Frequently Asked Questions
Use an SMS API like Twilio, Sinch, MessageBird, or Plivo. Ensure your messages comply with Malaysian regulations by including the "RM 0.00" prefix, respecting quiet hours (8 PM - 8 AM), and obtaining explicit consent before sending marketing messages. Remember to handle opt-outs promptly.
The cost varies depending on the SMS provider and message type. However, sending SMS to landlines is not possible and results in a 400 response error (code 21614) with no charge incurred. It is best to check the pricing from the SMS provider.
Due to regulations effective September 1, 2024, URLs in SMS messages are blocked unless whitelisted. This is to combat spam and fraud. MMS messages are converted to SMS with embedded (and blocked) URLs, making MMS delivery challenging.
Marketing SMS messages are allowed between 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM Malaysian time. Transactional and emergency messages are permitted 24/7. Consider cultural sensitivities, such as Ramadan, when scheduling campaigns.
No, alphanumeric sender IDs are not directly supported in Malaysia. All sender IDs are overwritten with operator-approved numeric sender IDs. For international long codes, the sender ID is overwritten with a random numeric ID.
While most operators support concatenated SMS, Digi Malaysia delivers split messages separately. Single SMS messages are limited to 160 characters for GSM-7 encoding or 70 characters for Unicode (UCS-2).
Comply with the Personal Data Protection Act 2010 (PDPA) and MCMC regulations. This includes getting explicit consent for marketing messages, supporting opt-out keywords (STOP, BATAL, HENTI), and respecting quiet hours.
The character limit is 160 characters for GSM-7 encoding and 70 characters for Unicode (UCS-2). Exceeding these limits results in concatenated messages (segmented SMS).
Your SMS might be blocked for several reasons, including containing URLs or phone numbers, lacking the "RM 0.00" prefix, sending outside permitted hours (8 AM - 8 PM), or sending prohibited content like gambling or adult material.
Short codes are available through operator-approved channels and typically take 4-6 weeks for provisioning. They are suitable for high-volume marketing, 2FA, and alerts.
Several SMS APIs offer services in Malaysia, including Twilio, Sinch, MessageBird, and Plivo. They provide features for sending, receiving, and managing SMS, while also incorporating local regulations and requirements.
Prohibited content includes gambling, adult material, political messages, religious content, controlled substances, alcohol, firearms, and money lending services. Ensure your content complies with these restrictions to avoid blocking.
Process opt-out requests (STOP, BATAL, HENTI) within 24 hours. Maintain a centralized opt-out database and confirm the opt-out with a final message. Never send marketing messages to opted-out numbers.
The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) regulates SMS communications and enforces strict regulations to protect consumers. They oversee compliance with the Personal Data Protection Act 2010 (PDPA).
Use strategies like queue systems (Redis/RabbitMQ), batch APIs, and monitoring throughput with adjustments to sending rates. Implementing exponential backoff for retries can also help with large-scale sending.
Malaysia SMS Compliance Guide: MCMC Regulations, PDPA Requirements & Best Practices
Send compliant SMS messages in Malaysia by following MCMC regulations, PDPA consent requirements, and mandatory content filtering rules. This comprehensive guide covers Malaysia's SMS compliance landscape, including the September 2024 URL blocking enforcement, RM 0.00 prefix requirements, PDPA Amendment 2024 rollout, and carrier-specific requirements for CelcomDigi, Maxis, and U Mobile.
Malaysia SMS Market Overview
Market Conditions: Malaysia operates a mature mobile market with high SMS adoption alongside popular OTT messaging apps like WhatsApp and WeChat. Following the Digi and Celcom merger completed in November 2022, CelcomDigi became Malaysia's largest telecommunications operator with over 20.3 million subscribers. The major Malaysian mobile carriers are CelcomDigi (largest market share), Maxis (second-largest with approximately 27.5% market share as of 2022), U Mobile, and smaller players like Unifi and Yes. The market serves a predominantly Android-based user base (approximately 80% Android vs. 20% iOS). SMS remains crucial for business communications in Malaysia – particularly OTP authentication, transaction notifications, and marketing campaigns – despite increasing competition from OTT messaging platforms.
SMS Messaging Capabilities in Malaysia
You'll find comprehensive SMS capabilities in Malaysia, including two-way messaging, message concatenation, and strict regulatory compliance requirements for business messaging.
Two-Way SMS Messaging in Malaysia
Yes. You can engage in bidirectional SMS messaging with your customers in Malaysia, though you must comply with local regulations regarding consent and opt-out mechanisms.
SMS Concatenation and Message Segmentation
Support: Yes. Most operators support concatenation. Note: Historical documentation indicated Digi Malaysia delivered split messages separately, but this may have changed following the CelcomDigi merger in November 2022. Verify current behavior with CelcomDigi before deploying to production.
Message length rules: Use 160 characters for single SMS with GSM-7 encoding, or 70 characters with Unicode (UCS-2).
