You incorporate a Sdn Bhd through SSM's MyCoID 2016 portal in two stages: reserve a company name, then submit the incorporation application — the "superform" under Section 14 of the Companies Act 2016 — and pay the flat RM1,010 registration fee for a company limited by shares. The company legally exists from the date stated on the Section 15 notice of registration. You need at least one shareholder, at least one director who ordinarily resides in Malaysia, a registered office in Malaysia and, within 30 days of incorporation, a licensed company secretary.
Watch: How Do You Actually Incorporate a Sdn Bhd in Malaysia?
A walkthrough of the same guide on this page: the four legal requirements, the MyCoID process step by step, and the compliance deadlines that hit every new company in year one. This is general information, not legal advice.
What a Sdn Bhd is — and when it is the right vehicle
"Sdn Bhd" is short for Sendirian Berhad: Malaysia's private company limited by shares. Once registered under the Companies Act 2016, the company is a separate legal person. It can own assets, sign contracts, borrow, sue and be sued in its own name, and its shareholders' liability is limited to the amount they agreed to pay for their shares. Business debts are the company's debts — not, in the ordinary course, the owners' personal debts.
A private company may have up to 50 shareholders, must restrict the transfer of its shares, and cannot offer its shares or debentures to the public. In practice, the Sdn Bhd is the default vehicle for any Malaysian business that carries meaningful risk, wants to contract with larger corporates, plans to hire, or intends to bring in partners or investors.
It is not automatically the right choice for everyone. A small, low-risk, one-person operation is often better served by a sole proprietorship, at least at the start. We compare the two honestly in Sdn Bhd vs sole proprietorship.
The legal requirements
Shareholders
A Sdn Bhd needs at least one shareholder and may have no more than 50. Shareholders can be individuals or corporate bodies, and one person can be the sole shareholder and sole director. Foreign ownership is generally permitted — many sectors allow 100% foreign shareholding — although certain regulated industries impose local-equity conditions, so check the rules for your sector before fixing the shareholding.
Directors
You need at least one director who is a natural person, at least 18 years old, and who ordinarily resides in Malaysia with a principal place of residence here. A director must not be disqualified under the Act — an undischarged bankrupt, for example, cannot act as a director without leave. Foreign-owned companies satisfy the residency rule by appointing at least one Malaysia-resident director alongside any foreign directors.
Company secretary
Every company must have at least one company secretary: 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 first secretary must be appointed within 30 days of incorporation. This is a named statutory officer of the company, not a formality.
Registered office
From incorporation, the company must maintain a registered office in Malaysia — the official address where its statutory registers and records are kept and where legal documents can be served on it. It does not have to be your business premises, but it must be a real, accessible address.
Decisions to make before you apply
Company name
Choose a name that is available and complies with SSM's naming rules. Names identical to an existing company or registered business will be rejected, and certain controlled words — those suggesting royal or government patronage, or a regulated activity such as banking or insurance — need consent from the relevant authority. Once SSM approves a name, it is reserved for 30 days, and the reservation can be extended on payment of SSM's prescribed fee.
Share capital and shareholding
There is no minimum share capital: a Sdn Bhd can be incorporated with a single RM1 share. That said, think practically. Banks, licensing authorities, landlords and customers read share capital as a signal of substance, and some licence categories set their own capital expectations. Decide who holds how many shares from day one — reshuffling a shareholding later is possible, but it means more paperwork and, in some cases, stamp duty.
Constitution — or not
Under Section 31 of the Companies Act 2016, a constitution is optional. Without one, the Act's default rules govern the company, which works well for many simple owner-managed businesses. Adopt a constitution when you need tailored rules: different share classes (preference shares must be authorised in a constitution), pre-emption rights among shareholders, or specific governance arrangements agreed with investors.
Business activity: MSIC codes
The application asks you to describe the company's intended business using MSIC codes — Malaysia's standard industrial classification. You may select up to three. Choose codes that genuinely match what the company will do, because banks, licensing agencies and government bodies all rely on them later.
The MyCoID process, step by step
Incorporation runs entirely through SSM's MyCoID 2016 portal. The sequence looks like this.
Step 1 — Name search and reservation
Search the proposed name, then apply to reserve it. Straightforward names are often approved quickly; names containing controlled words go for manual review and can take longer. On approval, the name is reserved for 30 days while you complete the application.
Step 2 — The superform (Section 14)
Submit the incorporation application under Section 14 of the Act — universally known as the superform. It captures the company name, the nature of business (your MSIC codes), the registered office and business addresses, the details of every director and shareholder, the share capital and shareholding, and a statement of compliance. For a company limited by shares, the SSM registration fee is a flat RM1,010, payable on submission.
Step 3 — Notice of registration (Section 15)
Once the Registrar is satisfied that the requirements are met, SSM issues a notice of registration under Section 15. This is the moment the company comes into existence: it is a body corporate from the date stated in the notice, with its own registration number. For complete, straightforward applications this typically arrives within a matter of days, though timing is SSM's, not anyone's promise.
Step 4 — Certificate of incorporation (Section 17)
A certificate of incorporation is not issued automatically. Under Section 17, you may request one from SSM on payment of the prescribed fee. Banks, embassies and contract counterparties often ask to sight it, so most companies obtain the certificate as a matter of course.
