The Employees Provident Fund(EPF) is expected to declare a 2025 dividend of about 5.8% to 6.3% for Conventional Savings and 5.5% to 6.0% for Shariah Savings, based on current investment performance and fund management considerations. The projection was shared by Global Asia Consulting.
EPF recorded investment income of RM63.99 billion in the first nine months of 2025, an 11% increase from RM57.57 billion in the same period last year. This reflects a healthy earnings trajectory and provides a solid base for dividend consideration. The projected dividend range is viewed reasonable given this performance and EPF’s governance framework, which prioritises sustainability over short-term gains. The unrealised gains, including mark-to-market gains driven by foreign exchange movements, cannot be paid out. These paper gains may fluctuate and only become distributable once realised.
The Shariah portfolio does not include conventional bonds, has fewer risk-hedging tools, and is more exposed to equity market cycles. In recovery years, the gap may narrow, but during periods of global uncertainty, such as 2025, a difference of around 0.2 to 0.3 percentage points is typical.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
Expectations of dividends reaching 6.5% or even 7.0%, despite the encouraging nine-month results, are not expected. EPF’s mandate is not to maximise dividends in a single year, but to ensure sustainable returns over decades. With total fund assets exceeding RM1 trillion, a growing number of retirees, and increasingly critical reserve requirements, the fund is particularly sensitive to the risks of over-distribution. From a pension fund governance perspective, Conventional Savings dividend of 5.8% to 6.3% is competitive without compromising financial discipline.
Over the past five years, EPF dividend rates
have remained within a relatively narrow range. Conventional Savings stood at
5.20% in 2020, rose to 6.10% in 2021, eased to 5.35% in 2022, increased to
5.50% in 2023, and reached 6.30% in 2024. Shariah Savings ranged from 4.90% in
2020 to 6.30% in 2024, matching the Conventional rate last year. This
historical pattern provides context for why the projected 2025 range is seen as
consistent rather than exceptional.
Overall, the outlook suggests a dividend that is in line with past years. It reinforces EPF’s role as a long-term retirement savings fund, focused on stability and sustainability rather than chasing higher payouts in any single year.
Reference:
EPF 2025 dividend
expected to stay within historical range, Samuel Chua, RinggitPlus, 5 Feb 2026






