Tourist visas don't get you a Malaysian bank account — but MM2H, Employment Pass, and Student Pass holders generally have a straightforward path. Here's which banks work, what DE Rantau visa holders run into, and how DuitNow actually works day to day.
As of 2026, opening an account on a tourist visa alone has become quite difficult — major banks increasingly screen applicants on the premise of long-term residency.
Malaysia's largest bank by branch network (400+ nationwide) and generally considered the most foreigner-friendly option — particularly for Employment Pass, Student Pass, or MM2H holders. The MAE app can open a basic account in under 10 minutes with just an ID and a selfie for some account types.
Malaysia's second-largest bank, with the strongest digital app among local banks — popular specifically with expats working in KL's financial and tech sectors, and consistent about its documentation requirements.
Well-regarded for stability, and often the first recommendation for retirees and MM2H applicants specifically because MM2H requires maintaining a fixed deposit in a Malaysian bank.
Better fit if you need genuine multi-currency banking or already hold an account with them at home — but expect higher minimum balances and a smaller branch/ATM footprint than the big five local banks.
Requirements vary slightly by bank and branch, but this standard set covers most cases.
Employment Pass, Student Pass, MM2H, or Dependent Pass — tourist visas are not accepted as valid proof of stay at major banks.
A tenancy agreement or utility bill — hotel addresses or a friend's home are frequently not accepted.
On company letterhead, confirming your position and salary — many banks require this even if not stated on their public website, mainly for anti-money-laundering compliance.
Required for SMS verification. Get a prepaid SIM as soon as you arrive — it makes the whole account-opening process smoother.
Once your account is open, day-to-day banking in Malaysia is genuinely convenient.
Malaysia's real-time payment and QR system — transfer instantly using just a phone number or QR code, no need for full account details. Works across all major banks.
If your ATM card carries the MEPS logo, you can withdraw at any ATM with the same logo regardless of which bank issued your card — though expect a RM1–2 service charge for using a machine outside your own bank.
Using a foreign-issued card at a Malaysian ATM typically costs RM10–20 per withdrawal on top of whatever your home bank charges — a real cost if it's your only way to access cash while you're waiting on a local account.
This is genuinely inconsistent, and worth knowing about before you rely on it.
BigPay and Boost handle daily expenses reliably for DE Rantau holders even when traditional banks won't commit. Worth setting up as your primary day-to-day account rather than treating it as a backup plan.
Always verify any specific branch's current policy directly before counting on it — this is one of the more fluid areas of Malaysian banking for foreigners.
Every topic covered in depth — pick any deep dive and go straight in.
MM2H, DE Rantau, tourist visa rules, and what long-term residency actually looks like.
Read the full guide →KL vs Penang vs Johor. Monthly budgets, housing, food, transport — city by city.
Read the full guide →Lease terms, condo rules, foreigner property restrictions, and neighbourhood breakdowns.
Read the full guide →Private hospital networks, health insurance, and why Malaysia is a regional medical hub.
Read the full guide →Hawker centres, kopitiams, Malay, Chinese-Malaysian, and Indian-Malaysian food culture.
Read the full guide →KL rail network, Grab, intercity buses, and driving as a foreigner.
Read the full guide →TNB electricity, internet providers, water, and what to budget monthly.
Read the full guide →Malls, wet markets, imported goods pricing, and foreigner pricing reality.
Read the full guide →Maybank vs CIMB, opening an account, DuitNow, and the DE Rantau banking gap.
You are here →This page covers banking inside Malaysia. For the other half of the picture — where to keep savings back home, cross-border transfer platforms, and tax-side considerations — see the managing money from abroad guide.