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SettleMetric.

Indonesia vs Malaysia

Indonesia is ahead on housing. Malaysia is ahead on taxes, healthcare, language, infrastructure. Full criterion-by-criterion data below.

Verified

Scoreboard

The key numbers head-to-head — the stronger side is marked. The overall score stays decoration; what matters is which facts fit you.

Malaysia leads on 5 of 7
IndonesiaMalaysia
Cost of living (single, excl. rent)$700/mo
i

BPS — Pengeluaran untuk Konsumsi Penduduk Indonesia, Maret 2024 (per-capita expenditure), scaled to a single urban resident basket

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
BPS March-2024 average per-capita monthly expenditure is Rp 1,500,556 nationally (urban Rp 1,737,427), split food/non-food — but that is a rural-weighted per-capita floor far below a foreign remote worker's outlay. Curated single-person, non-rent urban (Jakarta-level) basket — groceries, eating out, transport/ride-hailing, utilities, mobile+home internet, modest leisure — sits around USD 650–750/month; recorded midpoint USD 700. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: this is a modelled basket anchored on BPS composition, not a single official basket figure; refine with itemised BPS urban non-food lines and current retail prices next cycle.
$620/mo
i

DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (mean household expenditure RM5,150/mo), single-person basket derived

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
Notes
Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
Rent: 1-bedroom (city avg)$505/mo
i

Global Property Guide — average 1-bedroom apartment rent, Jakarta (market listings)

Research

Data as of
Jan 31, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Jakarta average 1-bedroom apartment asking rent ≈ IDR 8.1 million/month ≈ USD 505 (early 2026); city-centre/prime units run IDR 8–15m (USD 500–950), non-prime from IDR 4–6m. Country 'average' is proxied by Jakarta, the largest rental market; Bali resort areas can be higher for furnished short-to-medium lets. Numbeo/Expatistan are excluded per policy; this is a listing-market report. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: an official BPS/BI housing-rent series would be preferable if one is published.
$635/mo
i

Khazanah Research Institute / property-portal rental market data (KL avg asking rent Q1 2025) + Penang market rents

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Kuala Lumpur average asking rent ≈ RM2,901/mo (Q1 2025 market data) and Penang (George Town) 1-bedroom ≈ RM1,800/mo; population-weighted over the two covered cities (KL ≈1.98M, George Town/Penang island ≈0.79M) → ≈ RM2,586/mo ≈ $635 at USD/MYR 4.08. City-wide averages (central districts run higher).
Notes
Curated from market/portal rental data, not an official statistic — NAPIC (jpph.gov.my) rental transaction data is the preferred official source but was not machine-accessible this cycle. Weighted over the two covered cities, not a full national figure.
Freelancer tax burden9.1%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over official DJP rules (pajak.go.id: NPPN + PPh Pasal 17 + PTKP)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best cleanly-eligible scheme id-nppn-freelancer at €60,000 = 1,232,521,200 IDR (ECB 20,542.02 IDR/EUR). NPPN professional-services norm 50% → net income 616,260,600; minus PTKP TK/0 54,000,000 → PKP 562,260,600; progressive PPh (5/15/25/30%) = 112,678,180 IDR → 9.14% ≈ 9.1%. The 0.5% MSME final tax would give ~0.3% but its 7-year window and professional-services exclusion make it unreliable for a newly-registered foreign IT freelancer, so NPPN is the recorded best. Single filer; NPPN KLU-62 norm pending manual confirmation (50% vs 62.5% — see scheme notes).
0%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over Malaysia's territorial FSI exemption (MOF Budget 2026 Tax Measures, Appendix 8)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
Notes
The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
Homicide rate0.3/100k
i

UNODC via World Bank (Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Indonesia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Latest available UNODC-sourced value is 0.30 per 100,000 for 2022 (World Bank series VC.IHR.PSRC.P5, sourced from the UNODC Data Portal). Indonesia's recorded intentional-homicide rate is very low by global standards; reporting has gaps between years.
0.73/100k
i

World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
Notes
UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
Internet speed10 Mbps
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Indonesia (2023)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median download ≈ 9.3–9.8 Mbps across the 2023 daily country medians (~4.3M tests) from M-Lab's public NDT statistics API; recorded midpoint 9.5 Mbps. 2024/2026 aggregate files were not retrievable at the time of check.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads far below Ookla-style figures (Ookla put Indonesia fixed broadband ~28–41 Mbps in 2024–2025) — comparable only within this criterion, never mixed with Ookla.
32 Mbps
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median of daily medians over 343 days of 2023 (231,846 download samples), computed by log-interpolation within the median histogram bucket of M-Lab's public country-daily-stats API (latest full year available; 2024 file covers only 86 days). Bucket-midpoint method gives ≈37 Mbps as an upper alternative.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads well below Ookla-style figures (Ookla-based sources report Malaysian fixed download ~100+ Mbps) — comparable only within this criterion. Malaysia's fibre (Unifi, Maxis, TIME) is fast and widely available in cities; the M-Lab figure understates real fibre-plan speeds.
English proficiencyLow
i

