Incorporating a Sdn Bhd in the Klang Valley follows one fixed sequence set by SSM: name search and reservation, the incorporation superform, the notice of registration, and then the post-incorporation pack — company secretary, registered office, statutory registers and a bank account. An incorporation service runs the filings and the calendar; what you provide at each step is identity documents and a handful of decisions. This guide walks the whole sequence, including the friction points where applications actually stall.

Before step one: the decisions you make once

A good provider will not start filing until five things are settled, because changing them mid-application causes rework:

Step 1: Name search and reservation

Your provider searches the proposed name and either applies to reserve it or proceeds by direct incorporation, where name approval and company registration are handled in a single application. A successful reservation holds the name for 30 days, which becomes your window to complete the rest of the filing.

There is a judgment call here. Direct incorporation is faster when your first-choice name is clearly available; it is riskier when the name is unusual, because if the name is queried the whole application waits with it. Providers typically reserve first for borderline names and go direct for safe ones.

Where this step stalls: names too similar to existing companies, and names containing controlled or sensitive words that need supporting approval from the relevant authority before SSM will accept them. A provider who queries your name list on day one is saving you a rejected application, not being difficult.

Step 2: The superform

The application for incorporation is a single consolidated form — the superform — lodged through SSM's MyCoID 2016 portal. It carries the company name and type, the registered office details, the business activity and codes, the particulars of every director and shareholder, the share capital and split, and the statutory declarations that each officer is not disqualified from acting.

What you provide: confirmation of every detail exactly as it appears on identity documents. Mistyped NRIC numbers and inconsistent name spellings are the classic friction point here — SSM records take the form as filed, and later corrections mean further lodgements. A careful provider reads everything back to you before submission; it is a five-minute check that prevents a fortnight of tidying up.

A constitution is optional for a private company. Many founders skip it at incorporation and adopt one later if investors or bankers ask; if your company will have unusual share rights, adopt it at the start instead. This is exactly the kind of judgment call worth raising before the form goes in — our company incorporation page explains how we confirm scope and fee upfront before anything is filed.

Step 3: Payment and the notice of registration

The filing is completed with SSM's flat incorporation fee of RM1,010 for a company limited by shares. Once SSM is satisfied, it issues a notice of registration — this notice is the legal proof that your Sdn Bhd exists, and the registration number on it is the one you will use everywhere from bank forms to invoices. How long approval takes depends on SSM name approval and processing; a straightforward application generally moves quickly, but no honest provider will promise a fixed number of days, and you should be wary of any that do.

Step 4: The post-incorporation pack

The notice of registration is the midpoint, not the finish line. Four things follow, and they are where an incorporation service earns its fee.

Appoint the company secretary — within 30 days

Section 235 of the Companies Act 2016 requires every company to have at least one secretary: a natural person, aged 18 or above, ordinarily resident in Malaysia and qualified to act. The first secretary must be in place within 30 days of incorporation. If a secretarial firm ran your incorporation, this happens automatically; if you filed yourself, this deadline is now yours to meet. Our named company secretary service explains what the role actually covers day to day.

Set up the registered office and statutory registers

The registers of members, directors and secretaries, the minute books and the resolution records must be opened and kept at the registered office from day one. This is the least visible part of the pack and the most commonly neglected — companies that skip it discover the gap years later, during a due diligence or a bank review, when reconstructing records is slow and expensive.

Pass the first board resolutions

The opening set of resolutions typically confirms the first directors and secretary, the registered office, the financial year end and the opening of a bank account. Your provider drafts these; you review and sign them.

Open the bank account

Banks run their own onboarding checks and each has its own list, but all will want the notice of registration, the company's profile and particulars, and a board resolution authorising the account and its signatories. Friction point: bank timelines sit outside everyone's control — SSM's part may be finished while the account is still in review — so start the bank application as soon as the resolutions are signed, not after.

The first-year calendar your provider should hand you

Before the file closes, ask for the standing deadlines in writing:

The full requirements are published on SSM's website; the list above is the practical minimum to put in your diary.

What you provide versus what the service does

Across the whole sequence, your side of the table is short: ranked name choices, identity documents for every officer and shareholder, the share split, a registered office decision, signatures, and prompt answers when something is queried. The service's side is everything else — the searches, the superform, the payment, the secretary appointment, the registers, the resolutions and the calendar. That division of labour is what you are paying for, and it is fair to ask any provider — including us at PT Corporate Services in Kota Damansara — to confirm scope and fee upfront in writing before anything is filed. It is how we work, and it is a reasonable test of anyone in this market.