Anwar Unveils Malaysia Biggest Reform Budget 2026: More Aid for Rakyat, Record Farmer Subsidies, and AI Push

Malaysia Parliament

Kuala Lumpur, 10 October 2025 — Malaysia Government today tabled Budget 2026 with a record allocation of RM470 billion, charting a decisive course towards fiscal discipline, governance reform, rakyat-focused support, and long-term national competitiveness.

Prime Minister and Finance Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim, in delivering the Budget 2026 speech in Parliament, underscored that the government is not merely tabling a fiscal plan, but a reform mandate:

“The Government has chosen the winding and difficult path — reform, strict fiscal discipline and institutional strengthening — because this is the only path that guarantees the nation’s survival in the long run.”


Prime Minister DS Anwar Ibrahim giving speech

Strengthening Governance and Fiscal Responsibility

Budget 2026 builds on the Ekonomi MADANI framework and is the first to align with the 13th Malaysia Plan (RMK13). It focuses on fiscal consolidation while maintaining growth-supportive spending.

Anwar emphasised:

“For too long, blanket subsidies have leaked to foreigners and large corporations. Subsidies must be the right and privilege of Malaysians. Savings from diesel subsidy reforms allow us to ease the people’s burden through initiatives such as SARA Untuk Semua.”


Direct Relief for the Rakyat

Budget 2026 prioritises cost-of-living relief for households across income levels:


Boosting Agriculture and Food Security

Malaysia will see the largest agricultural subsidy in its history:

Anwar reaffirmed:

“It is our rice farmers, farmers, and fishermen who ensure there is rice on our plates and food on our tables. It is only right that we safeguard their livelihoods with the highest subsidies in the nation’s history.”


Driving Investment, Digitalisation and Green Growth

To position Malaysia as a competitive investment hub:


Housing and Consumer Protection


A Reformist and Inclusive Budget

Budget 2026, themed “Belanjawan Rakyat” which means People’s Budget in English, sets out nine core commitments (Tekad Utama) anchored on the three pillars of the Ekonomi MADANI — raising the economic ceiling, strengthening the social floor, and restoring governance.

Prime Minister Anwar concluded:

“The broader framework of Ekonomi MADANI is for the people — ensuring access to facilities, creating jobs, generating income, and easing the cost of living. This budget is not just about numbers, but a commitment to build a fairer, more prosperous and resilient Malaysia.”


Malaysia Budget 2026: An Interactive Infographic

🇲🇾 BELANJAWAN 2026

Belanjawan Rakyat: Fiscal Discipline, Economic Acceleration & Social Welfare

1. Fiscal & Macroeconomic Strength

The 2026 budget underscores a strong commitment to fiscal consolidation. By optimizing national resources and enhancing tax compliance, the government aims to strengthen the nation’s economic foundation while increasing public spending in critical areas.

RM470B

Total Public Spending

Up from RM452B in 2025

RM343.1B

Federal Revenue Estimate

Up from RM334.1B in 2025

3.5%

Target Fiscal Deficit (% of GDP)

Down from 3.8% in 2025

RM15.5B

Annual Subsidy Savings

Funds redirected to welfare

2. Economic Acceleration & High-Value Sectors

A significant portion of the budget is dedicated to catalyzing growth in high-value sectors. The focus is on bolstering technology and digital infrastructure, strengthening the semiconductor ecosystem, and providing unprecedented support for local entrepreneurs to enhance global competitiveness.

3. Rakyat Welfare & Social Protection

A cornerstone of the budget is the direct return of savings to the people. Financial aid is significantly expanded, with a major increase in the STR/SARA allocation to ease the cost of living, alongside crucial support for civil servants.

STR/SARA Expansion

RM15 Billion

Total allocation, with SARA extended to all 9 million STR recipients, providing up to RM100/month for necessities.

Civil Servant Support

4,500

Contract doctors will be offered permanent positions in 2026.

Hardcore Poverty

~0%

The rate is on track to be virtually eliminated, dropping from 0.2% to near zero.

4. Policy Changes & Targeted Development

The budget introduces key policy reforms aimed at housing affordability, regional equity, and enhanced consumer protection, reflecting a strategic approach to balanced national development.

Sabah & Sarawak Development

Record-high development allocations of RM6.9B for Sabah and RM6B for Sarawak to accelerate infrastructure growth and honor MA63 commitments.

First Home Buyer Relief

Full stamp duty exemption for first homes up to RM500,000 is extended for two years, until Dec 31, 2027.

Foreign Property Tax Change

Stamp duty for non-citizens and foreign companies is raised from 4% to 8% to help control local property prices.

New Consumer & Business Policies

A “Lemon Law” will be introduced to strengthen consumer rights. A 10% special tax deduction will be offered for converting commercial buildings to housing. Excise duty on alcohol will be increased by 10%.

© 2025 Malaysia Budget 2026 Infographic. Data sourced from the official budget speech.

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