
Malaysian bank lending (especially for property purchases) is currently shaped by several key monetary, regulatory, and market-demand factors. Rates have been easing somewhat, but approval conditions remain cautious. Below are the latest numbers and trends.
Current Figures & Trends
- Overnight Policy Rate (OPR) & Reference Rates
- In July 2025, Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) cut the OPR from 3.00% to 2.75% – the first cut in five years.
- Major banks have adjusted their Standardised Base Rate (SBR) to 2.75% per annum following the OPR cut.
- Base Rate (BR) has also been adjusted (for many banks) in line with this, though BR tends to be higher than SBR. For example, Alliance Bank’s BR is about 3.57%.
- Base Lending Rate / Base Financing Rate (BLR/BFR)
- The BLR or BFR (for Islamic financings) for many banks remains in the ~6.35% to ~6.65% range. For example, Maybank’s BLR is 6.40%, Hong Leong Bank’s is ~6.64%, etc. baserate.my+3Maybank2u+3NewPages+3
- Effective Housing Loan Rates
- While the base/reference rates give a starting point, effective lending rates (what borrowers actually pay) tend to be higher because banks add a margin/spread depending on risk, loan amount, tenure, etc.
- Recent reports suggest effective rates for housing loans are in many cases 4.15% to 5.7% p.a. depending on bank, borrower profile, loan value, promotion, etc. Property Genie
- Loan Approval & Volume
- There was a 25.7% month-on-month increase in approvals of housing-loan applications in July 2025 after a slump in June. Focus Malaysia – Business & Beyond
- The approval ratio (i.e. approved vs applied) in July 2025 was about 44.8%, up from ~42.6% in June 2025. Focus Malaysia – Business & Beyond
- On a year-on-year basis, total approved loan volume declined by ~5.1% for that month; cumulatively over the first 7 months of 2025, approved property loans were ~RM 161.4 billion, about -1.5% relative to same period in previous year. Focus Malaysia – Business & Beyond
- Outlook
- With lower OPR and more competitive base/reference rates, there is optimism that loan approvals (both volume and ratio) may improve in the remaining months of 2025. Government’s likely to include incentives in Budget 2026 to support first-time buyers, low-to-middle income groups. Focus Malaysia – Business & Beyond

Steps Borrowers Can Take to Increase Chances of Loan Approval
Given the current environment, borrowers can do several things to strengthen their applications and improve likelihood of approval. Here are practical steps, both before and during application.
| Step | What to Do | Why It Helps |
| 1. Check & Clean Up Your Credit History | Obtain your credit report (e.g. through CTOS, CCRIS, Experian) ahead of time. Ensure there are no outstanding defaults, ensure credit card/HP payments are on time. | Banks check creditworthiness; a clean credit history reduces risk and may allow you to access better rates. |
| 2. Assess Debt Service Ratio (DSR) / Total Commitments | Know your monthly obligations: other loans, credit cards, etc. Make sure your net income minus all obligations leaves enough room for loan instalments. Try to reduce existing liabilities if possible. | Banks often reject or charge higher margins if your debts relative to income are too high. Lower commitments improves affordability assessment. |
| 3. Have Stable & Adequate Income | Demonstrate consistent employment or business income; have documentation (pay slips, tax returns, EPF contributions). If self-employed or commission-based, provide past 2-3 years’ income statements, audited if possible. | Stability & predictability of income give banks confidence in your ability to repay. |
| 4. Make Reasonable Down Payment / Equity | The more you put down (lower loan-to-value ratio), the less risk for the bank. If you’re first-time buyer programs exist (often requiring only 10% payment), check eligibility, but be aware these may still have stricter conditions. | Less loan amount relative to property value helps bank exposure and reduces margin required. |
| 5. Choose Appropriate Loan Tenure | Longer tenure reduces monthly instalments but increases total interest paid; very long tenure may raise risk from bank’s perspective (future rate changes, income changes). Balance payroll constraints with ability to service. | A manageable monthly repayment improves approval chances; less risk of default. |
| 6. Prepare All Supporting Documents Properly | Have ready: identity documents, employment letters, income proof, EPF statements, tax returns (if applicable), bank statements, any other asset documentation. Ensure documents are current. | It speeds up processing and reduces grounds for rejection due to missing information. |
| 7. Shop Around & Compare Offers | Different banks have different margins, promotions, and underwriting criteria. Get multiple quotes. Negotiate (sometimes banks reduce spread or offer incentives). | May get better rate, lower fees, more favorable terms. |
| 8. Provide Clear Purpose & Property Details | Have the Sale & Purchase Agreement (SPA), valuation report (if needed), title deed, property details, etc. If property is new or under construction, ensure developer’s track record and required approvals are in order. | Banks assess property risk as well: location, title, developer credibility affect approval. |
| 9. Maintain Good Savings / Reserves | Having savings or avoid fully depleting your accounts helps; having reserves gives cushion in case of rate increases or unexpected expenses. | Shows financial discipline and lowers risk from bank’s viewpoint. |
| 10. Understand Bank Fees & Requirements | Be aware of legal fees, valuation fees, stamp duties, insurance (MRTA/MRTT), and any bank-specific requirements (e.g. guarantor, joint-applicant). Make sure to budget for them. | Unexpected costs can derail the process; being well-prepared ensures smoother approval. |
Challenges & What Borrowers Should Watch Out For
- Even with OPR at 2.75% and SBR adjusted, banks’ margins/spreads can still be high depending on borrower risk. So effective rates may still be less favourable for some.
- Approval ratios (~44-47%) show that over half of applications still get declined. That means it’s not just about rates; credit & affordability are being closely scrutinized. Focus Malaysia – Business & Beyond
- Rising costs for legal fees, valuation, and sometimes hidden fees can make total cost of financing higher than expected.
- Inflation, future rate rises, economic uncertainties mean banks may reserve right to tighten conditions suddenly.
Conclusion
Bank lending is currently becoming somewhat more favourable in Malaysia thanks to the OPR cut and adjusted reference rates. However, borrowers must still present strong, well-prepared loan applications. Cleaning up credit, reducing existing obligations, having stable income and proper documentation, and choosing appropriate loan terms are all crucial.





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