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AliTariffs

AliExpress Tariff Calculator — Malaysia

Calculate import duty, VAT, and total landed cost for any AliExpress order shipped to Malaysia. Rates refresh daily — today’s effective duty is 5.0% and VAT/GST is 10.0%.

Import duty

5.0%

effective

VAT / GST

10.0%

standard

De-minimis

$110

duty-free up to

Currency

MYR

MY

Example landed costs for Malaysia

What a typical AliExpress order actually costs after duty and VAT. Shipping is estimated based on common AliExpress Standard Shipping rates.

Item price (USD)ShippingDutyVATTotal landed+%
$10.00 duty-free$3.50$0.00$0.00$13.50+35%
$30.00 duty-free$8.00$0.00$0.00$38.00+27%
$100.00 $18.00$5.90$12.39$136.29+36%
$250.00 $18.00$13.40$28.14$309.54+24%

How AliExpress tariffs work in Malaysia

When you order from AliExpress and ship to Malaysia, three things determine the price you actually pay at the door: the import duty, the VAT or GST, and the de-minimis threshold below which small parcels are exempt.

Today, the most common effective duty rate for AliExpress consumer parcels arriving in Malaysia is around 5.0%. This rate is applied to the customs value, which is normally the product price plus the international shipping fee. On top of that, Malaysia’s standard VAT/GST of 10.0% is applied to the post-duty total.

Malaysia has a de-minimis threshold of approximately $110 — orders below this value are typically duty-free, though VAT may still apply (especially when AliExpress collects it at checkout under IOSS-style rules).

Most AliExpress sellers ship via AliExpress Standard Shipping or Cainiao Super Economy. Both declare the full product value in the customs paperwork, so don’t expect to get away with an under-declared parcel. If you’re shipping a high-value item, consider express shipping with a broker — the broker handles the paperwork and gives you an upfront landed-cost quote.

Common pain points unique to Malaysia: regulations change frequently; couriers sometimes apply a flat “handling fee” of $5–$25 in addition to the official duty and VAT. We’ll flag this on the result page when our data indicates it’s likely.

Tips to reduce AliExpress tariff bills

1

Stay under the de-minimis when possible

Split a large basket into smaller orders so each falls under Malaysia’s $110 duty-free threshold. Most carriers won’t consolidate parcels mid-route.

2

Choose the right shipping method

AliExpress Standard Shipping uses postal services that often clear without a broker fee. Express carriers (DHL, UPS, FedEx) add a $5–$25 brokerage charge.

3

Use AliExpress’s tax-included sellers

For EU/UK buyers, look for the “Tax included” badge on the product page. The seller has registered for IOSS and AliExpress collects VAT at checkout — no surprise charge at customs.

4

Bookmark our calculator

Or install the Chrome extension — it shows the landed cost on every AliExpress page automatically.

FAQ: AliExpress tariffs in Malaysia

Do I have to pay import duty on AliExpress orders to Malaysia?

Yes, but only on orders above MYR110 approximately (the de-minimis threshold). Below that, you typically pay nothing in duty — though VAT may still apply on the platform.

How is VAT/GST calculated on AliExpress purchases in Malaysia?

VAT/GST in Malaysia is approximately 10.0%. It is calculated on the post-duty value (product + shipping + duty). AliExpress may collect some VAT at checkout under local IOSS-style rules — when this happens, you do not pay again at customs.

Can the Chrome extension calculate Malaysia tariffs automatically?

Yes. Install the free AliTariffs Chrome extension, set Malaysia as your default country, and every AliExpress product page will show the landed cost in MYR automatically.

Are these rates official?

These are effective-rate estimates compiled by our daily AI pipeline. They reflect what a typical AliExpress shopper in Malaysia actually pays after considering de-minimis, IOSS, and routine clearance. Always confirm with your courier before large orders.

Disclaimer: Estimates only. AliTariffs is not a customs broker and not affiliated with AliExpress or any Malaysia government agency. Always verify with official sources for large orders.