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posted 2 hours ago
Last reviewed: June 12, 2026
TL;DR: Cross‑border insolvency in Malaysia is now governed by a dedicated statutory regime, the Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 (Act 877), that adopts the UNCITRAL Model Law. Foreign insolvency office‑holders can apply directly to the Malaysian High Court for recognition, automatic stays and a wide range of protective reliefs. Regulatory carve‑outs apply to certain financial institutions, and courts retain a public‑policy override.
For general counsel, insolvency practitioners and creditors with exposure to Malaysian assets, the new framework transforms what was previously an ad‑hoc, common‑law process into a structured, codified recognition and assistance regime. The Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025 was passed by Parliament, received Royal Assent on January 20, 2026, and has since been gazetted as Act 877. While practitioners should verify the precise commencement date through official gazette notifications, the architecture of the regime is now settled. This guide explains each recognition pathway, the documents courts require, the reliefs available, and the immediate tactical steps that both foreign office‑holders and creditors should take to protect their positions.
Before the cross‑border insolvency bill was introduced, Malaysia lacked a dedicated statutory mechanism for dealing with foreign insolvency proceedings. Courts relied on common‑law principles of comity and discretionary provisions scattered across the Companies Act 2016 to provide assistance, an approach that was slow, uncertain and unpredictable for international stakeholders.
The reform process moved quickly. The Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025 was published for public consultation in July 2025 and tabled before Parliament shortly thereafter. Between July and October 2025, multiple Malaysian law firms, industry bodies and international restructuring commentators published detailed analyses, and the Malaysia Department of Insolvency (Jabatan Insolvensi Malaysia) hosted a dedicated cross‑border insolvency conference to prepare practitioners for the new regime. The Bill passed both houses of Parliament before the end of 2025. On January 20, 2026, the Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 received Royal Assent and was published in the Federal Gazette.
As of this article’s review date, the Act has been gazetted but practitioners should confirm the precise commencement date through official government notices before filing applications. The legislative timeline below summarises the key milestones.
| Event | Date | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025 published and circulated | July 2025 | Stakeholder consultation commenced; preparatory guidance drafted by law firms and the Insolvency Department. |
| Law firm and industry commentary; Malaysia Cross‑Border Insolvency Conference | July – October 2025 | Market awareness raised; practical implementation guidance published by leading firms and industry bodies including MICPA. |
| Royal Assent and gazetting of Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 (Act 877) | January 20, 2026 | Act legally enacted. Practitioners must monitor gazette for commencement date and any subsidiary legislation or practice directions. |
| Implementation and commencement | 2026 (staged, verify gazette) | Recognition applications may be accepted depending on commencement; provisional reliefs may be available under transitional arrangements. |
The Act implements the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross‑Border Insolvency, the international standard adopted by more than fifty jurisdictions worldwide. The Model Law is designed to address insolvency cases involving assets and creditors in multiple countries, with the overarching goals of promoting cooperation between courts, ensuring equitable treatment of creditors and maximising the value of the debtor’s assets.
Under the Malaysian adoption, the Act applies primarily to corporate debtors governed by the Companies Act 2016 and the Labuan Companies Act 1990. It is to be read together with existing written laws in Malaysia relating to insolvency and other related matters, as provided by Clause 4 of the Bill. The legislation empowers foreign insolvency office‑holders to apply directly to the Malaysian High Court for recognition of foreign proceedings, without the procedural hurdles that previously accompanied requests for judicial assistance.
The UNCITRAL model law Malaysia framework classifies foreign proceedings into two categories: foreign main proceedings (where the debtor’s centre of main interests is located) and foreign non‑main proceedings (where the debtor has an establishment). Each category triggers different levels of relief, as detailed in the recognition pathways section below.
The Act does not apply universally. Specific regulated entities are carved out to protect financial stability and regulatory functions. Exclusions cover entities supervised by:
Individual debtors (natural persons) are also excluded. The carve‑outs are consistent with the approach taken by other Model Law jurisdictions and reflect the policy that prudential regulators retain exclusive control over the winding‑down of financial institutions within their supervisory perimeters.
Additionally, Malaysian courts retain broad discretion to deny recognition if doing so would violate the country’s public policy. This safety valve permits courts to refuse assistance in cases involving fraud, procedural unfairness in the foreign jurisdiction, or outcomes fundamentally contrary to Malaysian legal principles.
The recognition of foreign insolvency proceedings Malaysia regime follows a structured application process. Only a “foreign representative”, the person or body authorised in the foreign proceeding to administer the debtor’s reorganisation or liquidation, may apply for recognition under the Act.