EF EPI 2025 — Indonesia rank 80/123, score 471 (Low Proficiency band)

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI 2025 (attribution: EF Education First): Indonesia scores 471 (Low band) nationally, though Jakarta scores 523 (Moderate). Bahasa Indonesia is the sole official language; English is workable in tourist/expat zones (Bali, South Jakarta) and among younger professionals, but limited in government offices and everyday services nationwide → 'low'.
High
i

EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.
Private healthcare cost$3,600/yr
i

International private medical insurers (Cigna Global, Allianz Care, AXA, William Russell) — comprehensive outpatient+inpatient plans; quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient, ~USD 1m+ annual limit, small deductible) international/IPMI plans for a healthy 35-year-old resident foreigner in Indonesia are commonly quoted around USD 200–500/month; a mid-tier comprehensive plan midpoint ≈ USD 300/month ≈ USD 3,600/year. Premiums are quoted on request (age/coverage/evacuation dependent), so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote. Local BPJS Kesehatan (mandatory public scheme for KITAS holders) is far cheaper but not a comprehensive private-cover equivalent.
$1,960/yr
i

Malaysian comprehensive medical insurance (inpatient + outpatient) market midpoint — AIA / Great Eastern / Allianz / AXA; insurers quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive plans that include inpatient/hospitalisation plus outpatient cover for a resident foreigner run ≈ RM400–1,200/month across major insurers (AIA, Great Eastern, Allianz, AXA/Prudential); a healthy 35-year-old midpoint ≈ RM650–700/month ≈ RM8,000/year ≈ $1,960 at USD/MYR 4.08 (range ≈ $1,180–$3,530). Premiums are individually underwritten and quoted on request, so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote.
Notes
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient) basis, chosen for cross-country comparability. Malaysian citizens/PRs access heavily subsidised public healthcare; foreigners typically buy private cover or use the (higher) foreigner tariff at public hospitals. International (IPMI) plans with global coverage cost substantially more. Insurers quote on request.

Verdict

Each lens weighs only the facts that matter to that plan, and names the side it favours.

Contract or freelance in tech, billing clients abroad.

Malaysia fits better — 4 of 5

IndonesiaMalaysia
Freelancer tax burden9.1%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over official DJP rules (pajak.go.id: NPPN + PPh Pasal 17 + PTKP)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best cleanly-eligible scheme id-nppn-freelancer at €60,000 = 1,232,521,200 IDR (ECB 20,542.02 IDR/EUR). NPPN professional-services norm 50% → net income 616,260,600; minus PTKP TK/0 54,000,000 → PKP 562,260,600; progressive PPh (5/15/25/30%) = 112,678,180 IDR → 9.14% ≈ 9.1%. The 0.5% MSME final tax would give ~0.3% but its 7-year window and professional-services exclusion make it unreliable for a newly-registered foreign IT freelancer, so NPPN is the recorded best. Single filer; NPPN KLU-62 norm pending manual confirmation (50% vs 62.5% — see scheme notes).
0%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over Malaysia's territorial FSI exemption (MOF Budget 2026 Tax Measures, Appendix 8)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
Notes
The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
Internet speed10 Mbps
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Indonesia (2023)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median download ≈ 9.3–9.8 Mbps across the 2023 daily country medians (~4.3M tests) from M-Lab's public NDT statistics API; recorded midpoint 9.5 Mbps. 2024/2026 aggregate files were not retrievable at the time of check.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads far below Ookla-style figures (Ookla put Indonesia fixed broadband ~28–41 Mbps in 2024–2025) — comparable only within this criterion, never mixed with Ookla.
32 Mbps
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median of daily medians over 343 days of 2023 (231,846 download samples), computed by log-interpolation within the median histogram bucket of M-Lab's public country-daily-stats API (latest full year available; 2024 file covers only 86 days). Bucket-midpoint method gives ≈37 Mbps as an upper alternative.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads well below Ookla-style figures (Ookla-based sources report Malaysian fixed download ~100+ Mbps) — comparable only within this criterion. Malaysia's fibre (Unifi, Maxis, TIME) is fast and widely available in cities; the M-Lab figure understates real fibre-plan speeds.
English proficiencyLow
i

EF EPI 2025 — Indonesia rank 80/123, score 471 (Low Proficiency band)

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI 2025 (attribution: EF Education First): Indonesia scores 471 (Low band) nationally, though Jakarta scores 523 (Moderate). Bahasa Indonesia is the sole official language; English is workable in tourist/expat zones (Bali, South Jakarta) and among younger professionals, but limited in government offices and everyday services nationwide → 'low'.
High
i

EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.
Cost of living (single, excl. rent)$700/mo
i

