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PAYROLL · COMPLIANCE

Malaysian payroll deductions: EPF, SOCSO, EIS, PCB & the HRD levy

Every mandatory statutory deduction and 2026 employer contribution rate, in one master table you can run payroll from.

By Steph Eng · Carriera·Updated 18 June 2026
The short answer

Malaysia has five mandatory payroll deductions: EPF (employer 13% / 12%, employee 11%), SOCSO (about 1.75% employer + 0.5% employee, RM6,000 ceiling), EIS (0.2% each, RM6,000 ceiling), PCB/MTD income tax (withheld from the employee), and the HRD Corp levy (1% of wages, paid by the employer). All are remitted by the 15th of the following month. Total employer on-cost is roughly 15–16% of salary.

Running payroll in Malaysia means handling five separate statutory obligations every month, each with its own rate, its own wage ceiling, its own portal and its own legal authority. Get one wrong — an under-contributed EPF, a missed SOCSO band, a late PCB — and the employer, not the employee, carries the penalty. This guide sets out all five mandatory payroll deductions and the 2026 employer contribution rates in one place, with every figure tied to the responsible Malaysian authority: KWSP, PERKESO, LHDN and HRD Corp. Carriera is a compliance-focused recruitment and training partner — payroll and Employment Act literacy is one of our four differentiators — so this is the same reckoning we apply when we place and price talent for clients across Peninsular Malaysia.

§ 01
The master table

Every statutory deduction at a glance

What are the mandatory payroll deductions and employer contribution rates in Malaysia for 2026?

There are five: EPF, SOCSO, EIS, PCB (Monthly Tax Deduction) and the HRD Corp levy. The table below is the single reference for who pays, the rate, the wage ceiling and the deadline. EPF, SOCSO and EIS are shared between employer and employee; PCB is withheld from the employee's pay only; the HRD levy is borne entirely by the employer. See our glossary for plain-language definitions of each acronym.

DeductionEmployee shareEmployer shareWage ceilingRemit byAuthority
EPF / KWSP (retirement savings)11% (under 60)13% if wage ≤ RM5,000; 12% if > RM5,000Third Schedule bands up to RM20,000/mo15th of next monthKWSP
SOCSO / PERKESO (social security)0.5% (First Category)~1.75% (First Category)RM6,000/mo15th of next monthPERKESO
EIS (Employment Insurance System)0.2%0.2%RM6,000/mo15th of next monthPERKESO
PCB / MTD (income tax)Per LHDN scheduleNil (employer withholds & remits)No ceiling — tax-table based15th of next monthLHDN
HRD Corp levy (training)Nil1% of wages (10+ employees)No ceiling15th of next monthHRD Corp

SOCSO and EIS are taken from PERKESO's fixed contribution schedule by wage band, so the exact ringgit amount comes from the schedule rather than a flat percentage of exact salary; the percentages shown are the effective First-Category rates. EPF for wages up to RM20,000/month is likewise computed from the Third Schedule bands. Rates current as at June 2026.

§ 02
Retirement

EPF / KWSP

What is the EPF employer contribution rate in Malaysia?

The EPF (KWSP) employer rate is 13% of monthly wages for employees earning RM5,000 or below, and 12% for employees earning above RM5,000. The standard employee rate for members under 60 is 11%. For wages up to RM20,000 a month, the exact amount is read from the fixed bands in the Third Schedule of the EPF Act 1991 rather than multiplied directly, per KWSP's mandatory-contribution guidance and the EPF Act 1991 Third Schedule.

Two practical notes for employers. First, the rate split is by the employee's wage, not their seniority — the 13%/12% line sits at RM5,000. Second, rates differ for members aged 60 and above and for non-citizens, so a single payroll run can legitimately carry several EPF rates; always read the current Third Schedule rather than assuming one number applies to everyone.

§ 03
Social security

SOCSO & EIS

What are the SOCSO and EIS rates and wage ceiling?

SOCSO (PERKESO) First-Category contribution is about 1.75% employer + 0.5% employee, covering the Employment Injury and Invalidity Schemes. EIS is 0.2% from the employer and 0.2% from the employee. Both are capped at an insured-wage ceiling of RM6,000 a month, raised from RM5,000 effective 1 October 2024, so an employee earning above RM6,000 is contributed on RM6,000. These figures are set by PERKESO's rate-of-contribution schedules under the Employees' Social Security Act 1969 (Act 4) and the Employment Insurance System Act 2017 (Act 800).

SOCSO and EIS are computed band-by-band from PERKESO's schedule — not multiplied from exact salary — so always take the ringgit figure from the contribution table.

The First Category applies to employees below 60. A Second Category (employees aged 60 and over, who generally no longer contribute the employee share to the invalidity scheme) carries a different employer rate, so age is the trigger to check before you finalise SOCSO for an older worker.

§ 04
Income tax

PCB / Monthly Tax Deduction

How does PCB (Monthly Tax Deduction) work?

PCB — Potongan Cukai Bulanan, officially the Monthly Tax Deduction (MTD) — is Malaysia's pay-as-you-earn income-tax withholding. Under Section 107 of the Income Tax Act 1967, the employer must compute, deduct and remit PCB from each eligible employee's monthly pay to LHDN. It is not an employer cost: the employer is custodian of tax that belongs to the employee. The calculation method is set out in LHDN's 2026 MTD computerised-calculation specification.

The amount withheld depends on the employee's chargeable income, marital status, number of children and approved deductions — not a flat rate. Payroll software applies LHDN's MTD formula; employers without computerised payroll can use e-PCB Plus on the MyTax portal. PCB is then remitted by the 15th of the following month, in line with EPF, SOCSO and EIS.

§ 05
Training

The HRD Corp levy

What is the HRD Corp levy and who pays it?

