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Malaysia’s New Incentive Framework (NIF) for manufacturing, effective 1 March 2026, represents a structural recalibration of investment policy. Rather than adjusting tax rates or expanding incentive lists, this reform shifts the logic behind investment evaluation and reward systems.
The traditional model, under the 1986 Promotion of Investments Act, relied on product promotion and activity. Eligibility was largely determined by classification — once qualified, incentive outcomes were relatively standardized.
The NIF moves away from this activity-based architecture toward a two-stage system that combines eligibility screening with performance-based assessment under the National Investment Aspirations (NIA) Scorecard. The shift is not merely administrative; it reflects a broader policy intention. This change aligns incentives with long-term industrial upgrades, economic complexity, and sustainability objectives, while also responding to the Global Minimum Tax (GMT) environment. This falls under OECD Pillar Two, in which traditional tax holidays are increasingly less effective for multinational groups subject to a 15% minimum effective tax rate.
From an execution standpoint, eligibility remains a critical first filter. In practice, we have seen investors assume qualification based on sector alignment, only to find that specific activities fall outside the defined eligible scope. Early-stage validation with MIDA is therefore not procedural, but strategic — particularly where project scope sits near the boundary of eligible activities.
Under the previous standards, incentives were provided solely to projects within promoted categories. In these cases, capital expenditure thresholds and sector alignment were central determinants.
Under the NIF, evaluation is divided into two distinct stages: activity eligibility and performance scoring.
While the framework removes the traditional “promoted industries list,” it does not create universal access. Instead, it introduces:
Only projects within the eligible scope proceed to the next stage of evaluation.
This distinction is important — industrial targeting remains embedded in the framework, but it now operates through structured screening rather than a static promoted list.
Eligible projects are assessed using the NIA Scorecard, the core evaluation tool under the NIF. Scoring considers measurable contributions across multiple dimensions, including:
Incentive tier, rate, and duration are determined by aggregate score rather than sector classification alone.
The reform therefore shifts incentive discussions from “what industry” to “what contribution.”
The NIF retains two primary tax instruments, while access and quantum are now score-dependent.
In practice, the choice between STR and ITA depends on the project’s financial profile. STR tends to be more effective for higher-margin, value-added operations where taxable income is expected early, while ITA is generally more advantageous for capital-intensive projects with longer ramp-up periods where the ability to offset qualifying capital expenditure provides greater flexibility. However, under the NIF, this decision is no longer purely financial as both the availability and quantum of either incentive are contingent upon NIA Scorecard performance.
Several implications emerge from the NIF structure.
Manufacturing applications submitted before the transition deadline may remain eligible for assessment under the previous framework. However, applications submitted from 1 March 2026 and onward are assessed under the NIF.
Malaysia’s New Incentive Framework represents a deliberate shift from classification-based incentives toward contribution-based incentives. This reform preserves industrial selectivity while introducing structured eligibility screening and measurable performance evaluation.
For investors, the implications extend beyond tax planning. Project design, workforce strategy, technology integration, ESG planning, and ecosystem participation now directly influence fiscal outcomes.
Under the NIF, incentives are not granted solely because a project qualifies as manufacturing. They are awarded — and sustained — based on demonstrable contribution to Malaysia’s industrial transformation objectives.
Kay Khaing Htun is a Consultant at Tractus Thailand office.
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