
“Mr. Tan, I spent RM200,000 renovating my office. New partitions, new flooring, a pantry, a meeting room. Why can’t I claim 100% tax deduction? That’s UNFAIR!”
This is exactly what a client shouted over the phone last week.
And honestly? Many SME owners think the same way.
You spend money on your business → you should get a tax deduction.
Sounds logical, right?
But LHDN doesn’t see it that way.
❌ The Hard Truth: Renovation Is NOT Auto-Deductible
Under Malaysia’s Income Tax Act 1967, renovation costs are treated as CAPITAL EXPENDITURE – not revenue expenditure.
Meaning:
LHDN views renovation as improving an asset (your office), not spending money to earn income.
You cannot simply throw the invoice into your P&L and claim 100% deduction in the same year.
⏰ What About the RM300,000 Special Deduction?
“But I heard renovation can claim up to RM300,000?”
Yes – that was a COVID-19 special measure from March 2020 to December 2022.
That window is CLOSED.
If you renovated in 2023, 2024, or 2025 – that special deduction is no longer available.
✅ But It’s Not Over – You Still Have 3 Ways to Claim
Option 1: Capital Allowance (Slow & Steady)
If your renovation includes movable assets like:
- Air conditioners
- Signage
- Office furniture
- Electrical fittings
These may qualify as Plant & Machinery.
| Asset Type | Initial Allowance | Annual Allowance |
|---|---|---|
| Plant & Machinery | 20% | 14% |
| Other assets (e.g. furniture) | 20% | 10% |
✅ You recover the cost over 4–6 years, not all at once.
Option 2: Repair vs Improvement – The KEY Difference
LHDN asks one question: Are you repairing or upgrading?
| ✅ Revenue (100% claim in 1 year) | ❌ Capital (cannot claim fully) |
|---|---|
| Fixing a leaking roof | Building new partitions |
| Repainting walls | Adding a new pantry / meeting room |
| Replacing broken tiles | Installing a completely new floor |
📌 Same tile, replace it → Repair ✅
📌 Knock down a wall to redesign → Improvement ❌
Option 3: Special Deduction for Tourism Operators (2026 Budget)
If you are a MOTAC-registered tourism business (hotels, travel operators, etc.):
You may claim up to RM500,000 for renovation expenses incurred from 11 October 2025 to 31 December 2027.
⚠️ This is industry-specific – not for everyone.
🧾 The #1 Practical Mistake: A One-Line Invoice
Mr. Tan’s client showed him an invoice that said:
“Renovation Works – RM200,000”
Mr. Tan replied: “That’s not enough. LHDN will definitely question this.”
What you MUST do:
✅ Ask your contractor for a detailed itemised breakdown BEFORE you pay.
✅ Separate clearly:
- Movable equipment (AC, furniture, signage)
- Building fixtures (partitions, flooring, ceiling)
- Repairs (leak fixing, painting, tile replacement)
✅ Keep before & after photos of the work.
✅ Classify correctly from Day 1 – not when LHDN knocks on your door.
🔍 LHDN Is Actively Auditing Renovation Claims
Data shows:
Between January 2024 and August 2025, LHDN collected RM16.95 BILLION in additional taxes and penalties through audits.
One of the most common mistakes?
Treating capital renovation expenses as repair & maintenance to claim 100% same-year deduction.
If you are audited, you need proper documentation – not just a one-line invoice.
📌 Summary Table – At a Glance
| Your Situation | Can You Claim? | Correct Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Renovated in 2023+ with vague invoice | ❌ No | Cannot claim capital allowance |
| Renovation includes AC, furniture, signage | ✅ Yes | Claim Capital Allowance (4–6 years) |
| Repair work (leak, paint, broken tiles) | ✅ Yes | 100% deduction in same year |
| MOTAC tourism operator (2026–2027) | ✅ Yes | Up to RM500,000 special deduction |
💬 Final Advice from Mr. Tan
“Before you pay your contractor, demand a detailed invoice.
Do not assume ‘just put it in P&L’.
If you do it right, LHDN will not trouble you.
If you do it wrong, it’s not ‘unfair’ – it’s the rules.”
📚 Full Article & Detailed Classification Guide
For the complete breakdown (including legal provisions, case examples, and step-by-step claiming process), visit the original article on KTP website:
👉 https://www.ktp.com.my/chineseblog/why-renovation-cannot-claim-capital-allowance/4may2026
This article is based on Malaysia’s Income Tax Act 1967, LHDN public guidelines, and KTP tax analysis. For specific cases, please consult a licensed tax advisor.