A foreign insolvency office‑holder Malaysia applicant must prepare and file the following at the High Court:
| Document | Description | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Certified copy of foreign court order or decision commencing the foreign proceeding | Official order from the foreign tribunal confirming commencement of the insolvency proceeding | Must be certified by the issuing court or a competent authority; translations required if not in English or Malay. |
| Evidence of appointment as foreign representative | Court order, certificate or equivalent instrument confirming the applicant’s status | Include chain of authority if the representative is a delegate or successor. |
| Statement identifying all foreign proceedings in respect of the debtor | A sworn statement listing any other pending foreign proceedings known to the applicant | Ensures the court has a complete picture of multi‑jurisdictional proceedings. |
| Evidence of COMI (Centre of Main Interests) | Affidavit or statutory declaration setting out the factual basis for COMI, or the location of any “establishment” | Key evidentiary element, see COMI guidance below. |
| List of known Malaysian assets and local creditors | Schedule of debtor’s assets in Malaysia and identified Malaysian creditors | Assists the court in determining scope of relief and creditor protection requirements. |
| Originating application with supporting affidavit | Filed in the High Court, sets out the orders sought (recognition, stay, provisional relief) | Must comply with the Rules of Court and any practice directions issued for cross‑border insolvency applications. |
Where the High Court is satisfied that the foreign proceeding takes place in the jurisdiction of the debtor’s COMI, it recognises the proceeding as a “foreign main proceeding.” Recognition of a foreign main proceeding triggers an automatic stay on execution against the debtor’s assets in Malaysia and a suspension of the right to transfer or dispose of those assets. These automatic effects mirror the moratorium protections available under Malaysian domestic insolvency procedures and provide immediate breathing space for the foreign representative to assess the debtor’s Malaysian asset position.
If the foreign proceeding takes place in a jurisdiction where the debtor has an “establishment”, but not its COMI, the court classifies it as a “foreign non‑main proceeding.” In this case, no automatic stay arises. Instead, the foreign representative may apply to the court for discretionary provisional reliefs, which may include a stay of enforcement, an order restricting asset transfers, or authority to examine witnesses in Malaysia. The court retains wide latitude to tailor relief to the circumstances.
The Centre of Main Interests is the single most important factual finding in any recognition application under cross‑border insolvency Malaysia law. The Act creates a rebuttable presumption that a debtor’s COMI is in the jurisdiction of its registered office. The presumption can be displaced by evidence that the debtor’s actual centre of operations, including the location of management, the headquarters known to creditors, and the site of primary business activities, lies elsewhere.
COMI is assessed at the time of the recognition application, and the burden of proof lies with the party challenging the presumption. Practitioners should therefore prepare a detailed affidavit addressing: the location of the debtor’s head office and senior management, the jurisdiction where the debtor’s main bank accounts and material contracts are administered, the situs of principal revenue‑generating activities, and the creditors’ understanding of where the debtor conducted business.
The Act does not specify a mandatory timetable for the court to determine a recognition application. Industry observers expect that urgent applications, particularly those accompanied by requests for provisional relief, will be heard on an expedited basis, consistent with the High Court’s established practice in injunction and winding‑up matters. Provisional relief may be sought from the moment a recognition application is filed, even before the court has ruled on recognition itself. This includes interim stays, asset‑preservation orders and injunctions to prevent dissipation of debtor property.
Once a foreign main proceeding is recognised, the automatic stay broadly prevents creditors from commencing or continuing individual actions against the debtor’s Malaysian assets. This includes court proceedings, execution against property, and the transfer of assets. The stay creates a level playing field, ensuring that no single creditor can gain an advantage by racing to enforce in Malaysia while collective insolvency proceedings are underway abroad.
A critical question for practitioners concerns the interaction between a recognised foreign proceeding and an existing or proposed Malaysian winding‑up petition. The Act contemplates that concurrent proceedings may exist. Where a Malaysian insolvency proceeding is already pending, the court must coordinate relief to ensure consistency. Early indications suggest that courts will look to the Model Law’s cooperation principles to manage overlapping proceedings, giving primacy to the foreign main proceeding while protecting the interests of local creditors.
Secured creditors occupy a special position. Under the framework, the recognition of a foreign liquidation order Malaysia does not automatically extinguish the rights of a Malaysian‑secured creditor to enforce its security. However, the court may limit or modify those rights as part of a broader stay or relief order. Secured creditors should therefore act promptly: perfect any unregistered security interests, seek legal advice on carve‑outs to any proposed stay, and consider applying for directions from the court to preserve their enforcement rights.
For unsecured creditors, the practical effect of an automatic stay is that enforcement actions will pause. The creditor’s recourse shifts to participation in the foreign proceeding (by filing a proof of debt) and monitoring the foreign representative’s conduct in Malaysia to ensure equitable treatment.
