the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150
Thursday, July 2, 2026
28.5 C
Kuala Lumpur
the sun malaysia ipaper logo 150x150

New real property development bill to be tabled in June 2026

KPKT will table the Real Property Development Bill in June 2026, replacing the 1966 Act to expand coverage and enhance buyer protection.

PUTRAJAYA: The Ministry of Housing and Local Government (KPKT) is expected to table the Real Property Development Bill in June 2026, said its Minister, Nga Kor Ming.

He said the Bill is a comprehensive replacement of the Housing Development (Control and Licensing) Act 1966 (Act 118), to establish a more modern, responsive regulatory framework that protects homebuyers.

“This new Bill has two main objectives: first, to expand the existing regulatory scope so it is no longer limited to residential developments, but also covers commercial projects.

ALSO READ: KPKT clarifies housing data inaccuracy, confirms market stability

“Second, it aims to update legal provisions according to current needs, taking into account market demands and land types.

“We want a more modern, flexible legislative framework capable of accommodating changes in the industry,” he said during the MADANI Housing Reform event here today, which was also attended by National Housing Department director-general Datuk N Jayaselan.

The Real Property Development Bill is one of the five reforms that will be implemented by the Ministry by 2026.

The others are the electronic Sales and Purchase Agreement (eSPA), Housing Integrated Management System (HIMS), Transforming and Empowering Data Usage in Housing (TEDUH) and audits for Housing Development Accounts.

Key proposals being considered under the Bill include increasing and standardising penalties for serious and repeat offences, enhancing buyer protection regarding payment collection, quality standards and maintenance obligations, and establishing clearer technical audit, as well as investigation powers to detect troubled projects earlier.

“Through the Real Property Development Bill, the government will ensure every housing project in Malaysia operates within a more organised, transparent and resilient development ecosystem, aligned with the Malaysia MADANI aspiration and structural reform of the nation’s housing sector,” said Nga.

For instance, he said the eSPA will provide homebuyers with several key benefits: digital signing from any location, secure digital identity verification (eKYC) and automatic integration with the Inland Revenue Board’s eStamping system for a faster, more secure and tamper-proof process.

“This is a major achievement. It will not only reduce time and save costs but also simplify the entire process. When someone signs the eSPA, payment is made immediately, and the government receives the revenue directly.

“We anticipate that if everything proceeds smoothly, next year’s eSPA implementation could increase government revenue by up to RM8 billion,” he said. – Bernama

STAY AHEAD OF THE CURVE

Join our community for instant updates and exclusive content.

Join Telegram Channel

Related


spot_img

Latest News

Renovations on historic Paris Opera house extended by three years

Paris, France, July 2, 2026 (AFP) -The Paris Opera announced Thursday that it had been forced to extend planned renovations on its historic home in the French capital by three years because of lead contamination.The beloved institution had already announced two years of work from 2027-2029 for the Palais Garnier, which will close one of the most iconic sites of European opera.But the overhaul and de-contamination on the structure is now expected to take five years, with the re-opening date pushed back to 2032."It's a decision we stand by, a decision taken out of responsibility, a decision made to ensure the long-term future of our asset," Paris Opera director general Alexander Neef told AFP on Thursday."We have taken this step today in order to avoid having to launch other major works in a few years' time," he added.Neef blamed "stricter regulations" which he said meant that lead would have to be removed from the stage area.The 150-year-old Palais Garnier is considered an architectural jewel in Paris, famed for its vast domed ceiling painted by Marc Chagall and its grand marble entrance.It is one of several tourist attractions in the City of Light requiring costly repairs, with the Pompidou Centre modern art gallery closed for a five-year modernisation and the Louvre Museum beset by maintenance problems.The Paris Opera renovations had been estimated at 450 million euros ($515 million) by the culture ministry, a quarter of which would be financed by the French state.The institution's other home, the modern Bastille opera house, is set to close for two years of renovations once work is completed on Palais Garnier.

Malaysian unit trust industry expands

The assets under management (AUM) of unit trust companies in Malaysia increased by approximately RM27 billion, or 6%, to RM569.79 billion as of June 2025, driven by market and currency appreciation.

Healthcare sector to record 12% growth towards 2030

Malaysia’s healthcare sector is projected to record around 12% growth towards 2030, driven by an ageing population, rising chronic diseases, expanding private healthcare services, medical tourism and digital health adoption, according to Frost & Sullivan.

U Mobile completes transition to its own nationwide 5G network

Following its exit from the wholesale access agreement with Digital Nasional Bhd (DNB), U Mobile has successfully completed the migration to its own nationwide ULTRA5G network.

Most Viewed

spot_img
WC26

World Cup 2026

Updates, Fixtures, Results & Standings