BPS — Pengeluaran untuk Konsumsi Penduduk Indonesia, Maret 2024 (per-capita expenditure), scaled to a single urban resident basket

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
BPS March-2024 average per-capita monthly expenditure is Rp 1,500,556 nationally (urban Rp 1,737,427), split food/non-food — but that is a rural-weighted per-capita floor far below a foreign remote worker's outlay. Curated single-person, non-rent urban (Jakarta-level) basket — groceries, eating out, transport/ride-hailing, utilities, mobile+home internet, modest leisure — sits around USD 650–750/month; recorded midpoint USD 700. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: this is a modelled basket anchored on BPS composition, not a single official basket figure; refine with itemised BPS urban non-food lines and current retail prices next cycle.
$620/mo
i

DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (mean household expenditure RM5,150/mo), single-person basket derived

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
Notes
Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
Domestic delivery qualityGood
i

Pos Indonesia + major private carriers (JNE, J&T, SiCepat, Ninja Xpress, GoSend/GrabExpress) service coverage (composite)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Dense, competitive parcel market: Pos Indonesia (national operator) plus JNE, J&T Express, SiCepat, Ninja Xpress and on-demand couriers (GoSend, GrabExpress) give 1–3 day delivery in Java and major cities and same-day intra-city; tracking is standard. Reach to remote islands is slower and address quality is uneven, so 'good' rather than 'excellent'. Parcel-locker networks are limited vs Europe.
Good
i

Pos Malaysia (Pos Laju) and major courier coverage pages (J&T, Ninja Van, GDEX, DHL) — composite

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Pos Laju (Pos Malaysia) is the only courier with coverage in every district (900+ outlets, 80%+ of populated areas); J&T Express, Ninja Van, GDEX, City-Link and KEX provide dense e-commerce coverage with real-time tracking and cash-on-delivery; next-working-day delivery is available in Peninsular urban areas. Rated 'good' rather than 'excellent' because East Malaysia (Sabah/Sarawak) and rural areas are slower and parcel-locker density is far lower than locker-first markets.
Notes
Peninsular urban delivery is fast (1–2 days); East Malaysia and remote areas take longer. Tracking and COD are standard across the major carriers.

Relocating with a partner and school-age children.

Malaysia fits better — 2 of 3

IndonesiaMalaysia
Homicide rate0.3/100k
i

UNODC via World Bank (Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Indonesia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Latest available UNODC-sourced value is 0.30 per 100,000 for 2022 (World Bank series VC.IHR.PSRC.P5, sourced from the UNODC Data Portal). Indonesia's recorded intentional-homicide rate is very low by global standards; reporting has gaps between years.
0.73/100k
i

World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
Notes
UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
Private healthcare cost$3,600/yr
i

International private medical insurers (Cigna Global, Allianz Care, AXA, William Russell) — comprehensive outpatient+inpatient plans; quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient, ~USD 1m+ annual limit, small deductible) international/IPMI plans for a healthy 35-year-old resident foreigner in Indonesia are commonly quoted around USD 200–500/month; a mid-tier comprehensive plan midpoint ≈ USD 300/month ≈ USD 3,600/year. Premiums are quoted on request (age/coverage/evacuation dependent), so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote. Local BPJS Kesehatan (mandatory public scheme for KITAS holders) is far cheaper but not a comprehensive private-cover equivalent.
$1,960/yr
i

Malaysian comprehensive medical insurance (inpatient + outpatient) market midpoint — AIA / Great Eastern / Allianz / AXA; insurers quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive plans that include inpatient/hospitalisation plus outpatient cover for a resident foreigner run ≈ RM400–1,200/month across major insurers (AIA, Great Eastern, Allianz, AXA/Prudential); a healthy 35-year-old midpoint ≈ RM650–700/month ≈ RM8,000/year ≈ $1,960 at USD/MYR 4.08 (range ≈ $1,180–$3,530). Premiums are individually underwritten and quoted on request, so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote.
Notes
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient) basis, chosen for cross-country comparability. Malaysian citizens/PRs access heavily subsidised public healthcare; foreigners typically buy private cover or use the (higher) foreigner tariff at public hospitals. International (IPMI) plans with global coverage cost substantially more. Insurers quote on request.
English proficiencyLow
i

EF EPI 2025 — Indonesia rank 80/123, score 471 (Low Proficiency band)

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI 2025 (attribution: EF Education First): Indonesia scores 471 (Low band) nationally, though Jakarta scores 523 (Moderate). Bahasa Indonesia is the sole official language; English is workable in tourist/expat zones (Bali, South Jakarta) and among younger professionals, but limited in government offices and everyday services nationwide → 'low'.
High
i

EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.

Optimising tax, banking and crypto rules.

