Retiring in Malaysia as a US Citizen
Malaysia's low cost of living, genuine tax benefits on unremitted offshore income, and the MM2H long-stay program have made it a real, if still relatively small, retirement destination for Americans. A comfortable retirement, housing, dining, healthcare, can run as little as $1,500-$2,500 monthly for a couple, well below many other Asian retirement destinations.
Social Security Continues, No Reduction
US Social Security benefits continue to be paid to citizens living in Malaysia without reductions applied under some countries' agreements. Since there's no tax treaty at all, this isn't treaty-driven, Malaysia simply isn't on the short list of countries where the Social Security Administration restricts payments.
IRA and 401(k) Withdrawals, and the Remittance Question
Traditional IRA and 401(k) distributions remain taxable as ordinary US income regardless of where you live, and Required Minimum Distributions still apply on the standard US schedule. Whether Malaysia also taxes these distributions depends on the remittance rules: kept offshore and unremitted, they escape Malaysian tax under the current transitional exemption; remitted for living expenses, they've been exempt through 2026 but face a real question mark once that exemption expires.
MM2H as the Retirement Visa Pathway
Most retiring Americans use MM2H (typically Silver or Gold) as their long-term residency route. Applicants 50 and older face no minimum annual stay requirement, useful for those splitting time between Malaysia and family in the US, though this can complicate a Physical Presence Test claim if you're also relying on the FEIE for other income streams.
Medicare Doesn't Follow You Abroad
US Medicare generally does not cover care received in Malaysia. Malaysian private healthcare is well-regarded and comparatively affordable, but most long-term American retirees still budget for private international health insurance rather than relying on informal arrangements.
Worked Example: A Gold MM2H Couple
A retired American couple qualifies for Gold MM2H with a $500,000 fixed deposit and a RM 1,050,000 property purchase in Kuala Lumpur. They receive combined Social Security of $52,000 annually, reportable on their US return regardless of Malaysian rules, and remit roughly $30,000 per year for living expenses, currently exempt from Malaysian tax under the transitional rule but slated for review as 2027 approaches. Their advisor is already modeling the Foreign Tax Credit as a backstop against any future Malaysian liability on those remittances.