Income TaxFeatured

Business Deductions for Freelancers in Malaysia: Home Office, Equipment, Travel, Internet & Phone — What You Can Claim for Tax

Complete guide to tax-deductible business expenses for freelancers in Malaysia. Covers home office claims, equipment capital allowances, travel and mileage, internet and phone bills, professional subscriptions, entertainment limits, and documentation requirements to reduce your tax bill legally.

12 May 202615 min readBy DuitTools
freelancer tax deductions malaysiabusiness expenses freelancer malaysiatax deductible expenses malaysiafreelance tax malaysiaself employed tax deductionshome office deduction malaysiacapital allowance freelancerlhdn business expensessole proprietor deductions

Malaysian freelancers consistently overpay income tax for one reason: they don't claim the business expenses they're legally entitled to deduct.

LHDN allows freelancers, sole proprietors, and self-employed individuals to deduct expenses that are "wholly and exclusively" incurred in the production of business income. Every ringgit you legitimately deduct is a ringgit not taxed at your marginal tax rate — which could be 19%, 25%, or even 28% depending on your income bracket.

This guide covers every deduction category a typical Malaysian freelancer can claim, how to calculate each one, and what documentation LHDN expects if you're audited.

To track your freelance income and generate professional invoices for every client, use our free invoice generator Malaysia — it produces proper, numbered tax invoices that make expense tracking and tax filing straightforward.


The Golden Rule: "Wholly and Exclusively" for Business

LHDN's test for deductibility is Section 33(1) of the Income Tax Act 1967: the expense must be wholly and exclusively incurred in the production of gross income.

In practice, this means:

  • The expense must have a clear business purpose.
  • If an expense is partly personal, partly business (e.g., your home internet), you must apportion it — and only claim the business portion.
  • You must have documentation — receipts, invoices, bank statements, and a reasonable basis for the apportionment.

LHDN auditors will ask: "Would you have incurred this expense if you weren't running this business?" If the honest answer is no, it's likely deductible. If it's yes (e.g., you'd pay for internet regardless), you need to apportion.


1. Home Office Expenses

If you work from home — as most Malaysian freelancers do — a portion of your housing costs is deductible.

What You Can Claim

ExpenseHow to Calculate
Rent (if renting)(Area used for business ÷ Total floor area) × Monthly rent
Electricity(Estimated business-use hours ÷ Total hours) OR (Business floor area % × monthly bill)
WaterSame apportionment as electricity (if relevant to your work)
InternetBusiness-use portion (see Section 5 below for detail)
Home maintenance/repairsOnly the portion attributable to the business area

How to Calculate the Apportionment

Method 1: Floor area method

If you use a dedicated room (e.g., a spare bedroom turned office):

  • Home office area: 12 sqm
  • Total home area: 80 sqm
  • Business-use percentage: 12 ÷ 80 = 15%
  • Claim: 15% of rent, electricity, and water

Method 2: Time-based method (for spaces used both personally and for business, like a living room corner)

  • Business hours per day: 8 hours
  • Total hours per day: 24
  • Business percentage: 33%
  • Claim: 33% of electricity and internet for the shared space

LHDN is more comfortable with the floor area method because it's objective. Take photos of your home office setup and keep them on file in case of audit.

What You Cannot Claim

  • Mortgage interest on a property you own — mortgage interest is not a deductible business expense for sole proprietors (it's treated as a personal expense, though there's separate personal tax relief for housing loan interest under certain conditions)
  • Quit rent and assessment on your residence — these are personal property taxes, not business expenses
  • Furniture and furnishings — these are capital items (see Section 2 on capital allowances)
  • Renovations that increase the property's value — only repairs and maintenance of the existing state are potentially deductible

2. Equipment and Capital Allowances

Big-ticket items like a laptop, camera, or desk are not deducted all at once. Instead, they're claimed through capital allowances — an annual deduction spread over the asset's prescribed life.