The HRD Corp levy is a statutory training levy under the Pembangunan Sumber Manusia Berhad (PSMB) Act 2001, paid entirely by the employer. Employers with 10 or more Malaysian employees in covered sectors must register and pay 1% of each local employee's monthly wages; employers with 5 to 9 employees may register voluntarily at 0.5%, per HRD Corp's PSMB Act 2001 page. Unlike EPF or SOCSO, nothing is deducted from the employee.

The levy is not a sunk cost: it funds claimable training. Through the SBL-Khas scheme, employers can draw on their accumulated levy to pay for approved courses. We explain the mechanics in our HRD Corp levy guide and SBL-Khas explainer. Carriera Academy is an HRD Corp Approved Training Provider, so programmes — including the payroll and Employment Act course below — can be funded from your own levy rather than fresh budget.

§ 06
Worked example

What does an employee really cost?

How much does an RM4,000 employee actually cost the employer?

Take a Malaysian citizen under 60 on a gross salary of RM4,000 a month. On top of the RM4,000 the employer pays statutory contributions of roughly RM637, an on-cost of about 15.9% before any bonus, benefit or leave. PCB does not appear here because it is withheld from the employee, not added by the employer. The build-up:

Employer contributionRateOn RM4,000
EPF (KWSP)13%≈ RM520.00
SOCSO (First Category)~1.75% (schedule band)≈ RM69.05
EIS0.2% (schedule band)≈ RM7.90
HRD Corp levy1%RM40.00
Total employer on-cost≈ 15.9%≈ RM636.95

SOCSO and EIS ringgit figures are the scheduled amounts for the RM4,000 wage band from PERKESO's contribution table; the percentages are indicative. The HRD levy applies only if the employer is registered (10+ employees, or 5–9 voluntarily). EPF for some members aged 60+ or non-citizens differs.

So an RM4,000 hire is really an ~RM4,637 monthly commitment in statutory terms — useful to know before you sign off a salary band. We work through the wider picture (notice, leave, EPF, SOCSO and the cost of a mis-hire) when we advise clients on offers through our recruitment service.

§ 07
Deadlines & portals

When and where to remit

When must payroll deductions be paid, and through which portal?

All five statutory items share one deadline: the 15th of the following month. Each, however, has its own submission channel. Miss the date and late-payment interest or penalties apply to the employer. The table below maps each deduction to its official remittance portal.

DeductionDeadlineSubmission portal
EPF / KWSP15th of next monthKWSP i-Akaun (Employer)
SOCSO & EIS15th of next monthPERKESO ASSIST Portal
PCB / MTD15th of next monthe-PCB Plus on MyTax (LHDN)
HRD Corp levy15th of next monthHRD Corp e-TRIS
1

Register first

Enrol the business and each new hire with KWSP, PERKESO and LHDN, and with HRD Corp once you reach 10 employees.

2

Read the schedules

Take EPF, SOCSO and EIS amounts from the official bands — not a flat multiply — and run PCB through LHDN's MTD formula.

3

Remit by the 15th

Pay all five through their portals by the 15th of the following month to avoid penalties, and keep the receipts.

§ 08
FAQ

Malaysian payroll deductions — FAQ

What are the mandatory payroll deductions in Malaysia?
Malaysian employers must operate five statutory payroll items: EPF (KWSP) retirement savings, SOCSO (PERKESO) social security, EIS (Employment Insurance System), PCB/MTD income tax withholding under the Income Tax Act 1967, and the HRD Corp training levy under the PSMB Act 2001. EPF, SOCSO and EIS are split between employer and employee; PCB is withheld from the employee only; the HRD levy is paid entirely by the employer.
What is the EPF employer contribution rate in Malaysia for 2026?
The EPF (KWSP) employer contribution rate is 13% of monthly wages for employees earning RM5,000 or below, and 12% for employees earning above RM5,000. The standard employee rate for those under 60 is 11%. Contributions are computed from the fixed bands in the Third Schedule of the EPF Act 1991, not as a raw percentage, for wages up to RM20,000 a month.
What is the SOCSO and EIS wage ceiling in Malaysia?
The insured-wage ceiling for both SOCSO and EIS contributions is RM6,000 per month, raised from RM5,000 effective 1 October 2024 by PERKESO. Employees earning above RM6,000 are contributed on the RM6,000 ceiling. SOCSO (First Category) is about 1.75% employer plus 0.5% employee, and EIS is 0.2% from each side, taken from PERKESO's contribution schedule.
When must Malaysian payroll deductions be paid each month?
EPF, SOCSO, EIS, PCB/MTD and the HRD Corp levy must all be remitted by the 15th of the following month. For example, deductions on June wages are due by 15 July. EPF is paid through i-Akaun, SOCSO and EIS through the ASSIST Portal, PCB through e-PCB Plus on MyTax, and the HRD levy through the HRD Corp e-TRIS portal.
How much does an employee really cost an employer in Malaysia?
On top of gross salary, statutory employer contributions add roughly 15-16% for a typical employee within the wage ceilings. For an RM4,000 monthly salary the employer adds about RM520 EPF (13%), around RM69 SOCSO, around RM8 EIS and RM40 HRD levy (1%) — roughly RM637, or about 15.9% on-cost, before any benefits, bonus or leave.

This guide is general information for Malaysian employers, not legal, tax or payroll advice. For binding figures refer to KWSP (EPF), PERKESO (SOCSO/EIS), LHDN (PCB/MTD) and HRD Corp directly. Rates current as at June 2026. Updated 18 June 2026.

Train your payroll team to get this right

Carriera Academy runs an HRD Corp-claimable programme, Payroll Administration Skills and the Laws, covering EPF, SOCSO, EIS, PCB and the HRD levy end to end — fundable from your own levy. Browse all our training programmes or talk to us.