Immediately after incorporation — the first-30-days checklist
The notice of registration is the beginning, not the end. In the first weeks:
- Appoint the company secretary within 30 days. This is a hard statutory deadline. PT Corporate Services acts as a named company secretary under the Companies Act 2016.
- Confirm the registered office. If you do not have suitable premises, a registered office service gives the company a proper statutory address from day one.
- Open the statutory registers and pass the first resolutions. The registers of members, directors and secretaries must be set up, and the first board resolutions typically confirm the registered office, fix the financial year end and authorise a bank account.
- Open a corporate bank account. Banks generally ask for the Section 15 notice or Section 17 certificate, the constitution if one was adopted, identification for directors and shareholders, and a board resolution authorising the account.
- Check your licences. Requirements vary by industry and local authority — premises and signboard licences from the local council, plus any sector-specific approvals. Confirm what applies to your activity before you start trading.
Your first-year compliance calendar
A new Sdn Bhd picks up recurring obligations immediately, and the deadlines are anchored to two dates: the incorporation anniversary and the financial year end.
- Within 30 days of incorporation: appoint the company secretary.
- Within 18 months of incorporation: prepare your first financial statements — and after that, within six months of each financial year end. They must be audited unless the company qualifies for audit exemption under SSM's criteria.
- Within 6 months of each financial year end: circulate the financial statements to members.
- Within 30 days after circulation: lodge the financial statements with SSM through MBRS, SSM's digital filing platform.
- Within 30 days of each incorporation anniversary: lodge the annual return. The first one falls due after the company's first anniversary.
- Within 14 days of the event: notify SSM of changes to directors, the secretary, the registered office or shareholdings.
We keep this calendar for clients as part of our SSM filings and compliance work, and the full detail of every obligation is in our guide to company secretarial compliance.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Treating name approval as incorporation. A reserved name is not a company. Until the Section 15 notice is issued, there is nothing to sign contracts with.
- Missing the 30-day secretary deadline. It is the first statutory deadline every new company faces, and the easiest one to overlook in the excitement of starting up.
- Confusing the registered office with the business address. The registered office must be a real address where records are kept and documents can be served — a casually chosen home address often fails that test in practice.
- Incorporating with RM1 and leaving it there. Legal, but it can create friction with banks, licensing bodies and counterparties who read the number as a signal.
- Skipping the constitution question. If preference shares, investor rights or bespoke governance are anywhere in your plans, decide this early rather than retrofitting it.
- Forgetting year two. No annual return is due in the calendar year of incorporation, which lulls founders into missing the first real one — due within 30 days of the first anniversary.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to incorporate a Sdn Bhd?
For a straightforward application — an uncontroversial name, complete information and payment made — the whole process commonly completes within days. Names with controlled words go to manual review, and incomplete superforms bounce back, so preparation is what actually determines speed.
Can foreigners own a Malaysian Sdn Bhd?
Generally, yes. Most sectors permit up to 100% foreign shareholding, though some regulated industries impose local-equity conditions. The practical constant is the residency rule: at least one director must ordinarily reside in Malaysia, so a wholly foreign-owned company needs a Malaysia-resident director on the board.
How much does incorporation cost?
The SSM registration fee for a company limited by shares is a flat RM1,010. Name reservation and the optional Section 17 certificate each carry SSM's prescribed fee. Professional fees for handling the process are separate — at PT Corporate Services, scope and fee are confirmed upfront before any work begins.
- Registration runs through SSM's MyCoID 2016 portal: name reservation first, then the Section 14 superform.
- The SSM registration fee for a company limited by shares is a flat RM1,010.
- Minimums: one shareholder, one Malaysia-resident director, a registered office — and share capital can be as low as RM1.
- The company exists from the date on the Section 15 notice of registration; the Section 17 certificate is issued on request.
- Appoint a licensed company secretary within 30 days of incorporation — the first hard deadline every new company faces.
If any of the terms above are unfamiliar, our corporate secretarial glossary defines them in plain English.
Ready to incorporate — or still weighing whether you should? WhatsApp PT Corporate Services at +6016 538 5338. We reply within the working day, scope and fee are confirmed upfront, and our company incorporation service takes the whole process — name to notice of registration to first filings — off your desk. Compliance, handled.
Authoritative sources: Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia (SSM) · MyCoID portal (SSM).
Sdn Bhd requirements at a glance
| Requirement | Minimum under the Companies Act 2016 |
|---|---|
| Shareholders | One (individual or corporate) |
| Directors | One natural person, 18+, ordinarily resident in Malaysia |
| Company secretary | Appointed within 30 days of incorporation |
| Registered office | Required in Malaysia from the date of incorporation |
| Share capital | No minimum — from RM1 paid-up |
| Constitution | Optional — the Act’s default provisions apply without one |
According to Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia (SSM), an application for incorporation is made to the Registrar under Section 14 of the Companies Act 2016, and once satisfied the Registrar issues a Notice of Registration under Section 15 — conclusive evidence that the company is duly incorporated. See SSM — Guidelines for Incorporation of a Local Company.