Common Freelancer Assets and Their Capital Allowance Rates

AssetInitial AllowanceAnnual AllowanceEffective Write-Off Period
Computer, laptop, printer20%20%~4 years
Camera, video equipment20%20%~4 years
Office furniture (desk, chair, shelves)20%10%~7 years
Software (purchased outright)20%20%~4 years
Mobile phone20%20%~4 years
Vehicle (business use)20%20%~4 years (capped at RM50,000 for non-commercial vehicles; RM100,000 for commercial)

How Capital Allowances Work

You buy a RM6,000 laptop in July 2026 for freelance graphic design work.

Year of Assessment 2026:

  • Initial allowance: 20% × RM6,000 = RM1,200
  • Annual allowance: 20% × RM6,000 = RM1,200
  • Total capital allowance claimed in YA 2026: RM2,400

Year of Assessment 2027:

  • Annual allowance: 20% × RM6,000 = RM1,200

Year of Assessment 2028:

  • Annual allowance: 20% × RM6,000 = RM1,200

Year of Assessment 2029:

  • Annual allowance: 20% × RM6,000 = RM1,200 (fully written off)

Total RM6,000 deducted over 4 years — but the tax benefit is spread rather than taken up front.

Small Value Assets (RM2,000 and below)

Individual assets costing RM2,000 or less per item may qualify for an immediate 100% write-off in the year of purchase, subject to an annual cap. This is useful for smaller items like a webcam, external hard drive, drawing tablet, or office chair. Check the current rules with your tax agent, as limits change.


3. Travel and Transportation

Business Travel

Travel specifically for client meetings, site visits, shoots, or project-related errands is deductible.

Mileage claims: If you use your personal car for business travel, you can claim:

  • Mileage at a per-km rate (practical benchmark: RM0.50–RM0.80 per km, reflecting petrol, wear, and maintenance)
  • OR actual vehicle expenses (petrol, toll, parking, maintenance, insurance) apportioned by business vs personal kilometres

Most freelancers use the simpler mileage rate. Keep a logbook in your car or use a mileage tracking app. Record:

  • Date
  • Purpose (client name or project)
  • Start and end location
  • Kilometres travelled

Toll and parking: Fully deductible for business trips. Keep the receipts or use a Touch 'n Go e-statement.

Public transport (LRT, MRT, Grab, taxi): Fully deductible for business travel. Keep receipts.

What You Cannot Claim

  • Commuting from home to a regular workplace — this is personal, not business travel. However, since freelancers typically work from home, the "home to client site" trip is considered business travel, not commuting.
  • Personal trips with incidental business activity — if you drive to Penang for a holiday and spend two hours meeting a client, only the client-meeting portion is deductible, not the entire trip.

4. Meals and Entertainment

Client Entertainment

Entertainment of clients is 50% deductible under Malaysian tax rules. This includes:

  • Meals with clients
  • Coffee meetings
  • Event tickets for client entertainment

The 50% rule means if you spend RM200 on a client lunch, only RM100 is tax-deductible. Keep the receipt and note on the back: date, client name, and business purpose.

Business Meals (Not Entertainment)

If you're traveling for business and eat alone, the meal is a personal expense — not deductible (everyone needs to eat, business trip or not). The exception is if you're away from your usual place of business overnight, in which case reasonable meal costs may be claimed.

Subscriptions and Networking

  • Coworking space membership: fully deductible (this is rent, not entertainment)
  • Industry association fees: fully deductible
  • Networking event tickets: treated as entertainment (50% deductible) unless it's a professional conference, seminar, or workshop (100% deductible)

5. Internet and Phone

Most freelancers use the same internet connection and phone for personal and business purposes. You must apportion.

Internet (Home Broadband or Mobile Data)

Reasonable apportionment method:

  • Estimate the percentage of your data usage or online hours that are business-related.
  • For a full-time freelancer working 8 hours a day from home, claiming 40%–60% of the internet bill is typical and defensible.
  • For a part-time freelancer working evenings, 20%–30% may be more appropriate.

Example: Monthly Unifi bill is RM150. You estimate 50% business use. Claim: RM75/month, or RM900/year.

