7 MIN READ 
Malaysia Pillar Two GMT compliance 2026 is now a board-level tax issue for in-scope multinational enterprise groups. The rules affect large MNE groups with Malaysian constituent entities, especially where the group’s effective tax rate in a jurisdiction may fall below the 15% minimum rate.
For finance teams, the key point is timing. The first financial year may already begin from 1 January 2025, but the compliance work builds across Q4 2025 and 2026. Groups need to prepare data, test safe harbour positions, review Domestic Top-up Tax exposure and plan for the first GIR and TTR filing cycle.
Malaysia’s GMT framework applies to MNE groups with consolidated revenues of EUR 750 million or more in at least two of the four consecutive financial years immediately before the tested financial year.
Malaysia has incorporated the GloBE Rules into domestic tax law, and Multinational Top-up Tax (MTT) and the Domestic Top-up Tax (DTT) are effective from the financial year beginning on or after 1 January 2025.
This means many groups will spend 2026 preparing for first-year compliance instead of waiting for the actual filing date. The work involves group data, local accounts, tax attributes, effective tax rate calculations, safe harbour checks and return responsibilities.
| Compliance Area | What To Check | Why It Matters |
| Group scope | EUR750 million threshold and MNE status | Confirms if GMT applies |
| Malaysian entities | Constituent entities located in Malaysia | Identifies DTT exposure |
| ETR data | Covered taxes and GloBE income | Tests 15% minimum tax position |
| DTT position | Malaysian top-up tax computation | Protects local taxing rights |
| GIR filing | Who files the information return | Avoids duplicated or missed reporting |
| TTR filing | Which Malaysian entities file TTR | Confirms local tax payable reporting |
| Safe harbour | Transitional CbCR safe harbour position | May reduce first-year computation burden |
| Incentives | Impact of tax holidays and new incentives | Avoids unexpected top-up tax |
| Documentation | Data source and review trail | Supports audit-ready compliance |
The first question is simple. Is the group in scope?
The group must test consolidated revenue, MNE status and the relevant financial years. A Malaysian subsidiary should not assume that the parent company is handling everything without local input. Local finance teams may hold payroll, fixed asset, tax incentive and statutory account data that the group needs for the GMT computation.
For foreign-parent groups, the Malaysian entity should ask the parent tax team for the global Pillar Two status, expected filing approach and local data request timeline. Waiting until 2027 may create unnecessary pressure.
Pillar Two is built around a 15% minimum effective tax rate. A top-up tax may arise when the effective tax rate for a jurisdiction falls below that level.
This is important for Malaysia because some businesses may enjoy tax incentives, pioneer status, investment tax allowance, reinvestment allowance or other reliefs. These incentives can still be valuable, but the Pillar Two result may reduce the net benefit for large in-scope groups.
Finance teams should review tax incentives early and model the ETR impact before year-end. A low local tax charge can become a GMT issue at group level.
The QDMTT DTT Malaysia first year review should begin with Malaysian constituent entities. Malaysia’s Domestic Top-up Tax is designed to ensure low-taxed Malaysian profits are addressed locally before another jurisdiction collects the top-up tax.
This matters because DTT focuses on entities located in Malaysia. The computation may need local financial statements, covered taxes, deferred tax information, GloBE adjustments and entity-level allocation.
The local team should not treat DTT as only a group tax problem. Malaysian data quality will directly affect the final DTT position.
The First GIR TTR filing Malaysia cycle gives groups some transition time, but that time should not be wasted.
HASiL’s FAQ explains that the initial submission of GIR and TTR will be 18 months from the last day of the financial year for the transition year. For an in-scope group with a 12-month financial year ending on 31 December 2025, the FAQ gives 30 June 2027 as the first initial submission deadline.
This does not mean teams should wait until 2027. In practice, 2026 is the year to confirm data sources, entity roles, safe harbour positions, internal controls and review ownership.
The GloBE Information Return, or GIR, is the broader information return. It is generally used to disclose details of the top-up tax calculation and may be filed by the UPE or a designated filing entity.
The Top-up Tax Return, or TTR, is different. It is used by Malaysian constituent entities to disclose local top-up tax liability. HASiL’s FAQ explains that constituent entities of MNE groups are required to file two separate returns for each reporting financial year, namely the information return and the Top-up Tax Return.
This distinction matters because the person preparing GIR may not be the same person responsible for Malaysian TTR data. A clear responsibility matrix avoids gaps.
Transitional CbCR safe harbour 2026 planning can reduce the first-year burden if the group qualifies. The idea is to use qualified Country-by-Country Reporting data and simplified tests during the transitional period.
The practical issue is data quality. HASiL’s FAQ states that an MNE group that fails to submit its CbC Report will not be eligible for the Transitional CbCR Safe Harbour.
This makes CbCR preparation more important than usual. The finance team should check if the CbC report is based on qualified financial statements and if the same data source is used consistently across the jurisdiction.
The New Investment Incentive Framework Malaysia direction is relevant because investment incentives are being redesigned in a GMT environment. MITI states that the New Incentive Framework will be implemented in Q1 2026 for the manufacturing sector and Q2 2026 for the services sector.
This matters for MNEs planning new projects in Malaysia. Incentive planning now needs to sit beside GMT modeling. A company should ask how the incentive affects statutory tax, covered taxes, effective tax rate and possible top-up tax.
The better approach is to review investment incentives before submitting applications or approving major capital expenditure.
Malaysia Pillar Two GMT compliance 2026 is mainly about early data control. The filing deadline may feel distant, but scope, safe harbour, DTT and incentive reviews need 2026 preparation. Arnifi’s expert team has long experience helping in-scope groups organize entity data, assess compliance gaps and build cleaner workflows for the first GMT filing cycle.
It refers to the preparation required by in-scope MNE groups for Malaysia’s Global Minimum Tax rules. The work includes scope testing, effective tax rate review, DTT analysis, GIR and TTR planning, and safe harbour checks.
GMT generally targets MNE groups with consolidated revenues of EUR 750 million or more in at least two of the four preceding financial years. Malaysian constituent entities should confirm scope with the group tax team.
For a 12-month financial year ending 31 December 2025, HASiL’s FAQ gives 30 June 2027 as the initial submission deadline for GIR and TTR under the transition-year timeline.
QDMTT refers to a qualified domestic minimum top-up tax concept under Pillar Two. Malaysia’s DTT is the domestic top-up tax mechanism used to address low-taxed Malaysian profits of in-scope MNE groups.
The New Investment Incentive Framework matters because incentives can affect effective tax rate calculations. In-scope MNEs should review incentives together with GMT modelling before making investment or tax planning decisions.
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