Encoding considerations: Use GSM-7 for basic Latin characters and UCS-2 for local language support, including Bahasa Malaysia characters.
MMS Support in Malaysia
Malaysian carriers automatically convert MMS messages to SMS with an embedded URL link. As of September 1, 2024, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) blocks all URLs in SMS messages, including those in MMS-converted messages. Previously exempted credible entities (government agencies, financial institutions, corporations) lost their exemptions on this date. This makes MMS delivery effectively non-functional in Malaysia without prior URL whitelisting approval from MCMC – which remains extremely difficult to obtain.
Recipient Phone Number Compatibility
Mobile Number Portability (MNP) in Malaysia
Yes. Mobile Number Portability (MNP) has been available in Malaysia since 2008, implemented under MCMC direction. MNP enables customers to switch mobile service providers while keeping their existing phone numbers. Before MNP, mobile numbers were fixed to specific operators (e.g., 012/017 for Maxis, 016 for Digi, 013/019 for Celcom, 018 for U Mobile). Number portability doesn't significantly impact your SMS delivery – carriers handle routing automatically through Malaysia's MNP system. Note: Malaysia's MNP system faces performance challenges, with rejection rates exceeding 50% for port requests – significantly higher than the <10% best practice benchmark.
Sending SMS to Landlines
No. You cannot send SMS to landline numbers in Malaysia. Attempts will result in failed delivery with a 400 response error (code 21614), and you won't be charged.
Malaysia SMS Compliance: MCMC and PDPA Regulations
The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) oversees SMS communications and enforces strict regulations to protect consumers from scams and unauthorized marketing. You must comply with the Personal Data Protection Act 2010 (PDPA) when handling customer data and communications. Significant amendments to the PDPA received royal assent on October 9, 2024, with implementation occurring in three phases: Phase 1 (January 1, 2025), Phase 2 (April 1, 2025), and Phase 3 (June 1, 2025). These amendments expand the definition of "sensitive personal data" to include biometric data, introduce mandatory data breach notification requirements, and require you to appoint data protection officers (both data controllers and processors).
PDPA Consent Requirements for SMS Marketing
Obtain explicit, recordable consent under the PDPA before sending any marketing or promotional messages. Passive opt-out methods are not sufficient – you must obtain consent in a form you can record and maintain, such as written consent or audio recordings. The PDPA requires you to obtain consent before processing personal data. Calling, texting, or emailing individuals without consent constitutes a PDPA breach. Follow these best practices:
SMS Opt-Out Commands: STOP, BATAL, HENTI
Support these commands in all SMS campaigns:
Malaysia Do Not Call (DNC) Registry Status
Important Update: Malaysia does not have an implemented Do Not Call (DNC) registry as of 2024, unlike neighboring countries such as Singapore and Hong Kong. The Personal Data Protection Department (PDPD) is studying the possibility of implementing a national DNC registry, but the PDPA 2010 does not provide for or mandate a specific DNC registry system. Until Malaysia establishes a formal DNC registry, rely on these internal compliance measures:
SMS Sending Time Restrictions in Malaysia
Industry Best Practice: Do not send marketing messages between 8:00 PM and 8:00 AM Malaysian time (UTC+8). Note: While SMS providers widely recommend this 8 PM – 8 AM restriction, explicit time-based sending restrictions are not codified in Malaysian telecommunications law as of 2024. However, respecting these quiet hours aligns with PDPA consumer protection principles and reduces complaint risk. You can send transactional and emergency messages (OTPs, security alerts, critical notifications) 24/7. Consider cultural sensitivities during Ramadan and other religious observances when scheduling marketing campaigns.
SMS Sender ID Options for Malaysia
Alphanumeric Sender ID Support in Malaysia
Operator network capability: Not supported for direct use
Registration requirements: N/A – alphanumeric sender IDs are not supported
Sender ID preservation: Operators overwrite all sender IDs with operator-approved numeric sender IDs
Long Code SMS in Malaysia
Domestic vs. International:
Sender ID preservation:
Provisioning time: Immediate to 24 hours
Use cases: P2P messaging (domestic), A2P messaging (international)
Short Code Registration and Approval in Malaysia
Support: Available through operator-approved channels in three MCMC-regulated categories:
Provisioning time: 4 weeks upon application approval by mobile operators
Content requirements: Start every short code message with your full company name or company website (MCMC mandate)
Use cases: High-volume marketing, 2FA, alerts, corporate notifications
Recent regulatory change: As of September 1, 2024, MCMC revoked short code exemptions from URL blocking rules – even MCMC-approved short codes cannot send URLs without explicit whitelisting
MCMC SMS Content Filtering and Prohibited Industries
MCMC prohibits these content types and industries:
Malaysia SMS Content Filtering Rules (September 2024)
Known Carrier Filtering Rules (MCMC enforcement effective September 1, 2024):
How to Avoid SMS Message Blocking in Malaysia:
Follow these guidelines to avoid message blocking:
Malaysia SMS Best Practices for Business Messaging
SMS Message Strategy and Content Guidelines
SMS Sending Frequency and Timing Best Practices
Localizing SMS Content for Malaysia
Managing SMS Opt-Outs and Unsubscribes
Testing SMS Delivery Across Malaysian Carriers
SMS API Integration Options for Malaysia
Twilio
Twilio provides a robust SMS API with specific support for Malaysian regulations. Integration requires an Account SID and Auth Token from your Twilio console.
