Malaysia's household debt stood at 1.73 trillion ringgit ($408.8 billion), equivalent to 84.4% of gross domestic product at the end of March, easing from 84.7% at the end of 2025, New Strait Times reported Wednesday, citing Prime Minister and Finance Minister Anwar Ibrahim's written parliamentary reply.
Anwar said household repayment capacity remained resilient, with the median debt service ratio at 33% and the median debt-to-income ratio steady at 1.3 times. The impaired household loan ratio also improved to 1.0% at end-2025 from 1.1% six months earlier, according to the report.
He said the government and Bank Negara Malaysia continued to monitor household debt and broader economic conditions, while banks were providing targeted repayment assistance, including loan restructuring, rescheduling and temporary repayment holidays, to borrowers affected by the Middle East conflict, New Strait Times said.
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