Malaysia fits better — 1 of 3

IndonesiaMalaysia
Crypto regulationLegal regulated
i

OJK — POJK 27/2024 (as amended by POJK 23/2025) on trading of digital financial assets incl. crypto assets

Official source

Data as of
Aug 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Crypto is legal to hold and trade as a regulated digital financial asset (supervision moved from Bappebti to OJK on 2025-01-10 under PP 49/2024; framework in POJK 27/2024 + POJK 23/2025), but is prohibited as a means of payment (only the rupiah is legal tender). Taxed: a final PPh of 0.21% on sales via domestic licensed platforms and 1% via foreign platforms (PMK 50/2025, effective 2025-08-01); VAT on the asset transfer itself was removed. Regulated, not exemption-friendly → 'legal-regulated'.
Legal regulated
i

Securities Commission Malaysia — Digital Assets (regulated under the Capital Markets & Services (Prescription of Securities)(Digital Currency and Digital Token) Order 2019)

Official source

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Holding and trading digital assets is legal but regulated: the SC regulates digital-asset trading, issuance and custody, and licenses Recognized Market Operator exchanges (registered DAX) trading an approved list of tokens. Bank Negara Malaysia does not recognize crypto as legal tender. Tax: Malaysia has no capital gains tax, so a long-term individual holder's gains are generally untaxed; frequent/active trading can be recharacterized as business income under LHDN's 'badges of trade' (LHDN crypto guideline). Not 'legal-friendly' because it is standard licensing/regulation rather than an explicit favourable regime.
Financial control levelModerate
i

Bank Indonesia foreign-exchange regulations + DJP crypto/reporting rules (composite)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Composite: the rupiah is largely convertible and there are no hard capital controls on inbound/outbound personal transfers, but Bank Indonesia requires reporting/underlying-document evidence for FX purchases above a threshold (historically USD 25,000/month per customer without underlying documents), restricts rupiah use offshore, and mandates rupiah for domestic settlement; residents are taxed on worldwide income once tax-resident; foreigners can open local bank accounts but generally need a KITAS/KITAP and NPWP. More friction than a low-control hub, well short of strict capital controls → 'moderate'. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: the current exact FX-without-documents threshold should be re-verified against a live Bank Indonesia regulation page (fetch was JS-walled).
Moderate
i

Bank Negara Malaysia — Foreign Exchange Policy (FEP): resident rules for investing in foreign currency assets

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Nov 15, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Composite of BNM Foreign Exchange Policy (FEP, formerly FEA): (1) the ringgit is non-internationalised — MYR may not be traded or settled offshore; (2) a resident WITH domestic ringgit borrowing may invest only up to RM1,000,000 equivalent per calendar year in foreign-currency assets (residents without ringgit borrowing: unlimited); resident FCA borrowing capped (RM10m from onshore/non-resident); (3) an active exchange-control apparatus exists (FEP Notices, BNM approvals, penalties). Offsetting liberalisations: non-residents may freely open ringgit/foreign-currency accounts and repatriate funds; current-account flows are free; no cash-transaction reporting comparable to FBAR for individuals. BNM (Apr 2024) publicly ruled out crisis-style capital controls.
Notes
Between 'low' (fully free personal fund movement) and 'high': personal current-account and non-resident flows are liberal and banking access for foreigners is straightforward, but the non-internationalised ringgit and resident foreign-asset investment limits are real state controls on money flows, so classified 'moderate'. Cross-check via IMF AREAER not retrieved this cycle.
Freelancer tax burden9.1%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over official DJP rules (pajak.go.id: NPPN + PPh Pasal 17 + PTKP)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best cleanly-eligible scheme id-nppn-freelancer at €60,000 = 1,232,521,200 IDR (ECB 20,542.02 IDR/EUR). NPPN professional-services norm 50% → net income 616,260,600; minus PTKP TK/0 54,000,000 → PKP 562,260,600; progressive PPh (5/15/25/30%) = 112,678,180 IDR → 9.14% ≈ 9.1%. The 0.5% MSME final tax would give ~0.3% but its 7-year window and professional-services exclusion make it unreliable for a newly-registered foreign IT freelancer, so NPPN is the recorded best. Single filer; NPPN KLU-62 norm pending manual confirmation (50% vs 62.5% — see scheme notes).
0%
i

SettleMetric tax engine over Malaysia's territorial FSI exemption (MOF Budget 2026 Tax Measures, Appendix 8)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
Notes
The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.

Prioritising safety, air, and an easy daily life.

