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Track rent, manage deposits, and keep digital rent receipts — free for Malaysian landlords and tenants.
Residential tenancies are governed by the tenancy agreement and contract law (there is no dedicated Residential Tenancy Act yet). Agreements are typically stamped at LHDN.
Landlords declare rental income to LHDN (Inland Revenue Board); a clear digital rent record simplifies filing. RentyBase timestamps every receipt.
A security deposit of about two months’ rent plus a half-month utility deposit is standard, refundable at the end of the tenancy subject to condition.
General information only, not legal or tax advice. Rules vary by region and change over time — confirm with the relevant authority.
A common arrangement is two months’ rent as a security deposit plus a half-month utility deposit, and sometimes a half-month advance rental. All are refundable at the end of the tenancy subject to condition. RentyBase records each deposit and any deductions.
Yes — tenancy agreements are stamped at LHDN (the Inland Revenue Board) to be admissible as evidence. Keeping a clean rent record helps at renewal; RentyBase stores it for you.
Not yet — residential tenancies are governed by the agreement and general contract law, so a clear written agreement and rent record matter. RentyBase keeps the rent, deposit, and condition record for the whole tenancy.
Rent is commonly paid by online banking transfer or DuitNow. RentyBase logs each payment with its reference so both landlord and tenant see the same record.
Yes — rent tracking, receipts, deposit records, condition photos, and repair logs are all free for both sides.
Free for both landlords and tenants. One shared ledger, receipts included, move-in proof sealed.
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