Johor Bahru Rental Rate Trends (2026)
JB rents are rising fastest in the CIQ-RTS corridor, where Singapore-linked tenants paying SGD-supported rents push yields toward 6–8% — well above the 3–5% typical of local-demand-only areas further out. The headline: location and tenant type matter more than the JB average. Here’s the directional picture by area and unit type.
Rent trend by area (directional)
| Area | Rent trend | Why |
|---|---|---|
| CIQ-RTS corridor (Taman Pelangi, city centre) | Rising | SGD-linked demand, RTS catalyst |
| Established mid-town townships | Stable | Local + some cross-border demand |
| Peripheral / isolated developments | Soft | Oversupply, thin demand |
Rent by unit type (indicative, corridor)
| Unit type | Indicative monthly rent | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed (e.g., 450 sf) | Higher yield-on-cost | Strongest commuter demand |
| 2-bed (e.g., 660 sf) | Steady, low vacancy | Deepest tenant pool |
| 3-bed / dual-key | Two streams possible | Highest absolute income |
Directional ranges only; actual rents vary by building, floor and furnishing. See the investment analysis for unit-specific projections.
What drives corridor rents
The SGD-to-MYR gap lets Singapore-earning tenants afford higher ringgit rents, and the RTS Link deepens that pool from 2027. This is why corridor stock like Maxim The Address targets higher yields than peripheral JB property.
How to use this
Benchmark any unit’s projected rent against comparable corridor rents, then stress-test net yield after management and costs. Don’t rely on the headline yield — verify against real comparables.
Frequently asked questions
Are JB rents rising in 2026?
Yes, fastest in the CIQ-RTS corridor where SGD-linked demand and the RTS catalyst push yields toward 6–8%, versus 3–5% in local-demand-only areas further out.
Which JB unit type rents best?
Studios/1-beds offer the highest yield-on-cost from commuter demand; 2-beds have the deepest, lowest-vacancy tenant pool; dual-keys produce the highest absolute income.
Why are corridor rents higher?
Because Singapore-earning tenants paying SGD-supported rents can afford more in ringgit terms, and the RTS deepens that demand pool.
Reviewed by Jason Chan, Malaysia property consultant (DMS Team). Directional information, not a rent guarantee.
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