Sinch
Sinch offers direct carrier connections in Malaysia with support for local regulations and formatting requirements.
MessageBird
MessageBird provides enterprise-grade SMS capabilities with Malaysian carrier connections.
Plivo
Plivo offers reliable SMS delivery to Malaysia with support for local compliance requirements.
SMS API Rate Limits for Malaysia
Understand these rate limits:
Apply these strategies for large-scale sending:
Common SMS Error Codes in Malaysia
Log and monitor errors effectively:
Frequently Asked Questions About Malaysia SMS Compliance
What is the RM 0.00 prefix requirement in Malaysia?
The RM 0.00 prefix is mandatory for all SMS messages sent in Malaysia as of September 2024. The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) requires this prefix to indicate to recipients that the SMS is free to receive. If you don't include "RM 0.00," "RM 0.0," or "RM0" at the start of your message, mobile operators will automatically add it, which can disrupt your message formatting and character count. The prefix consumes 7 – 8 characters including the space.
Can I send URLs in SMS messages in Malaysia?
No. As of September 1, 2024, MCMC strictly enforces a complete ban on URLs and hyperlinks in SMS messages in Malaysia. This applies to all senders, including previously exempted credible entities like government agencies, financial institutions, and corporations. Even MCMC-approved short codes cannot send URLs without explicit whitelisting approval, which is extremely difficult to obtain. The ban aims to protect Malaysian consumers from SMS-based scams.
Do I need PDPA consent to send marketing SMS in Malaysia?
Yes. The Personal Data Protection Act 2010 (PDPA) requires you to obtain explicit, recordable consent before sending any marketing or promotional SMS messages in Malaysia. Passive opt-out methods are not sufficient – you must obtain consent in a recordable form such as written consent or audio recordings. Sending marketing messages without proper consent constitutes a PDPA breach. Under PDPA Section 43, individuals have the legal right to stop you from using their personal data for direct marketing at any time.
What are the SMS sending time restrictions in Malaysia?
While not legally codified in Malaysian telecommunications law, industry best practice recommends not sending marketing SMS between 8:00 PM and 8:00 AM Malaysian time (UTC+8). Respecting these quiet hours aligns with PDPA consumer protection principles and reduces complaint risk. You can send transactional and emergency messages (OTPs, security alerts, critical notifications) 24/7. Consider cultural sensitivities during Ramadan and other religious observances when scheduling marketing campaigns.
Which mobile carriers operate in Malaysia?
Malaysia's major mobile carriers are CelcomDigi (largest operator with over 20.3 million subscribers following the Digi and Celcom merger in November 2022), Maxis (second-largest with approximately 27.5% market share as of 2022), U Mobile, and smaller players like Unifi and Yes. CelcomDigi's formation through the merger makes it the dominant player in Malaysia's telecommunications market.
Does Malaysia have a Do Not Call registry?
No. Malaysia does not currently have an implemented Do Not Call (DNC) registry as of 2024, unlike neighboring countries such as Singapore and Hong Kong. The Personal Data Protection Department (PDPD) is studying the possibility of implementing a national DNC registry, but the PDPA 2010 does not provide for or mandate a specific DNC registry system. Until Malaysia establishes a formal DNC registry, maintain an internal suppression list and honor all opt-out requests within 24 hours.
What is Mobile Number Portability in Malaysia?
Mobile Number Portability (MNP) has been available in Malaysia since 2008, implemented under MCMC direction. MNP enables customers to switch mobile service providers while keeping their existing phone numbers. Before MNP, mobile numbers were fixed to specific operators. Number portability doesn't significantly impact SMS delivery for businesses – carriers handle routing automatically through Malaysia's MNP system. However, Malaysia's MNP system faces performance challenges with rejection rates exceeding 50%.
What are the PDPA Amendment 2024 implementation dates?
The Personal Data Protection Act amendments received royal assent on October 9, 2024, with implementation occurring in three phases: Phase 1 (January 1, 2025), Phase 2 (April 1, 2025), and Phase 3 (June 1, 2025). These amendments expand the definition of "sensitive personal data" to include biometric data, introduce mandatory data breach notification requirements, and require both data controllers and processors to appoint data protection officers. Ensure your SMS compliance programs are updated to meet these new requirements.
Recap and Additional Resources
Key Takeaways
Compliance Priorities (Updated for 2024 – 2025):
Technical Requirements:
Next Steps
Complete these steps to ensure compliance:
Additional Information