A close call for this plan

IndonesiaMalaysia
Homicide rate0.3/100k
i

UNODC via World Bank (Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Indonesia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Latest available UNODC-sourced value is 0.30 per 100,000 for 2022 (World Bank series VC.IHR.PSRC.P5, sourced from the UNODC Data Portal). Indonesia's recorded intentional-homicide rate is very low by global standards; reporting has gaps between years.
0.73/100k
i

World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
Notes
UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
Cost of living (single, excl. rent)$700/mo
i

BPS — Pengeluaran untuk Konsumsi Penduduk Indonesia, Maret 2024 (per-capita expenditure), scaled to a single urban resident basket

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
BPS March-2024 average per-capita monthly expenditure is Rp 1,500,556 nationally (urban Rp 1,737,427), split food/non-food — but that is a rural-weighted per-capita floor far below a foreign remote worker's outlay. Curated single-person, non-rent urban (Jakarta-level) basket — groceries, eating out, transport/ride-hailing, utilities, mobile+home internet, modest leisure — sits around USD 650–750/month; recorded midpoint USD 700. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: this is a modelled basket anchored on BPS composition, not a single official basket figure; refine with itemised BPS urban non-food lines and current retail prices next cycle.
$620/mo
i

DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (mean household expenditure RM5,150/mo), single-person basket derived

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
Notes
Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.

Details

Taxes

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Freelancer tax burden% effective burden at €60k/year self-employed profile9.1
i

SettleMetric tax engine over official DJP rules (pajak.go.id: NPPN + PPh Pasal 17 + PTKP)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best cleanly-eligible scheme id-nppn-freelancer at €60,000 = 1,232,521,200 IDR (ECB 20,542.02 IDR/EUR). NPPN professional-services norm 50% → net income 616,260,600; minus PTKP TK/0 54,000,000 → PKP 562,260,600; progressive PPh (5/15/25/30%) = 112,678,180 IDR → 9.14% ≈ 9.1%. The 0.5% MSME final tax would give ~0.3% but its 7-year window and professional-services exclusion make it unreliable for a newly-registered foreign IT freelancer, so NPPN is the recorded best. Single filer; NPPN KLU-62 norm pending manual confirmation (50% vs 62.5% — see scheme notes).
9.2
0
i

SettleMetric tax engine over Malaysia's territorial FSI exemption (MOF Budget 2026 Tax Measures, Appendix 8)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jan 1, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Best eligible scheme my-fsi-exempt-resident. A location-independent freelancer with foreign clients who is a Malaysian tax resident receives foreign-sourced income, which is exempt from Malaysian income tax for individuals until 31 December 2036 under the territorial system (Income Tax Exemption Orders; extended in Budget 2026). Income tax on EUR 60,000 (= 279,048 MYR at ECB 4.6508) = 0. No mandatory social contributions for an independent self-employed person (EPF/i-Saraan voluntary; SOCSO mandatory only for platform gig workers). Effective burden = 0.0%.
Notes
The 0% assumes the income is genuinely foreign-sourced (as marketed for the DE Rantau Nomad Pass). Income treated as Malaysian-sourced instead is taxed on the resident progressive scale (my-resident-progressive: ~18.6% at this income before reliefs) or, if non-resident, flat 30% (my-nonresident-flat). The exemption is conditional on a return declaration and, per IRB guidance, the income having borne tax of a similar character abroad. The source-of-income question for services performed while physically in Malaysia is fact-specific — flagged for manual review.
10.0

Legalization

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Remote-work legalization easeDedicated nomad visa
i

Direktorat Jenderal Imigrasi — E33G Visa Rumah Kedua Pekerja Jarak Jauh (remote worker)

Official source

Data as of
Apr 1, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Indonesia has a dedicated remote-worker permit: the E33G Remote Worker KITAS (live since April 2024) grants a 1-year, renewable limited stay to foreigners employed by a company established outside Indonesia, requiring USD 60,000/year foreign income and a USD 2,000 bank balance. Self-employed/sole traders and anyone with Indonesian-source income are excluded — a genuine gap for pure freelancers, who instead use the Second Home (E33) or Investor (E28A) KITAS.
10.0
Dedicated nomad visa
i

Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC) — DE Rantau Nomad Pass

Official source

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Malaysia runs a dedicated remote-work visa: the DE Rantau Nomad Pass (Professional Visit Pass), 3–12 months and renewable to 24 months, income threshold >USD 24,000/yr for tech professionals (>USD 60,000/yr for non-tech), administered fully online by MDEC. Not valid in Sabah/Sarawak (Sarawak has a separate DE Rantau variant).
10.0

Cost of living

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Cost of living (single, excl. rent)USD/month, single person, excluding rent700
i

BPS — Pengeluaran untuk Konsumsi Penduduk Indonesia, Maret 2024 (per-capita expenditure), scaled to a single urban resident basket

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
BPS March-2024 average per-capita monthly expenditure is Rp 1,500,556 nationally (urban Rp 1,737,427), split food/non-food — but that is a rural-weighted per-capita floor far below a foreign remote worker's outlay. Curated single-person, non-rent urban (Jakarta-level) basket — groceries, eating out, transport/ride-hailing, utilities, mobile+home internet, modest leisure — sits around USD 650–750/month; recorded midpoint USD 700. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: this is a modelled basket anchored on BPS composition, not a single official basket figure; refine with itemised BPS urban non-food lines and current retail prices next cycle.
9.0
620
i

DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (mean household expenditure RM5,150/mo), single-person basket derived

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
DOSM HES 2022 mean household monthly expenditure = RM5,150; housing+utilities group = 23.2%. Per-capita non-housing spend ≈ RM1,014 (over mean household size ≈3.9); scaled to a solo adult (loss of household economies of scale, ×~2.4) and utilities added back ≈ RM2,530/mo excluding rent. Converted at USD/MYR 4.08 (ECB EUR/MYR 4.6508 ÷ EUR/USD 1.1399, 2026-07-02) → ≈ $620/mo. This is a derivation from the all-household survey, not a published one-person-household line (which could not be retrieved from DOSM this cycle).
Notes
Excludes rent. National basis (KL runs higher, smaller towns lower). The housing-group sub-split into rent vs utilities is approximate; flagged for refinement against the DOSM one-person-household table on next verification.
9.4
Monthly spending by category (excl. rent)
CategoryIndonesia
i

BPS Household consumption composition (Maret 2024), curated into a single urban-resident basket

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Mar 31, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Category split follows the BPS food/non-food consumption structure, sized to the ~USD 700/mo single-person non-rent aggregate for an urban (Jakarta-level) resident. Illustrative allocation, not an official line-item table — see the NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW note on cost-of-living-single.
Malaysia
i

DOSM Household Expenditure Survey 2022 (COICOP expenditure shares), single-person basket derived

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
DOSM HES 2022 main-group expenditure shares (Food & non-alcoholic 16.3%, Restaurants & accommodation 16.1%, Transport 11.3%, etc.), with the housing group reduced to its utilities portion (rent removed), renormalised over the ≈$620/mo single-person non-rent basket and converted at USD/MYR 4.08. Categories sum to the cost-of-living aggregate.
Notes
Derived from the all-household survey shares; the utilities-vs-rent split within the housing group is approximate. National average.
Food & groceries$220
Food & non-alcoholic beverages$128
Restaurants & accommodation$127
Restaurants & eating out$120
Transport (ride-hailing + public)$90
Recreation & culture$90
Transport$89
Utilities (electricity, water, gas)$70
Household & personal goods$70
Utilities (water, electricity, gas)$55
Personal care & misc goods/services$51
Mobile + home internet$40
Recreation, sport & culture$39
Communications$38
Household furnishings & maintenance$33
Alcohol & tobacco$19
Clothing & footwear$18
Health (out-of-pocket)$15
Education$9
Total (excl. rent)$700/mo$621/mo

Housing

Rent by apartment type

Asking rent, central price with outside-centre in parentheses ($/mo).

ApartmentIndonesia
i

SettleMetric — population-weighted average of covered cities (Bali, Jakarta)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jun 30, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Population-weighted mean of the rent-breakdown matrices of Bali, Jakarta; each cell averages the cities that report it. See each city page for its exact local matrix.
Malaysia
i

SettleMetric — population-weighted average of covered cities (Kuala Lumpur, Penang)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Population-weighted mean of the rent-breakdown matrices of Kuala Lumpur, Penang; each cell averages the cities that report it. See each city page for its exact local matrix.
Studio$644 ($245)$611 ($374)
1-bedroom$883 ($410)$814 ($494)
2-bedroom$1,351 ($656)$1,098 ($667)
3-bedroom$1,794 ($872)$1,451 ($880)

Safety

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Homicide rateintentional homicides per 100,000/year0.3
i

UNODC via World Bank (Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Indonesia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2022
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Latest available UNODC-sourced value is 0.30 per 100,000 for 2022 (World Bank series VC.IHR.PSRC.P5, sourced from the UNODC Data Portal). Indonesia's recorded intentional-homicide rate is very low by global standards; reporting has gaps between years.
10.0
0.7
i

World Bank (UNODC-sourced) — Intentional homicides per 100,000 people, Malaysia (VC.IHR.PSRC.P5)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Latest non-null World Bank value (2023) = 0.734, drawn from the UNODC intentional-homicide series (CC BY-4.0). Prior years: 2022 = 0.69, 2021 = 0.71, 2020 = 0.75.
Notes
UNODC-sourced open data. Malaysia's rate is low by Southeast Asian standards (below Thailand, above Singapore/Indonesia).
9.5

Healthcare

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Private healthcare costUSD/year, comprehensive private insurance premium, healthy 35-year-old3,600
i

International private medical insurers (Cigna Global, Allianz Care, AXA, William Russell) — comprehensive outpatient+inpatient plans; quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient, ~USD 1m+ annual limit, small deductible) international/IPMI plans for a healthy 35-year-old resident foreigner in Indonesia are commonly quoted around USD 200–500/month; a mid-tier comprehensive plan midpoint ≈ USD 300/month ≈ USD 3,600/year. Premiums are quoted on request (age/coverage/evacuation dependent), so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote. Local BPJS Kesehatan (mandatory public scheme for KITAS holders) is far cheaper but not a comprehensive private-cover equivalent.
3.9
1,960
i

