Can Singaporeans Make Money Renting Out Johor Bahru Condos?

Can Singaporeans Make Money Renting Out JB Condos?

Yes — Singaporeans (buying via the JS-SEZ allowance or as PR) can earn a positive net return renting out a Johor Bahru condo, with gross yields of 6–8% on well-located RTS-corridor units, driven by the SGD-to-MYR rent gap and Singapore-linked tenant demand. The catch is that the headline yield is gross: real profit depends on managing costs, vacancy and currency. Here’s the honest math.

Why the income is there

  • SGD-funded rents. Tenants earning Singapore dollars pay ringgit rents that are cheap to them but high-yielding to you — the currency advantage.
  • RTS demand. From January 2027, a 5-minute crossing makes JB viable for Singapore commuters, deepening the tenant pool.
  • Legal short-stay option. A commercial strata title lets you run higher-gross Airbnb-style lets where it suits.

From gross to net — the realistic picture

Line Effect
Gross yield (well-located unit) ~6–8%
Less management (8–12% long-stay / 15–25% short-stay)
Less maintenance fee, sinking fund, repairs
Less vacancy allowance
Net yield (typical) ~4–6% (long-stay), variable for short-stay

Indicative; see rental management for cost detail.

How Singaporeans actually do it hands-off

The common worry — "I live in Singapore, who manages it?" — is solved by a property management agent who handles tenants, rent and maintenance. With the RTS, even occasional checks are a 5-minute ride.

The catch (be realistic)

  • You must qualify to buy — Singaporeans need the RM600k SEZ threshold (Type B/C). See eligibility.
  • Off-plan timing — income starts at completion (~2029–2030).
  • FX and occupancy risk — model conservatively; net, not gross, is what you keep.

Bottom line

For a Singaporean who buys a qualifying, well-located unit and manages it properly, JB rental is a credible income-and-appreciation play — not a get-rich-quick scheme. Run your numbers on the investment page.

Frequently asked questions

Can a Singaporean make money renting out a JB condo?
Yes — well-located RTS-corridor units target 6–8% gross (typically ~4–6% net for long-stay) thanks to SGD-funded rents and RTS demand. Net return depends on management, vacancy and FX.

Do Singaporeans need to be in JB to rent it out?
No — a property management agent handles tenants, rent and maintenance, making it passive even from Singapore.

What yield can a Singaporean realistically expect?
Around 4–6% net for long-stay after costs, with short-stay potentially higher gross but more variable. Model conservatively.


Reviewed by Jason Chan, Malaysia property consultant (DMS Team). Indicative figures, not financial advice. Returns are not guaranteed.

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