SGD vs MYR: The Currency Advantage in JB Property
The core of the JB investment thesis is currency: a tenant earning in Singapore dollars and paying rent in ringgit enjoys a ~3.3x exchange gap (roughly S$1 = RM3.3), which lets them pay rents that are cheap in SGD terms but high in MYR terms — directly funding the 6–8% gross yields JB landlords target. This single dynamic is why JB rental yields structurally beat Malaysia-tenant-only markets. Here’s the math and the caveats.
The currency math, simply
A Singapore-based tenant comparing housing costs thinks in SGD. Paying, say, RM2,400/month for a Maxim Type A feels like ~S$730 — a fraction of Singapore rent — while delivering the JB owner a strong ringgit yield. The tenant gets affordability; the owner gets yield. The exchange gap funds both sides.
| In SGD (tenant’s view) | In MYR (owner’s view) | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly rent (Type A, indicative) | ~S$730 | ~RM2,400 |
| Annual rent | ~S$8,760 | ~RM28,800 |
| Gross yield on RM426k | — | ~6.8% |
Illustrative only at ~S$1 = RM3.3; actual rent and FX vary. Get a unit-specific projection.
Why this beats a Malaysia-tenant market
A purely local tenant earns and pays in ringgit — no exchange uplift — so local-demand yields sit closer to 3–5%. The Singapore-linked corridor near the RTS is one of the few places the currency gap reliably lifts achievable rent, which is the rental-demand engine behind Maxim’s projected yield.
The honest caveats
- FX cuts both ways. A stronger ringgit narrows the tenant’s affordability edge; model a conservative exchange assumption.
- You’re paid in ringgit. If you ultimately spend in SGD, repatriation and FX timing matter.
- Yield still depends on occupancy and management — currency lifts the ceiling, not the floor. See the risks page.
Bottom line for Singapore investors
The currency advantage is real and durable as long as the SGD-MYR gap and RTS-driven demand persist — and it is the clearest reason a Singapore-linked investor can out-earn a local-only landlord in JB. Pair it with hands-off management and the investment becomes genuinely passive.
Frequently asked questions
Why are JB rental yields higher for Singapore-linked units?
Because tenants earn in SGD and pay in MYR (~3.3x gap), they can afford rents that are low in SGD terms but high in MYR terms — funding 6–8% gross yields versus 3–5% for local-tenant stock.
What is the SGD to MYR rate advantage?
Roughly S$1 = RM3.3, meaning Singapore-earning tenants have about 3.3x purchasing power on ringgit-priced rent — the core of the JB yield thesis.
Is the currency advantage guaranteed?
No — exchange rates move both ways. A stronger ringgit narrows the edge, so model conservatively; the advantage holds while the SGD-MYR gap and RTS demand persist.
Reviewed by Jason Chan, Malaysia property consultant (DMS Team). Illustrative figures, not financial advice. FX and yields are not guaranteed.
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