What Donations And Gifts Qualify For Tax Deductions In Malaysia?
Author Avatar

If you donated to charity last year, or contributed to a mosque, a public university, or a registered welfare organisation, you may be able to deduct that from your taxable income. People who give regularly often don’t claim everything they’re entitled to, simply because the rules aren’t obvious.

LHDN recognises a range of donations and gifts as eligible for tax deductions, from cash contributions to approved charities to gifts of artefacts and medical equipment. These deductions come off your aggregate income, separately from your personal tax reliefs.

What Counts As An LHDN-Approved Donation Or Gift?

LHDN recognises ten categories of donations, gifts, and contributions for tax deduction purposes. Not all of them come with a deduction limit, and the caps that do exist vary by category.

CategoryMaximum Deduction
Gift of money to the government, state government, or local authoritiesNo limit
Gift of money to approved institutions, organisations, or funds10% of aggregate income (individuals and businesses, combined across all categories in this group)
Gift of money or contribution in kind for any approved sports activity or sports body10% of aggregate income (combined)
Gift of money or contribution in kind for any project of national interest approved by the Ministry of Finance10% of aggregate income (combined)
Gift of money in the form of wakaf to religious authorities or public universities; gift of money as endowment to a public university10% of aggregate income (combined)
Gift of artefacts, manuscripts, or paintings to the government or state governmentNo limit
Gift of money for library facilities or to librariesUp to RM20,000
Gift of money or contribution in kind for facilities in public places for disabled personsNo limit
Gift of money or medical equipment to any healthcare facility approved by the Ministry of HealthUp to RM20,000
Gift of paintings to the National Art Gallery or any state art galleryNo limit

The 10% cap applies collectively to the middle group of categories. Charitable institutions, sports bodies, national interest projects, and wakaf contributions are all pooled together when calculating how much you can deduct, not assessed separately.

Donations to organisations not listed by LHDN do not qualify for deductions, regardless of how legitimate or well-known the charity might be. You can check whether an institution is recognised on LHDN’s website.

How Does The 10% Cap Actually Work?

Say your aggregate income for the year is RM60,000. The maximum you can deduct for approved charitable donations combined is 10% of that, which comes to RM6,000. If you donated RM5,000 to an approved institution over the course of the year, you can deduct the full RM5,000, bringing your chargeable income down to RM55,000.

If you donated RM8,000, you can only deduct RM6,000. The remaining RM2,000 cannot be carried forward to the following year.

Direct donations to the government, state governments, or local authorities are not subject to the 10% limit, so the full amount can be deducted.

Is There A Minimum Donation Amount?

LHDN does not set a minimum. You can donate any amount and claim the deduction as long as the organisation is approved and you have proper documentation.

Some organisations do require a minimum donation on their end for administrative reasons. WWF Malaysia, for example, requests a minimum of RM10 for donors who want a tax exemption receipt. This is the organisation’s own requirement, not LHDN’s.

What Do You Need To Claim the Deduction?

To get a tax exemption receipt from an approved institution, you’ll need to provide the following details to the organisation at the time of donation:

  • Full name (as per IC)
  • IC number or passport number
  • Complete mailing address

Without these, the organisation may not issue you with an official tax exemption receipt, and without that receipt, you cannot claim the deduction

Make sure these details are included. Otherwise, you will not be able to claim the deduction. Do note that the LHDN has been phasing in e-Invoicing since 2024, so the receipt you get may look different from what you’re used to.

Where To Declare It In Your Tax Form

When filing via MyTax (e-Filing), you’ll find the donations and gifts section under the deductions portion of your Return Form. 

Enter each donation separately under the appropriate category. LHDN’s e-Filing system will automatically cap your deduction at 10% of aggregate income where applicable.

If you have questions about specific donations or want to confirm whether a particular organisation qualifies, LHDN’s donation approval page is the most reliable place to check.

***

For more on reducing your tax bill, see our guides on personal tax reliefs for YA 2025 and how to calculate your chargeable income.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for the latest money tips and updates.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
SHARE

Comments (0)

Subscribe
Notify of

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Most Viewed Articles
Post Image
Tax
Malaysia Personal Income Tax Guide 2026 (YA 2025)
Steffi Manisha Arokiam
- 13th March 2026
If you earned around RM38,000 in 2025, income tax probably is not about managing a large bill; it […]
Post Image
Tax
Everything You Can Claim As Income Tax Relief In Malaysia 2026 (Filing For YA 2025)
Steffi Manisha Arokiam
- 24th March 2026
If you’re filing your income tax in 2026 for income earned in 2025 (Year of Assessment 2025), tax […]
Post Image
Tax
Income Tax Relief Malaysia: What’s New For YA 2025?
Pugaleshwaran Raja Kumaran
- 10th March 2026
Budget 2025 expanded several existing reliefs, introduced a new housing loan interest relief for first-time homebuyers, and added […]
Post Image
Tax
Do You Need To Pay Tax On Your Investment Returns?
Pugaleshwaran Raja Kumaran
- 16th March 2026
Whether you pay tax on your investment returns in Malaysia depends almost entirely on what you’re invested in. […]

Related articles

Related Posts Image
Tax
Related Posts Image
Tax
Related Posts Image
Tax
Related Posts Image
Tax