons Exempted from Payment of Tax) Order remains a critical lifeline. However, the rules have tightened considerably:

Schedule C exemption must be approved BEFORE the cargo arrives in Malaysia. Retrospective applications are no longer accepted, and late applications will result in full duty and tax liability at the point of import.

This means manufacturers must plan their exemption applications weeks in advance of each shipment. Working with a customs broker who understands the application timeline is no longer optional — it is a business necessity.

What Changed in 2026: The January Refinements

After a full year of the expanded SST, the government fine-tuned the regime rather than overhauling it. As of July 2026 the sales-tax scope on goods is unchanged, but several service-tax refinements took effect on 1 January 2026 — the same day the penalty-free grace period ended and full enforcement began. The changes below matter most to importers and manufacturers who lease space, build facilities, or bring in raw materials.

SST changes effective 1 January 2026

The practical takeaway for importers: if you lease warehousing or factory space for industrial use, your service-tax cost on that rent fell from 8% to 6% in January 2026, and smaller operators may now sit below the RM1.5 million exemption line altogether. But the compliance safety net is gone — the errors that were forgiven during the 2025 grace period now carry the full weight of the Sales Tax Act 2018 and Service Tax Act 2018.

How SST Interacts With Customs Value at Import

For imported goods, sales tax is not charged on the invoice price alone. It is calculated on the customs value of the goods — the CIF value (cost, insurance and freight) plus any import duty payable. In practice that means the 5% or 10% sales-tax rate is applied to a base that already includes freight, insurance and duty, so the effective ringgit cost of the expansion is a little higher than the headline rate suggests. Getting the HS classification and the declared customs value right is therefore what actually determines your tax bill — an under- or over-stated value flows straight through to the SST charged at clearance.

E-Waste Import Ban: Basel Convention Amendments

Effective January 2025, Malaysia implemented new restrictions on e-waste imports following the Basel Convention amendments. These changes affect companies that import electronic components, refurbished equipment, or materials containing electronic waste residues.

The amendments establish stricter definitions of what constitutes e-waste versus reusable electronic equipment. Under the new rules:

Manufacturers who import electronic components for assembly or repair should review their supplier documentation carefully. Even components listed as "for refurbishment" may trigger scrutiny under the new classification rules.

New Prohibited and Restricted Items for 2026

JKDM has updated its list of prohibited and restricted items for 2026, reflecting both domestic policy changes and international treaty obligations. Key additions include:

Practical Tips for Staying Compliant in 2026

Given the scale of these changes, here are concrete steps every importer and exporter should take:

  1. Audit your HS codes: With the SST expansion, tariff classification directly affects your tax liability. A professional tariff review can identify misclassifications that may be costing you money — or exposing you to penalties. (See also: our guide to cutting logistics costs.)
  2. Apply for exemptions early: If you qualify for Schedule C or any other exemption, submit your application well before your cargo ships. Build a 3-4 week buffer into your planning.
  3. Digitise your documentation: If your invoices, packing lists, and certificates are still being managed in spreadsheets or paper files, migrate to a digital document management system that can interface with MyCIEDS requirements.
  4. Review your customs broker relationship: Not all brokers have adapted equally to the new systems. Ensure your broker is experienced with MyCIEDS and proactive about regulatory changes.
  5. Track regulatory updates: Subscribe to JKDM announcements and industry association bulletins. The regulatory environment is evolving rapidly, and changes can affect your next shipment.

How DNE Forwarding Helps You Navigate These Changes

At DNE Forwarding, we have been managing customs clearance at Port Klang for over 25 years. We have processed thousands of declarations and stay ahead of every regulatory change so our clients don't have to.

Here is what we bring to the table:

The 2026 customs landscape rewards preparation and penalises complacency. Whether you are a first-time importer or a seasoned manufacturer, having the right customs partner is more important now than ever.

Part of a guide: this article is part of DNE's complete guide to customs clearance in Malaysia.