Missing a compliance deadline in Malaysia doesn’t always start with a warning. In many cases, the fine is generated automatically once the due date passes.
This section breaks down some of the most common company penalties in Malaysia — explained in plain English so business owners actually understand what went wrong and how to avoid it.
1. Auto-Fines
These are the penalties businesses get simply because a filing or submission was missed. No complicated investigation needed — the system automatically flags it.
CP204 Penalty (Estimated Tax Submission)
Authority: LHDN
Reference: Section 107C / 124
What happened?
New companies in Malaysia are required to estimate their tax payable within 3 months of incorporation.
Many business owners assume they only need to think about taxes at year-end. Unfortunately, LHDN expects an estimated tax submission much earlier.
Common mistake
“My company is still new, so I thought tax filing can wait.”
That assumption often results in a penalty.
How to avoid it
- Track your incorporation date carefully
- Submit CP204 early
- Speak to your accountant once your company becomes active
Annual Return Penalty
Authority: SSM
Reference: Section 68
What happened?
Every Sdn Bhd in Malaysia must submit an Annual Return to SSM once a year.
Think of it as updating your company’s official profile:
- directors
- shareholders
- registered address
- company details
Common mistake
Business owners often forget because the deadline is tied to the company’s incorporation anniversary — not the calendar year.
How to avoid it
- Keep track of your incorporation anniversary
- Work closely with your company secretary
- Don’t ignore reminder emails from SSM or your CoSec
Form E Penalty
Authority: LHDN
Reference: Section 83 (CP631)
What happened?
Even if your company has zero employees, you may still need to submit Form E.
Common mistake
“We didn’t hire anyone this year, so there’s nothing to submit.”
LHDN still expects employers to declare employee information — even if the amount is RM0.
What can happen?
Failure to submit Form E can lead to:
- penalties
- reminder notices
- court action in serious cases
How to avoid it
- Submit Form E every year
- Don’t assume “no employees” means “no filing needed”
2. Operational Penalties
These penalties usually happen when the business gets busy and internal processes fall behind.
Late Financial Statements Penalty
Authority: SSM
Reference: Sections 259(1) & 340(2)
What happened?
Your auditor cannot complete the audit if bookkeeping records are incomplete or delayed.
Once the audit is delayed:
- Financial Statements become late
- SSM filing deadlines are missed
- penalties follow
Common mistake
Many SMEs delay bookkeeping for months, then rush everything near the deadline.
How to avoid it
- Keep bookkeeping updated monthly
- Don’t wait until year-end
- Prepare audit documents early
SST Registration Penalty
Authority: Royal Malaysian Customs
Reference: Section 37
What happened?
Your business exceeded the SST threshold (commonly RM500,000 depending on industry), but registration was not completed on time.
Common mistake
“I didn’t realise my revenue already crossed the threshold.”
This happens frequently with:
- agencies
- consultants
- fast-growing SMEs
- eCommerce businesses
What can happen?
Customs may:
- backdate your SST registration
- demand unpaid SST
- impose additional penalties
How to avoid it
- Monitor your revenue monthly
- Understand your industry threshold
- Register before exceeding the limit
PCB Late Payment Penalty
Authority: LHDN
Reference: CP650
What happened?
PCB (employee tax deductions) was paid late to LHDN.
Common mistake
The company deducts tax from employee salaries but only transfers it to LHDN after the monthly deadline.
Important to understand
Once PCB is deducted from staff salaries, the company is responsible for remitting it on time.
How to avoid it
- Process payroll early
- Set monthly reminders before the 15th
- Use automated payroll systems where possible
3. Technical Penalties
These penalties are less common but can become very expensive if ignored. They often affect companies dealing with foreign vendors, international payments, or ownership changes.
Withholding Tax (WHT) Penalty
Authority: LHDN
Reference: Section 109
What happened?
The company made payments to overseas service providers but failed to withhold tax.
Common examples
- paying foreign freelancers
- Meta/Facebook ads
- overseas consultants
- foreign software subscriptions
Common mistake
Most business owners don’t realise certain overseas payments may trigger Malaysian withholding tax obligations.
Why this becomes dangerous
LHDN can:
- impose penalties
- disallow expenses
- charge additional tax
How to avoid it
- Review overseas payments carefully
- Speak to a tax advisor before paying foreign vendors
- Don’t assume digital payments are automatically exempt
Beneficial Ownership (BO) Penalty
Authority: SSM
Reference: Sections 60B / 60C
What happened?
The company changed shareholders or directors but failed to update its Beneficial Ownership information within the required timeline.
Common mistake
Many business owners assume updating shareholders internally is enough.
It isn’t.
SSM requires proper Beneficial Ownership records to be maintained and updated promptly.
How to avoid it
- Inform your company secretary immediately after ownership changes
- Don’t delay shareholder updates
- Keep BO records accurate and current