Ongoing secretarial compliance means keeping the company's statutory registers, minutes and resolutions accurate and current, lodging an annual return with SSM within 30 days of each incorporation anniversary, and circulating and lodging financial statements through MBRS on a fixed timetable. On top of that annual cycle, most changes — to directors, the secretary, the registered office or shareholdings — must be reported to SSM within 14 days. Under the Companies Act 2016, the company secretary is the officer whose job is to keep this machinery running.
The company secretary's role under the Companies Act 2016
Two sections of the Act do most of the work here. Section 236 requires every Malaysian company to have at least one company secretary. Section 235 sets out who may hold the office: a natural person aged 18 or above, a Malaysian citizen or permanent resident who ordinarily resides in Malaysia, and who is either a member of a professional body prescribed by the Minister or licensed by SSM. The office must not be left vacant for more than 30 days.
In plain terms, the secretary is the company's compliance officer of record. The role covers lodging documents with SSM through MyCoID and MBRS, maintaining the statutory registers, preparing and recording board and shareholder resolutions, keeping minutes, and advising the directors on what the Act requires of them and by when. A good secretary is the difference between compliance that happens quietly on schedule and compliance that happens in a panic after a bank or a buyer asks for documents. That is the work we do as a named company secretary.
The statutory records a company must keep
Every company maintains a set of statutory registers: the register of members, the register of directors, managers and secretaries, the register of directors' shareholdings, the register of beneficial owners, and records of any charges granted over the company's assets. Alongside the registers sit the minutes of board and shareholders' proceedings and every written resolution the company passes. Accounting records must be kept for seven years.
These records live at the registered office — or another address notified to SSM — and must be available for inspection there. This is why the registered office is a statutory requirement rather than a mailing convenience: it is the address where the company's legal memory is kept and where official documents can be served on it.
The annual cycle
The annual return
Every company must lodge an annual return with SSM within 30 days of each anniversary of its incorporation date; a company is not required to lodge one in the calendar year it was incorporated. The annual return is a snapshot of the company — registered office, principal business activities, directors, secretary, shareholders and share capital — and it is prepared and lodged by the company secretary. Note that the 30-day window is anchored to your incorporation anniversary, not the calendar year end, which is precisely why companies without a secretary watching the diary miss it.
Financial statements and MBRS
The timetable for accounts is fixed by the Act. Directors must prepare the first financial statements within 18 months of incorporation, and after that within six months of each financial year end. A private company must circulate its financial statements to members within six months of the financial year end, and lodge them with SSM within 30 days after circulation. Lodgement is made through MBRS — the Malaysian Business Reporting System, SSM's digital filing platform. The statements must be audited unless the company qualifies for audit exemption under criteria set by SSM.
One common misconception is worth clearing up: private companies no longer hold AGMs. Under the Companies Act 2016, decisions that once needed an annual general meeting are passed as written resolutions of the members; only public companies must still hold an AGM.
Event-driven filings
The annual cycle is predictable. Event-driven filings are where discipline shows, because each is triggered by something happening in the business. The main ones:
- Change of director or secretary — an appointment, a resignation or a change in particulars: notify SSM within 14 days.
- Change of registered office — notify SSM within 14 days.
- Allotment of new shares — lodge a return of allotment within 14 days.
- Share transfers — update the register of members and notify SSM of the change within 14 days.
- Adopting or amending a constitution — lodge it with SSM within 30 days of the resolution.
Each filing keeps SSM's record of your company aligned with reality. When the two drift apart — a resigned director still on record, an old address on file — the mismatch surfaces at the worst possible time, usually in front of a bank, a lawyer or a prospective buyer doing due diligence. Our SSM filings and compliance service exists to keep the two in lockstep.
Beneficial ownership, in plain terms
Malaysian companies must identify and record their beneficial owners: the individual people who ultimately own or control the company — broadly, anyone holding at least 20% of the shares or voting rights, or who exercises effective control by other means. The company keeps a register of beneficial owners at the registered office, lodges the information with SSM, and updates it within 14 days of becoming aware of a change. Where shares are held through nominees or layers of entities, the company must look through the layers to the people at the top. For most owner-managed companies this is simple — the shareholders and the beneficial owners are the same people — but the register must still exist and be kept current.