Whether secured or unsecured, creditors with exposure to a debtor facing cross‑border restructuring Malaysia proceedings should take immediate protective steps.
| Action | When to Use | Likely Court / Forum |
|---|---|---|
| Apply for Mareva injunction / freezing order | Before recognition granted, urgent asset dissipation risk | Malaysian High Court |
| File proof of debt in foreign proceeding | As soon as foreign proceeding is notified | Foreign insolvency court / administrator |
| Apply for carve‑out from stay order (secured creditor) | After recognition of foreign main proceeding | Malaysian High Court |
| Challenge transfer of assets overseas | When foreign representative proposes remittance of Malaysian assets | Malaysian High Court |
| Support / oppose Malaysian winding‑up petition | When concurrent local proceeding is pending or proposed | Malaysian High Court (Companies Court) |
| Register or perfect security interests | Immediately, before any stay takes effect | Companies Commission of Malaysia / Land Registry |
A foreign insolvency office‑holder appointed over a debtor with assets or creditors in Malaysia should act swiftly. The following sequenced checklist reflects the likely practical effect of the new regime on cross‑border cases.
While specific drafting must be tailored to each case, the originating application for recognition will typically include the following substantive headings:
The Act provides a wide toolkit of reliefs following recognition. Beyond the automatic stay for foreign main proceedings, the court may grant examination orders to compel witnesses to give evidence, make orders for the production of documents, authorise the foreign representative to administer or realise Malaysian assets, and provide assistance in cross‑border asset recovery.
A distinctive feature of the UNCITRAL model law Malaysia framework is its express provision for court‑to‑court cooperation. Malaysian courts and insolvency professionals are explicitly empowered to communicate and coordinate directly with their foreign counterparts. This may include the adoption of cross‑border insolvency protocols, joint hearings, and direct correspondence between judges. For practitioners, this means that applications should proactively propose cooperation mechanisms, including draft protocols and communication guidelines, to facilitate efficient case management.
Where local creditor interests are at stake, recognition orders should include appropriate safeguards. The likely practical effect will be that courts require foreign representatives to certify or guarantee that local Malaysian creditors are appropriately compensated before transferring debtor assets overseas, a requirement consistent with equitable distribution principles.
The Malaysian courts retain the power to refuse recognition if it would be manifestly contrary to the public policy of Malaysia. Industry observers expect this threshold to be interpreted restrictively, consistent with Model Law jurisprudence in other adopting states. Likely grounds for refusal include foreign proceedings tainted by fraud, a fundamental denial of procedural fairness in the originating jurisdiction, or orders that would destabilise Malaysia’s financial system.
Foreign office‑holders should also be aware of local priority claims. Malaysian preferential creditors, including employees owed wages, the Inland Revenue Board for unpaid taxes, and the Employees Provident Fund, will retain priority in the distribution of Malaysian assets. Any recognition order must accommodate these statutory priorities. Failure to account for them may result in the court imposing conditions on the foreign representative or refusing to authorise the remittance of assets abroad.
| Procedure | Typical Timeline (Expected) | Practical Steps to Shorten Delay |
|---|---|---|
| Instruction of Malaysian counsel and document preparation | 1 – 7 days | Pre‑prepare certified documents and translations before the foreign proceeding commences; instruct counsel on a standby basis. |
| Filing of recognition application | 7 – 14 days after instruction | Use standard‑form originating application adapted for cross‑border insolvency; file electronically where court permits. |
| Provisional relief hearing (if urgent) | 1 – 5 days after filing (ex parte or on short notice) | File concurrently with recognition application; demonstrate asset‑dissipation risk clearly in affidavit evidence. |
| Full recognition hearing | 4 – 8 weeks after filing (inter partes) | Agree directions with respondents early; provide comprehensive COMI evidence to avoid adjournments. |
| Post‑recognition relief and cooperation orders | Ongoing, as needed | Propose court‑to‑court protocols at the recognition hearing; maintain regular progress reporting to the court. |
Practitioners seeking the primary text of the legislation should consult the official Federal Gazette and the Bill text circulated by Parliament. Leading analyses include the Skrine alert on highlights of the Cross‑Border Insolvency Bill 2025, the Christopher Lee & Ong practical guide, the Global Restructuring Review’s commentary on Malaysia’s adoption of the UNCITRAL Model Law, and the EY Pulse of Malaysia podcast on cross‑border restructuring Malaysia implications. The Malaysian Institute of Certified Public Accountants (MICPA) published a press statement applauding the legislation and outlining practical consequences for accountants and insolvency practitioners. The Malaysia Department of Insolvency (Jabatan Insolvensi Malaysia) remains the official government body for implementation updates and practice guidance.
The Cross‑Border Insolvency Act 2026 represents the most significant reform to cross‑border insolvency Malaysia practice in decades. For the first time, foreign representatives have a clear, codified pathway to seek recognition and enforcement in Malaysian courts, while creditors benefit from a framework that mandates equitable treatment and local asset protection. Practitioners, whether acting for foreign office‑holders or Malaysian creditors, should familiarise themselves with the recognition procedures, prepare standard‑form application documents, and monitor the Federal Gazette for commencement and subsidiary legislation. Early preparation and prompt action will be decisive in the first wave of cases under this new regime.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kenneth Koh at Xavier & Koh Partnership (XK Law), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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