In 2025, the median house price in Kuala Lumpur and Selangor was RM560,000 (US$142,300) and RM470,000 respectively, a 7 per cent and 4.4 per cent increase from the year before, according to official data. This is a spike from the 1.6 per cent and 0.4 per cent increase in 2024. The Malaysian federal government has defined affordable homes as having a maximum price of RM300,000.
According to official data, Malaysia’s homes have been “seriously unaffordable” since 2014, when the country’s median house price was almost five times its median annual household income. This house price-to-income ratio, or median multiple, is a method recommended by the World Bank and United Nations to gauge housing affordability. Home prices are considered affordable when they are three times or below that of household income.
A decade on in 2024, homes in Malaysia have become slightly more affordable, when the median multiple dropped from 4.9 to 4.2, though this score is still in the “seriously unaffordable” range. Analysts say homes remain unaffordable due to slow income growth, longer loan tenures, and rising costs for developers. These developers in turn price homes higher for larger profit margins.
Recognising that homes on the open market can be unaffordable for some Malaysians, the federal and state governments have introduced several housing schemes to help the bottom 40 per cent and middle 40 per cent income earners. These schemes have eligibility criteria that include citizenship and household income, and offer homes capped at around RM300,000 with hybrid financing models, including the possibility of rent-to-own.
The federal
government’s schemes include PR1MA, where a government-linked company builds
affordable homes across the country either directly or through voluntary joint
ventures with private developers. Prices range from RM150,000 to more than
RM500,000, depending on location and project.
Residensi Wilayah is another federal government affordable housing scheme that is designed for Malaysians working in the federal territories - Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya and Labuan. Prices range from RM200,000 to more than RM400,000. The federal government also provides low-cost housing, like this block of flats in Kerinchi, Kuala Lumpur, under its Program Perumahan Rakyat (PPR) scheme. State governments, which have vested power over their land, have their own affordable housing schemes.
In 2025, homes priced below RM300,000 made up the largest portion (37.7 per cent) of unsold completed units. Homes priced above RM500,001 made up the second-largest portion (34.7 per cent) of unsold completed units, suggesting that more expensive units were not exactly being snapped up either.
The housing minister has said that he has always advised developers to conduct feasibility studies and reduce building costs through technology like industrialised building systems (IBS). IBS is a construction technique in Malaysia where components are manufactured in a controlled environment either on- or off-site, before being transported and assembled with minimal site work.
The other is financing cost. Banks do have long-dated tenures but if wages are low, prospects for new buyers to get financing is low. And if wages remain “sticky” upward, then sales are going to be hampered and home purchases by young people will be impacted. The way forward is to be innovative on building new homes, creating connections (rail/roads) to new development areas and providing incentives and support for first time buyers. We are not Singapore or Hong Kong limited by land. Solutions can be found if we work on it seriously enough.
Reference:
IN
FOCUS: Why have Malaysia’s homes remained ‘seriously unaffordable’ for a decade
and counting? Aqil
Haziq Mahmud, CNA, 11 March 2026