Directors' duties — the other half of compliance
Secretarial compliance sits inside a wider frame of directors' duties. Directors must act in good faith in the best interests of the company, exercise their powers for a proper purpose, apply reasonable care, skill and diligence, avoid conflicts of interest, and disclose any interest they hold in transactions the company enters. The point that matters for compliance: filing failures are offences committed not only by the company but by its officers. The annual return nobody lodged is a personal problem for the directors, not an abstract corporate one — which makes a properly run secretarial function, among other things, protection for the people around the board table.
What good compliance looks like, month to month
Compliance is not a year-end scramble; it is a set of small habits maintained continuously:
- Board decisions are minuted or passed as written resolutions when they are made — not reconstructed months later from memory.
- Registers are updated within days of an event, so the paper record never trails reality.
- The two anchor dates — the incorporation anniversary and the financial year end — drive a deadline diary set well in advance, with the audit and circulation timeline planned before the year end arrives.
- Dividends are declared properly: authorised by the directors, paid only out of profits, with the company's solvency considered and documented.
- Changes reach the secretary immediately — a new director's details, a shareholder's transfer — so the 14-day windows feel roomy instead of tight.
This is also how we work at PT Corporate Services: messages answered within the working day, and scope and fee confirmed upfront so there are no surprises. Compliance, handled.
Penalties and strike-off, stated factually
Failing to lodge the annual return or financial statements is an offence by the company and its officers, carrying fines under the Act and, for some breaches, further daily penalties while the default continues. SSM may offer to compound certain offences — resolving them on payment, but at a cost that dwarfs the filing that was missed. Persistent failure to lodge annual returns can lead the Registrar to strike the company off the register on the basis that it does not appear to be carrying on business. A struck-off company ceases to exist as a legal entity, and restoring it to the register requires a court order — a slow and expensive exercise compared with simply staying compliant.
Frequently asked questions
Does a Sdn Bhd still need to hold an AGM?
No. Private companies pass members' decisions as written resolutions under the Companies Act 2016; the AGM requirement now applies only to public companies. The record-keeping duty remains, though — those written resolutions must be properly drafted, signed and kept with the company's records.
Can I act as my own company secretary?
Only if you personally qualify under Section 235 — that is, you are a member of a professional body prescribed by the Minister or hold a licence from SSM. Most business owners do not, and appoint an external named secretary instead. The secretary must be a specific, qualified person, not simply the company itself or any willing shareholder.
We have already missed some filings. What should we do?
Bring the record current as quickly as possible: lodge the outstanding documents, settle any compounds issued, and correct the registers so they match reality. The exposure grows the longer a default runs, so speed matters more than embarrassment. A company secretary can review the company's SSM record and set out exactly what is outstanding and in what order to fix it.
- Every year: annual return lodged within 30 days of the incorporation anniversary.
- After each financial year end: financial statements circulated to members within 6 months, then lodged with SSM via MBRS within 30 days after circulation.
- Within 14 days, as they happen: changes to directors, the secretary, the registered office, share allotments and share transfers.
- Continuously: registers, minutes and resolutions kept current at the registered office, and beneficial ownership information kept up to date.
Shorter answers to the questions we hear most often are on our FAQ — and if you are still at the setup stage, start with our guide to Sdn Bhd incorporation.
If you would rather have this whole calendar off your desk, WhatsApp PT Corporate Services at +6016 538 5338. We reply within the working day, and scope and fee are confirmed upfront before any work begins. Compliance, handled.
Authoritative sources: Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia (SSM) · MyCoID portal (SSM).
The statutory calendar at a glance
| Obligation | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Annual return | Within 30 days of the incorporation anniversary, each calendar year |
| Financial statements — circulation | Within 6 months of the financial year end |
| Financial statements — lodgement (MBRS) | Within 30 days after circulation |
| Director / secretary changes | Notify SSM within 14 days |
| Registered office change | Lodge within 14 days |
| Secretary vacancy | Never more than 30 days |
More plain-English answers live on our insights page.
According to Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia (SSM), a company must lodge its annual return with the Registrar for each calendar year not later than 30 days from the anniversary of its incorporation date (Companies Act 2016, Section 68). See SSM — Companies Act 2016, Section 68.