Malaysian comprehensive medical insurance (inpatient + outpatient) market midpoint — AIA / Great Eastern / Allianz / AXA; insurers quote on request

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Comprehensive plans that include inpatient/hospitalisation plus outpatient cover for a resident foreigner run ≈ RM400–1,200/month across major insurers (AIA, Great Eastern, Allianz, AXA/Prudential); a healthy 35-year-old midpoint ≈ RM650–700/month ≈ RM8,000/year ≈ $1,960 at USD/MYR 4.08 (range ≈ $1,180–$3,530). Premiums are individually underwritten and quoted on request, so this is a curated market midpoint, not a public engine quote.
Notes
Comprehensive (outpatient + inpatient) basis, chosen for cross-country comparability. Malaysian citizens/PRs access heavily subsidised public healthcare; foreigners typically buy private cover or use the (higher) foreigner tariff at public hospitals. International (IPMI) plans with global coverage cost substantially more. Insurers quote on request.
6.1

Money & crypto

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Crypto regulationLegal regulated
i

OJK — POJK 27/2024 (as amended by POJK 23/2025) on trading of digital financial assets incl. crypto assets

Official source

Data as of
Aug 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Crypto is legal to hold and trade as a regulated digital financial asset (supervision moved from Bappebti to OJK on 2025-01-10 under PP 49/2024; framework in POJK 27/2024 + POJK 23/2025), but is prohibited as a means of payment (only the rupiah is legal tender). Taxed: a final PPh of 0.21% on sales via domestic licensed platforms and 1% via foreign platforms (PMK 50/2025, effective 2025-08-01); VAT on the asset transfer itself was removed. Regulated, not exemption-friendly → 'legal-regulated'.
8.0
Legal regulated
i

Securities Commission Malaysia — Digital Assets (regulated under the Capital Markets & Services (Prescription of Securities)(Digital Currency and Digital Token) Order 2019)

Official source

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Holding and trading digital assets is legal but regulated: the SC regulates digital-asset trading, issuance and custody, and licenses Recognized Market Operator exchanges (registered DAX) trading an approved list of tokens. Bank Negara Malaysia does not recognize crypto as legal tender. Tax: Malaysia has no capital gains tax, so a long-term individual holder's gains are generally untaxed; frequent/active trading can be recharacterized as business income under LHDN's 'badges of trade' (LHDN crypto guideline). Not 'legal-friendly' because it is standard licensing/regulation rather than an explicit favourable regime.
8.0
Financial control levelModerate
i

Bank Indonesia foreign-exchange regulations + DJP crypto/reporting rules (composite)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Composite: the rupiah is largely convertible and there are no hard capital controls on inbound/outbound personal transfers, but Bank Indonesia requires reporting/underlying-document evidence for FX purchases above a threshold (historically USD 25,000/month per customer without underlying documents), restricts rupiah use offshore, and mandates rupiah for domestic settlement; residents are taxed on worldwide income once tax-resident; foreigners can open local bank accounts but generally need a KITAS/KITAP and NPWP. More friction than a low-control hub, well short of strict capital controls → 'moderate'. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: the current exact FX-without-documents threshold should be re-verified against a live Bank Indonesia regulation page (fetch was JS-walled).
7.0
Moderate
i

Bank Negara Malaysia — Foreign Exchange Policy (FEP): resident rules for investing in foreign currency assets

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Nov 15, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Composite of BNM Foreign Exchange Policy (FEP, formerly FEA): (1) the ringgit is non-internationalised — MYR may not be traded or settled offshore; (2) a resident WITH domestic ringgit borrowing may invest only up to RM1,000,000 equivalent per calendar year in foreign-currency assets (residents without ringgit borrowing: unlimited); resident FCA borrowing capped (RM10m from onshore/non-resident); (3) an active exchange-control apparatus exists (FEP Notices, BNM approvals, penalties). Offsetting liberalisations: non-residents may freely open ringgit/foreign-currency accounts and repatriate funds; current-account flows are free; no cash-transaction reporting comparable to FBAR for individuals. BNM (Apr 2024) publicly ruled out crisis-style capital controls.
Notes
Between 'low' (fully free personal fund movement) and 'high': personal current-account and non-resident flows are liberal and banking access for foreigners is straightforward, but the non-internationalised ringgit and resident foreign-asset investment limits are real state controls on money flows, so classified 'moderate'. Cross-check via IMF AREAER not retrieved this cycle.
7.0

Infrastructure

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
Domestic delivery qualityGood
i

Pos Indonesia + major private carriers (JNE, J&T, SiCepat, Ninja Xpress, GoSend/GrabExpress) service coverage (composite)