Mobile Phone

  • Monthly postpaid bill: apportion by business vs personal calls (check your itemised bill)
  • Alternatively, claim a fixed percentage — 50% is typical for full-time freelancers who use their phone for client calls, WhatsApp with clients, and business-related mobile data
  • Phone purchase: capital allowance (see Section 2)

6. Professional Development and Subscriptions

Courses, Workshops, and Certifications

Fully deductible if they relate to your current freelance business. Examples:

  • A freelance web developer taking a React.js course: deductible
  • A freelance designer taking a UX/UI workshop: deductible
  • A freelance copywriter taking a SEO writing course: deductible
  • A freelance photographer taking a business accounting course: not directly related — harder to justify

Software Subscriptions

Fully deductible if used for business:

  • Adobe Creative Cloud (RM100–RM230/month depending on plan)
  • Canva Pro
  • Notion, Trello, or Asana
  • Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace
  • Accounting software
  • Domain and web hosting fees
  • Portfolio site hosting

These recurring subscriptions add up fast — RM200–RM500/month is common for a full-time freelancer. Track them. At RM300/month, that's RM3,600/year in deductions, which at a 19% marginal tax rate saves you RM684 in tax.

Books and Learning Materials

Books, online courses (Udemy, Coursera), and industry publications related to your work are deductible.


7. Bank Charges and Financial Costs

  • Business bank account fees: Fully deductible if you maintain a separate business account (which you should — it makes expense tracking infinitely easier)
  • Payment gateway fees: Stripe, PayPal, SenangPay, Billplz, etc. — the 2%–4% transaction fees are fully deductible
  • Interest on business loans: Deductible if the loan was for business purposes

8. Insurance and Professional Fees

  • Professional indemnity insurance: Fully deductible (and recommended for consultants and creatives)
  • Equipment insurance: Fully deductible
  • SOCSO (Self-Employment Scheme) contributions: Deductible — and you should have this coverage
  • Tax agent / accountant fees: Fully deductible — the cost of professional tax preparation is itself a business expense

9. Marketing and Promotion

  • Website costs: Domain registration, hosting, and maintenance — fully deductible
  • Portfolio site: Build and maintenance costs — fully deductible
  • Social media advertising: Facebook/Instagram/Google ads for your freelance services — fully deductible
  • Business cards and printed materials: Fully deductible
  • Portfolio or sample production costs: Fully deductible

Documentation: What LHDN Expects in an Audit

Every expense you claim must be supported by documentation. LHDN requires records to be kept for 7 years after the year of assessment.

Acceptable Documentation

Expense TypeRequired Documentation
RentTenancy agreement + monthly bank transfer or receipt
UtilitiesMonthly bills in your name
EquipmentPurchase receipt/invoice + bank/card statement showing the transaction
MileageLogbook (date, destination, purpose, km) + petrol receipts
Client mealsReceipt with client name and business purpose noted
Software subscriptionsMonthly/annual invoice or bank statement
CoursesRegistration receipt + certificate of completion
Internet/phoneMonthly bill in your name

Best Practices

  1. Separate bank account for business. Even as a sole proprietor without a dedicated business account requirement, having a separate personal current account for business transactions makes audit preparation trivial.

  2. Use accounting software or at minimum a spreadsheet. Track every expense in real-time — not the night before filing.

  3. Generate proper invoices for all client work. Our free invoice generator Malaysia produces numbered, professional tax invoices. Sequential invoice numbers and clear records make your income declaration auditable and credible.

  4. Scan or photograph receipts immediately. Thermal paper receipts fade. Take a photo and store it in a cloud folder organised by month.

  5. Note business purpose on every receipt. A RM47.50 receipt from a cafe tells LHDN nothing. A note on the back — "17 Jan 2026, lunch w/ Sarah (client, branding project)" — tells the full story.


Common Mistakes That Trigger an LHDN Audit

  1. Claiming 100% of home internet and phone without apportionment. If you also use the internet for Netflix and personal WhatsApp, claiming 100% is a red flag. Be honest with your apportionment.

  2. Claiming personal expenses as business. Gym membership, personal travel, family meals — these are not business expenses. Auditors have seen it all.

  3. No documentation. Claiming expenses without receipts is effectively asking LHDN to take your word for it. They won't.

  4. Claiming the same expense twice. Example: claiming both the per-km mileage rate AND actual petrol, toll, and maintenance on the same vehicle. Pick one method and stick with it.

