Health inflation in Malaysia increased to 3% in 2025 from
1.4%, driven by rising healthcare service costs. Chief Statistician Datuk Seri
Dr Mohd Uzir Mahidin said the Preliminary Report of the Malaysia Health Price
Index (IHK) 2025 showed that the health services category recorded the highest
increase at 4.4%, compared with 0.9% in 2024. He said the increase was mainly
driven by a 9% rise in insurance expenditure.
Meanwhile, inflation for medicines rose to 2.7% from 2.2%
in 2024, while health equipment increased to 1.2% from 0.6%. The Medicines
category is the largest component of household health expenditure in Malaysia,
accounting for 38.9% of the IHK weighting. Malaysia’s IHK covers health-related
components from several consumer price index (CPI) groups, while other
countries measure health inflation based on the health category in their
respective CPI. Health inflation rates in selected countries in 2025 ranged between
negative 0.8% and 5.3%. Vietnam recorded a higher health inflation rate at 5.3%
compared with Malaysia’s 3%, while Thailand recorded the lowest rate at
negative 0.8%.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org
The IHK has served as an important reference for measuring
changes in prices of health-related goods and services in relation to household
spending. The statistics can help the government, stakeholders and the public
identify trends in healthcare cost changes, supporting more effective planning,
implementation and monitoring of health inflation.
Meanwhile, the government will launch a pilot programme
for its Base Medical and Health Insurance and Takaful (MHIT) plan in the Klang
Valley by the end of July, with monthly premiums expected to start from around
RM60.
Known as MediAsas, it will be offered as a standalone
medical insurance and takaful protection plan with two product options —
MediAsas Teras (a standard plan) and MediAsas Fleksi (a standard-plus plan).
The scheme will provide medical coverage for individuals up to the age of
85. The MediAsas premiums will be determined based on the latest medical
claims experience and healthcare cost inflation trends, with indicative
premiums expected to remain within the target monthly range of around RM60 to
RM550 for individuals within the entry age of up to 70 years. Final
pricing will be confirmed before the nationwide implementation in January 2027.
The pilot phase will run from end-July until October 2026.
Six insurers and takaful operators will participate in
the pilot programme, together with selected hospitals in the Klang Valley. They
include AIA Bhd, Allianz Life Insurance Malaysia Bhd, Great Eastern Life
Assurance (Malaysia) Bhd, Prudential BSN Takaful Bhd, Etiqa Family Takaful Bhd
and Syarikat Takaful Malaysia Keluarga Bhd. The government said the pilot
programme will test "operational readiness, including systems integration,
customer experience and operational processes" in a controlled
environment. Feedback gathered during the pilot phase will be used to refine
implementation arrangements before the nationwide rollout.
The Base MHIT initiative forms part of the government's
broader Reset strategy, undertaken jointly with Bank Negara Malaysia, to
address rising medical inflation and strengthen the long-term sustainability of
Malaysia's healthcare system. The strategy focuses on value based healthcare in
improving patient outcomes, optimising cost-effective healthcare services and
enhancing access to quality care.
References:
Health inflation rises to 3% in 2025 on higher
service costs, says DOSM, theedgemalaysia.com, 8 July 2026
Govt to launch base-medical insurance plan by
end-July, monthly premiums start at RM60, Luqman Amin, theedgemalaysia.com, 7
July 2026