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Jul 4, 2026
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Dense, competitive parcel market: Pos Indonesia (national operator) plus JNE, J&T Express, SiCepat, Ninja Xpress and on-demand couriers (GoSend, GrabExpress) give 1–3 day delivery in Java and major cities and same-day intra-city; tracking is standard. Reach to remote islands is slower and address quality is uneven, so 'good' rather than 'excellent'. Parcel-locker networks are limited vs Europe.
7.0
Good
i

Pos Malaysia (Pos Laju) and major courier coverage pages (J&T, Ninja Van, GDEX, DHL) — composite

Curated by SettleMetric

Data as of
Dec 31, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Pos Laju (Pos Malaysia) is the only courier with coverage in every district (900+ outlets, 80%+ of populated areas); J&T Express, Ninja Van, GDEX, City-Link and KEX provide dense e-commerce coverage with real-time tracking and cash-on-delivery; next-working-day delivery is available in Peninsular urban areas. Rated 'good' rather than 'excellent' because East Malaysia (Sabah/Sarawak) and rural areas are slower and parcel-locker density is far lower than locker-first markets.
Notes
Peninsular urban delivery is fast (1–2 days); East Malaysia and remote areas take longer. Tracking and COD are standard across the major carriers.
7.0
International delivery easeSignificant friction
i

Indonesian Customs (Bea Cukai) / Ministry of Finance — de-minimis lowered to USD 3 FOB (PMK 4/2025)

Official source

Data as of
Jan 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Major carriers (DHL, FedEx, UPS) serve Indonesia, but the duty-free de-minimis is only USD 3 FOB per shipment (lowered from USD 75; tiered import duty 0/15/25% plus 11% VAT above that), and customs clearance on personal imports is frequently slow with brokerage fees. Low de-minimis + routine customs handling → 'significant-friction'. NEEDS MANUAL REVIEW: re-confirm the exact current PMK reference and threshold on beacukai.go.id (fetch was blocked; USD 3 figure cross-read from customs-guidance sources citing PMK 4/2025).
4.0
Minor friction
i

Ministry of Finance Malaysia — Sales Tax on imported Low-Value Goods (RM500 de-minimis; 10% LVG sales tax from 1 Jan 2024)

Official source

Data as of
Jan 1, 2024
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
De-minimis threshold RM500 (shipments ≤RM500 by air are exempt from import duty and sales tax on imports). From 1 January 2024 a 10% Sales Tax on Low-Value Goods applies to imported goods valued ≤RM500 sold online (collected at checkout by registered sellers). All major international carriers (DHL, FedEx, UPS) operate; clearance is generally predictable but the low RM500 threshold and the LVG tax add routine cost/paperwork — hence minor friction. Land/sea shipments do not get the de-minimis exemption.
7.0
Internet speedMbps, median fixed download9.5
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Indonesia (2023)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median download ≈ 9.3–9.8 Mbps across the 2023 daily country medians (~4.3M tests) from M-Lab's public NDT statistics API; recorded midpoint 9.5 Mbps. 2024/2026 aggregate files were not retrievable at the time of check.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads far below Ookla-style figures (Ookla put Indonesia fixed broadband ~28–41 Mbps in 2024–2025) — comparable only within this criterion, never mixed with Ookla.
0.0
32
i

M-Lab NDT country aggregates for Malaysia (Asia)

Open data

Data as of
Dec 31, 2023
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Method
Median of daily medians over 343 days of 2023 (231,846 download samples), computed by log-interpolation within the median histogram bucket of M-Lab's public country-daily-stats API (latest full year available; 2024 file covers only 86 days). Bucket-midpoint method gives ≈37 Mbps as an upper alternative.
Notes
M-Lab NDT is single-stream and reads well below Ookla-style figures (Ookla-based sources report Malaysian fixed download ~100+ Mbps) — comparable only within this criterion. Malaysia's fibre (Unifi, Maxis, TIME) is fast and widely available in cities; the M-Lab figure understates real fibre-plan speeds.
2.8

Language

CriterionIndonesiaMalaysia
English proficiencyLow
i

EF EPI 2025 — Indonesia rank 80/123, score 471 (Low Proficiency band)

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI 2025 (attribution: EF Education First): Indonesia scores 471 (Low band) nationally, though Jakarta scores 523 (Moderate). Bahasa Indonesia is the sole official language; English is workable in tourist/expat zones (Bali, South Jakarta) and among younger professionals, but limited in government offices and everyday services nationwide → 'low'.
2.0
High
i

EF EPI 2025 — Malaysia rank 24/123, score 581 (High band); #1 in Asia

Research

Data as of
Nov 1, 2025
Verified
Jul 4, 2026
Notes
Own band informed by EF EPI (attribution: EF Education First) and Malaysia's status as a former British colony where English is widely used in business, higher education, the service sector and much government interaction (Malay is the sole national/official language). English gets a resident a long way in daily life, especially in cities — banded 'high'.
7.0

Deep dives: taxes in Indonesia ·taxes in Malaysia ·net-income calculator