  5. Large, round-number claims. A claim of exactly RM5,000 for "miscellaneous expenses" with no breakdown or receipts is audit bait. Real expenses are specific: RM47.50, RM128.00, RM1,200.00.

  6. Not declaring all income while claiming expenses. If you claim RM10,000 in business expenses but only declared RM15,000 in freelance income, the expense-to-income ratio is suspiciously high. Legitimate expenses should be proportional to your business activity.


How to Estimate Your Tax Savings from Deductions

Let's say you're a full-time freelance designer earning RM72,000 annually (RM6,000/month). You claim the following deductions:

Deduction CategoryAnnual Amount (RM)
Home office (15% of RM1,200 rent × 12)2,160
Electricity (15% of RM200 × 12)360
Internet (50% of RM150 × 12)900
Phone (50% of RM80 × 12)480
Software subscriptions2,400
Equipment capital allowance (laptop, monitor)2,000
Mileage (5,000 km × RM0.60)3,000
Professional development (courses)1,500
Bank/payment gateway fees600
Marketing (ads, website)1,200
Total deductions14,600

Without deductions:

  • Gross income: RM72,000
  • Less personal relief: RM9,000
  • Less EPF (i-Saraan voluntary): RM0 for this example
  • Chargeable income: RM63,000
  • Tax: RM4,130

With RM14,600 deductions:

  • Gross income: RM72,000
  • Less allowable business expenses: RM14,600
  • Adjusted income: RM57,400
  • Less personal relief: RM9,000
  • Chargeable income: RM48,400
  • Tax: RM1,619

Annual tax saved: RM2,511

That RM14,600 in deductions reduced tax by RM2,511 — a real saving that stays in your pocket.

Use our PCB calculator Malaysia to model different income and deduction scenarios and see the tax impact instantly.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I claim the cost of buying my laptop in one go?

Not exactly. Equipment like laptops, cameras, and office furniture are capital assets — you claim them through capital allowances, which spread the cost over several years. However, for individual items costing RM2,000 or less, you may be able to claim a 100% write-off in the year of purchase under the small value assets rule.

Do I need a registered office to claim home office expenses?

No. As a freelancer or sole proprietor, your home office is your principal place of business. You don't need a separate registered office address. The key is that you actually work from home and can demonstrate the space is used for business.

What if I use a coworking space instead of a home office?

Coworking membership fees, hot desk rentals, and meeting room bookings are fully deductible as rental expenses. Unlike a home office, you don't need to apportion — the entire cost is a business expense.

Can I claim for coffee meetings with potential clients?

Yes — subject to the 50% entertainment deduction rule. If you spend RM30 on coffee for yourself and a potential client, RM15 is deductible. Note the client's name and business purpose on the receipt.

How do I prove my mileage if I don't have a logbook?

Start one today. A simple notebook in your glove compartment, a Google Sheet, or a mileage tracking app (MileIQ, TripLog, Driversnote) works. LHDN may accept a reasonable estimate based on your calendar and client records, but a contemporaneous logbook is the gold standard. At minimum, use your calendar to reconstruct business trips (date, client, location, estimated km) and keep that record.

Is my EPF contribution deductible as a business expense?

If you contribute to EPF voluntarily as a self-employed person (i-Saraan or self-contribution), the contribution is a personal expense — not a business deduction against your freelance income. However, EPF contributions (up to RM4,000 annually) and i-Saraan incentives are separate personal tax reliefs that reduce your chargeable income regardless. They're claimed in the personal relief section of your tax return, not as business expenses.


Start Tracking Your Deductions

Every receipt you keep and every expense you document is money back from LHDN. For a full-time freelancer, legitimate business expenses typically range from RM5,000 to RM20,000+ per year — representing RM1,000 to RM5,000+ in actual tax savings depending on your bracket.

Generate professional, numbered invoices for every client with our free invoice generator Malaysia — clean records make deductions easy to claim and easy to defend. And use our PCB calculator to estimate your tax liability after deductions before filing.

Share: