[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":457},["ShallowReactive",2],{"guide-sst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia":3},{"id":4,"title":5,"answer":6,"authorId":7,"body":8,"category":370,"ctaVariant":371,"description":372,"examples":373,"extension":374,"faqs":375,"heroImage":400,"intro":401,"meta":402,"navigation":404,"path":405,"publishedAt":406,"seo":407,"sources":408,"stats":430,"stem":455,"updatedAt":406,"__hash__":456},"blog\u002Fblog\u002Fsst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia.md","SST on Facebook & Instagram Ads (Malaysia)","Meta charges an 8% Malaysian service tax on Facebook and Instagram ad spend for any account whose 'Sold to' country is set to Malaysia. This is the Service Tax on Digital Services under the Service Tax Act 2018, raised from 6% to 8% on 1 March 2024, and Meta adds it on top of your ad charge, so RM1,000 of delivery is billed as RM1,080. A separate withholding-tax question on payments to a non-resident like Meta exists under the Income Tax Act 1967 and is genuinely unsettled for self-serve advertisers, so confirm your own position with LHDN or a licensed tax agent.","likit-sae-lee",{"type":9,"value":10,"toc":355},"minimark",[11,16,20,23,26,30,33,36,39,43,46,49,52,56,59,126,140,143,147,150,153,156,160,163,166,169,173,176,179,182,186,189,236,239,242,246,249,278,281,285,288,306,310,313,352],[12,13,15],"h2",{"id":14},"the-short-answer-8-service-tax-added-by-meta-on-top-of-your-spend","The short answer: 8% service tax, added by Meta on top of your spend",[17,18,19],"p",{},"If your Meta ad account has its \"Sold to\" country set to Malaysia, Meta charges an 8% Malaysian service tax on your Facebook and Instagram ad spend, and it has been charging a Malaysian service tax on those accounts since January 2020. The rate you see today is 8%, effective 1 March 2024, up from the 6% that applied from 1 January 2020. This is not a fee Meta invented; it is the Service Tax on Digital Services under Malaysia's Service Tax Act 2018, administered by the Royal Malaysian Customs Department (RMCD), and Meta collects it as a registered foreign supplier.",[17,21,22],{},"The single most important detail is where the tax sits. Meta adds the 8% on top of your ad charge, not inside it. So the tax is a real incremental cost, not a slice carved out of the budget you set. Budget RM1,000 of delivery and you are billed RM1,080. That is the whole settled story on the service-tax side, and most advertisers can stop there.",[17,24,25],{},"There is a second, murkier tax question that this guide will not pretend is settled: whether you also owe withholding tax on the payments you make to Meta, a non-resident, under the Income Tax Act 1967. Practitioners genuinely disagree on how it applies to ordinary self-serve ad spend, so the later sections describe the debate honestly and point you to the right authority rather than handing you a false certainty. This is educational content, not tax advice.",[12,27,29],{"id":28},"what-sst-on-digital-ads-actually-is-stods-under-the-service-tax-act-2018","What SST on digital ads actually is (SToDS under the Service Tax Act 2018)",[17,31,32],{},"Malaysia's service tax is a single-stage consumption tax charged on prescribed taxable services. In 2020 the net was widened to cover digital services supplied from outside the country, the regime commonly called the Service Tax on Digital Services (SToDS), or imported digital services. Under the Service Tax Act 2018, service tax is charged and levied on any digital service provided by a Foreign Registered Person (FRP) to any consumer in Malaysia. Digital advertising sits squarely inside that scope, which is why Facebook and Instagram ads are taxed at all.",[17,34,35],{},"The mechanism is what makes it painless for you as the buyer. Rather than making every Malaysian who buys a foreign digital service self-account for the tax, the law puts the collection duty on the foreign supplier. Meta registers with RMCD, charges the tax on its invoices to Malaysian \"Sold to\" accounts, and remits it. You do not separately self-account for service tax on spend that Meta has already taxed; the tax you see on the receipt is the tax being collected.",[17,37,38],{},"The rate history is short and worth committing to memory. Digital services entered the net at 6% on 1 January 2020. Then, on 1 March 2024, RMCD raised the general service tax rate on most prescribed taxable services, including digital services supplied by an FRP, from 6% to 8%. That is the rate in force now. A foreign supplier applies whichever rate is current at the time it charges you, and the RMCD transitional guideline published on 14 February 2024 set out exactly how the changeover was handled for billing that straddled the date.",[12,40,42],{"id":41},"how-meta-charges-it-the-sold-to-country-and-your-invoice","How Meta charges it: the \"Sold to\" country and your invoice",[17,44,45],{},"The trigger for Malaysian service tax on your Meta ads is a setting, not a guess. Meta looks at the \"Sold to\" country on your ad account. If that country is Malaysia, Meta applies the Malaysian service tax; if it is somewhere else, a different country's rules apply. So the first thing to check, especially if you set up your account while travelling or through an overseas entity, is that \"Sold to\" genuinely reflects where the advertiser sits. You will find it in the payment settings of Meta Ads Manager.",[17,47,48],{},"Two features of Meta's charging deserve emphasis because they trip people up. First, the tax applies whether you buy ads for business or for personal purposes. There is no personal-use carve-out on the service-tax side; a sole trader boosting one post is charged the same 8% on top as a company running a full campaign. Second, because the tax is added on top of the ad charge rather than taken from within it, it does not eat into your delivery. Your RM1,000 budget still buys RM1,000 of delivery; the tax is billed as an extra RM80.",[17,50,51],{},"One practical consequence of the \"on top\" mechanic is worth noting for anyone who runs on a billing threshold. Because the service tax is added after charges rather than counted as spend, it does not make your account hit its billing threshold sooner. But the amount actually billed to your card can exceed the threshold once the tax is stacked on, so the figure that leaves your account is the tax-inclusive one. If you reconcile card statements against ad spend, expect the statement to run 8% higher than the delivery figure in Ads Manager.",[12,53,55],{"id":54},"the-true-cost-math-in-ringgit","The true-cost math in ringgit",[17,57,58],{},"The arithmetic is simple, which is exactly why it is easy to under-budget. The 8% sits on top of spend, so the amount you are billed is your ad charge multiplied by 1.08.",[60,61,62,78],"table",{},[63,64,65],"thead",{},[66,67,68,72,75],"tr",{},[69,70,71],"th",{},"Ad delivery you set",[69,73,74],{},"Service tax at 8%",[69,76,77],{},"Total billed to you",[79,80,81,93,104,115],"tbody",{},[66,82,83,87,90],{},[84,85,86],"td",{},"RM500",[84,88,89],{},"RM40",[84,91,92],{},"RM540",[66,94,95,98,101],{},[84,96,97],{},"RM1,000",[84,99,100],{},"RM80",[84,102,103],{},"RM1,080",[66,105,106,109,112],{},[84,107,108],{},"RM5,000",[84,110,111],{},"RM400",[84,113,114],{},"RM5,400",[66,116,117,120,123],{},[84,118,119],{},"RM10,000",[84,121,122],{},"RM800",[84,124,125],{},"RM10,800",[17,127,128,129,134,135,139],{},"The number that matters for planning is that headline RM1,000 becomes RM1,080. If you are working out what campaigns really cost, this tax stacks on top of everything else the auction charges you. Our guide to ",[130,131,133],"a",{"href":132},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-cost-malaysia","what Facebook ads cost in Malaysia"," walks through the CPM, CPC and cost-per-result side of the bill; the service tax is the flat 8% you add to whatever total that produces. For a small business ",[130,136,138],{"href":137},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ad-budget-how-much","sizing a monthly budget",", the cleanest habit is to treat your funded ad spend as the pre-tax figure and add 8% when you forecast the cash that will actually leave your account, so the tax never arrives as a surprise on the card.",[17,141,142],{},"Compared with a US-dollar advertiser paying no Malaysian service tax, that 8% is a structural difference in your local cost base, one more reason imported cost benchmarks do not translate cleanly. It is small per campaign and steady, but over a year of consistent spend it is a line worth forecasting rather than absorbing by accident.",[12,144,146],{"id":145},"your-sst-registration-number-optional-but-tidy-if-you-have-one","Your SST registration number: optional, but tidy if you have one",[17,148,149],{},"Meta lets you enter your service-tax registration number in payment settings. This is optional, and the choice does not change whether you are taxed. Enter it or leave it blank, and a Malaysian \"Sold to\" account is charged the 8% either way. The number is about documentation, not liability.",[17,151,152],{},"What entering it does is twofold, per Meta's guidance. The number appears on your ad receipts, which gives you a cleaner, self-identifying record for your accounts. And Meta notes that if you are registered for service tax and provide the number, it may help you recover service tax paid, subject to the conditions the Malaysian authority sets. That last clause is doing real work: it is a \"may,\" conditioned on Malaysian rules, not a promise of a refund. Malaysia's service tax is not a broad input-credit system in the way the old GST was, so do not assume that being charged the tax automatically means you can reclaim it.",[17,154,155],{},"The sensible position is practical. If your business holds an SST registration, add the number so your receipts are complete and your accountant has clean documents to work from. Then ask a licensed agent or RMCD directly whether, given your specific business, any recovery of the service tax on ad spend is actually available to you. If you are not SST-registered, there is nothing to enter, and you simply pay the tax-inclusive amount.",[12,157,159],{"id":158},"who-registers-and-why-meta-collects-instead-of-you","Who registers, and why Meta collects instead of you",[17,161,162],{},"The reason you, the advertiser, are not filing service-tax returns for your Meta spend is that the obligation sits on the supplier once it crosses a size threshold. Under section 56B of the Service Tax Act 2018, a foreign provider whose value of digital services to Malaysian consumers over a 12-month period exceeds RM500,000 must register as a Foreign Registered Person. Global platforms clear that RM500,000 line comfortably, so they register, charge the tax on their invoices, and remit it to RMCD through the MySToDS system.",[17,164,165],{},"Once registered, an FRP accounts for the tax it has collected by filing a DST-02 return through MySToDS for each quarterly taxable period, paying by the last day of the month following the quarter. That back-office rhythm is the supplier's to manage, not yours. Meta's own help documentation confirms it charges the Malaysian service tax on qualifying accounts, which is consistent with it being registered and collecting under this regime.",[17,167,168],{},"One honest caveat: this guide has not cross-checked Meta against a published RMCD register of Foreign Registered Persons, so treat \"Meta is a registered FRP\" as the reasonable inference from its charging behaviour and help pages rather than something verified against the registry here. It does not change your position as the buyer, because the tax on your receipt is being collected either way. If you specifically need to confirm a supplier's FRP status for your own records, RMCD is the authority to ask.",[12,170,172],{"id":171},"the-other-tax-nobody-agrees-on-withholding-tax-on-payments-to-meta","The other tax nobody agrees on: withholding tax on payments to Meta",[17,174,175],{},"Here is where honest guidance parts company with the confident blog posts. Separate from the service tax Meta bills you, there is a question of whether you owe withholding tax (WHT) on the payments you make to Meta, because Meta is a non-resident and Malaysian income tax can require a payer to withhold on certain payments to non-residents under the Income Tax Act 1967. This is a genuinely contested area, and the responsible thing is to describe the debate, not to resolve it for you.",[17,177,178],{},"The two candidate treatments both carry the same headline rate but different legal characters. Under Section 109, withholding tax on a royalty paid to a non-resident is 10% of the gross amount and is a final tax. Under Section 109B, withholding tax on \"special classes of income\" (which includes certain service fees) paid to a non-resident is also 10% of the gross amount and is a final tax. So the rate question and the classification question are separate: even if you land on 10%, whether the payment is a royalty or a service fee changes which section applies and how the rest of the analysis runs.",[17,180,181],{},"Crucially, whether an ordinary Malaysian advertiser is expected, in practice, to withhold on routine self-serve Meta ad spend at all is actively debated among tax practitioners. This guide will not tell you that you must, or must not. It will tell you the rule that governs the classification, and then tell you to confirm your own facts with LHDN or a licensed agent, which is the only defensible way to handle a contested WHT position.",[12,183,185],{"id":184},"royalty-or-service-what-practice-note-12018-actually-says","Royalty or service? What Practice Note 1\u002F2018 actually says",[17,187,188],{},"The document that frames the classification is LHDN's Practice Note No. 1\u002F2018, issued on 16 March 2018, on the tax treatment of digital advertising provided by a non-resident. It draws the line by how you use the platform.",[60,190,191,207],{},[63,192,193],{},[66,194,195,198,201,204],{},[69,196,197],{},"Your situation",[69,199,200],{},"How PN 1\u002F2018 characterises it",[69,202,203],{},"Section",[69,205,206],{},"Statutory rate",[79,208,209,223],{},[66,210,211,214,217,220],{},[84,212,213],{},"You use a platform or app to build and run your own advertising campaign (typical self-serve Facebook\u002FInstagram Ads)",[84,215,216],{},"Royalty",[84,218,219],{},"Section 109",[84,221,222],{},"10%, final tax",[66,224,225,228,231,234],{},[84,226,227],{},"You merely receive an advertising service and rely wholly on the provider to deliver it (a pure managed service)",[84,229,230],{},"Service income (special classes of income)",[84,232,233],{},"Section 109B",[84,235,222],{},[17,237,238],{},"Read the top row carefully, because it is the one that describes most readers. When you log into Ads Manager and build your own campaign, PN 1\u002F2018 points toward royalty treatment under Section 109, since you are using the provider's application to create your own advertising rather than buying a finished service. The bottom row fits an advertiser who hands the whole job over and relies entirely on the provider.",[17,240,241],{},"But PN 1\u002F2018 makes the treatment explicitly fact-dependent, and that is the catch. Real arrangements are rarely as clean as two table rows. The classification turns on your specific facts, and reasonable advisers can read the same setup differently, which is a large part of why the WHT position on self-serve Meta spend is unsettled rather than routine. The Practice Note gives you the framework; it does not give you a mechanical answer you can apply without judgement.",[12,243,245],{"id":244},"what-is-genuinely-unsettled-and-how-to-protect-yourself","What is genuinely unsettled, and how to protect yourself",[17,247,248],{},"It is worth being explicit about the open questions, because pretending they are closed is how advertisers get exposed. Several points that circulate as \"facts\" online are not settled from a primary source, and you should treat each as a question for your own agent:",[250,251,252,260,266,272],"ul",{},[253,254,255,259],"li",{},[256,257,258],"strong",{},"Whether you must actually withhold on self-serve Meta spend."," PN 1\u002F2018 makes classification fact-dependent, and whether ordinary advertisers are expected to withhold and remit on routine self-serve payments is debated. Do not adopt a blanket \"yes\" or \"no\" from a blog.",[253,261,262,265],{},[256,263,264],{},"Any treaty reduction on the rate."," Practitioner sources differ on whether the Malaysia-Ireland Double Taxation Agreement reduces the royalty withholding rate on payments to Meta's Irish entity below the 10% statutory figure; some cite a lower rate, others say no reduction applies. This guide cannot confirm a specific treaty rate from a primary source, so it does not assert one. If a treaty position matters to you, have your agent read the actual treaty against your facts.",[253,267,268,271],{},[256,269,270],{},"Whether an exemption applies to service-fee treatment."," Whether the exemption for services performed wholly outside Malaysia reaches Meta ad fees taxed under Section 109B is not confirmed here from a primary source, so treat it as open.",[253,273,274,277],{},[256,275,276],{},"The penalty for failing to withhold."," The exact penalty or tax uplift imposed on a payer that should have withheld and did not is not confirmed here from a primary source. Because the downside of getting a required withholding wrong can be material, this is precisely the kind of point to confirm with LHDN rather than infer.",[17,279,280],{},"The protective move is the same for all four: keep clean, itemised records of every Meta payment, and get a written position from a licensed tax agent or LHDN that is based on your actual arrangements. The service-tax side is settled and handled by Meta; the withholding-tax side is where a real advertiser can get it wrong, so that is where professional advice earns its fee.",[12,282,284],{"id":283},"keeping-ad-compliance-and-ad-tax-in-the-same-file","Keeping ad compliance and ad tax in the same file",[17,286,287],{},"Tax is one of several places where a Malaysian advertiser's paperwork and their ad account intersect, and it helps to see it as part of a whole rather than a stray line on an invoice. The same account that carries your \"Sold to\" country and your service-tax number is the one that has to satisfy Meta's advertising policies, and a business that keeps those things organised runs more smoothly than one that firefights each in isolation.",[17,289,290,291,295,296,300,301,305],{},"If you are building out your ad operation, the tax record sits alongside your creative and compliance record. Regulated categories have their own approval layers before a sen of tax is ever charged: health and medicine advertisers deal with ",[130,292,294],{"href":293},"\u002Fblog\u002Fkkliu-meta-ad-approval-malaysia","KKLIU approval for Meta ads",", and food, cosmetics and lifestyle brands work within ",[130,297,299],{"href":298},"\u002Fblog\u002Fhalal-ad-creative-malaysia","halal claims and creative rules",". None of that changes the 8% service tax, but it belongs in the same folder, because an advertiser who has their approvals, their receipts and their registration number in order is the one who can hand a clean file to an accountant at year end. For a broader operational view, our guide for ",[130,302,304],{"href":303},"\u002Fblog\u002Ffacebook-ads-for-small-business-malaysia","small businesses advertising in Malaysia"," sets the account-level habits that make tax season painless. Keeping research, creative generation and launch in one place, as a platform like AdPlay.ai does, is convenient, but the tax discipline here is about records, and records are the advertiser's own responsibility whatever tools sit around them.",[12,307,309],{"id":308},"a-practical-checklist-before-your-next-invoice","A practical checklist before your next invoice",[17,311,312],{},"You do not need to become a tax specialist to handle SST on your Meta ads correctly. You need to get the settled part right, and get advice on the contested part. Work through this once and revisit it if your setup changes.",[314,315,316,322,328,334,340,346],"ol",{},[253,317,318,321],{},[256,319,320],{},"Confirm your \"Sold to\" country."," In Meta Ads Manager payment settings, make sure it reflects where the advertiser actually sits. This setting is what triggers the Malaysian 8% service tax.",[253,323,324,327],{},[256,325,326],{},"Budget for the 8% on top."," Treat your funded spend as the pre-tax figure and forecast cash as spend times 1.08, so RM1,000 of delivery is planned as RM1,080 leaving your account. The tax should never surprise you on the card statement.",[253,329,330,333],{},[256,331,332],{},"Add your SST registration number if you have one."," It is optional and does not change what you are charged, but it prints on your receipts and may support any recovery the Malaysian rules allow. If you are not registered, skip it.",[253,335,336,339],{},[256,337,338],{},"Download and keep every itemised receipt."," The service tax shows as its own line. These are your records for your accounts and for anything your agent files.",[253,341,342,345],{},[256,343,344],{},"Get a written WHT position from a licensed agent or LHDN."," The withholding-tax treatment of payments to Meta under the Income Tax Act 1967 is genuinely contested for self-serve advertisers, and PN 1\u002F2018 makes it fact-dependent. Do not run on a blog's blanket answer; confirm yours.",[253,347,348,351],{},[256,349,350],{},"Re-check when the rules move."," The rate went from 6% to 8% on 1 March 2024, and rates and thresholds can change again. If your bill shifts, check whether a rate change or a genuine cost change caused it.",[17,353,354],{},"The service tax is the easy, settled part: 8%, added by Meta, on top of your spend, since 1 March 2024. The withholding tax is the part that deserves professional care. Handle the first as arithmetic and the second as a question for your agent, and your Meta ad spend stays clean on both fronts.",{"title":356,"searchDepth":357,"depth":357,"links":358},"",2,[359,360,361,362,363,364,365,366,367,368,369],{"id":14,"depth":357,"text":15},{"id":28,"depth":357,"text":29},{"id":41,"depth":357,"text":42},{"id":54,"depth":357,"text":55},{"id":145,"depth":357,"text":146},{"id":158,"depth":357,"text":159},{"id":171,"depth":357,"text":172},{"id":184,"depth":357,"text":185},{"id":244,"depth":357,"text":245},{"id":283,"depth":357,"text":284},{"id":308,"depth":357,"text":309},null,"local","How the 8% service tax on Meta ads works in Malaysia: what SST on digital services is, how Meta bills it on top of your spend, the true RM cost, your registration number, and the separate withholding-tax question.",[],"md",[376,379,382,385,388,391,394,397],{"question":377,"answer":378},"Is SST charged on my Facebook and Instagram ad spend in Malaysia?","Yes, if your ad account's 'Sold to' country is set to Malaysia. Meta applies a Malaysian service tax at the local rate on the ads it bills you, and it has done so since January 2020. This is not a charge Meta invented; it is the Service Tax on Digital Services under the Service Tax Act 2018, which covers digital services supplied by a foreign provider to a consumer in Malaysia. The tax applies whether you run ads for a registered business or boost a post for personal reasons. Meta adds it on top of your ad charge rather than taking it out of your budget, so it is a real extra cost. Check your 'Sold to' setting in payment settings to confirm which country's tax applies.",{"question":380,"answer":381},"How much is the service tax on Meta ads right now?","The rate is 8% of your ad charge, effective 1 March 2024. Before that date it was 6%, the rate that had applied since digital services entered the net on 1 January 2020. The increase came from the Royal Malaysian Customs Department raising the general service tax rate on most prescribed taxable services, including digital services supplied by a foreign registered person, from 6% to 8%. Meta applies whichever rate is current at the time you are charged. In plain ringgit, RM1,000 of ad delivery is billed as RM1,080, because the 8% sits on top of the spend, not inside it. If you budgeted only for the RM1,000, the tax is the part that catches you out.",{"question":383,"answer":384},"Do I need to give Meta my SST registration number?","No, providing your service-tax registration number to Meta is optional. Whether you enter it or leave the field blank does not change whether the 8% is charged; Meta applies the tax either way for a Malaysian 'Sold to' account. What the number does is appear on your ad receipts once entered, which gives you a cleaner record and, per Meta's guidance, may help support any recovery of service tax that Malaysian rules allow, subject to the conditions the authorities set. If your business is registered for SST, adding the number is low effort and keeps your documentation tidy for your accountant. If you are not registered, you have nothing to enter, and you are still charged the tax.",{"question":386,"answer":387},"Can I claim back the 8% service tax Meta charges me?","This depends on the Malaysian rules and your own registration status, so treat it as a question for your tax agent rather than an automatic yes. Meta's own guidance says that if you are registered for service tax and provide your registration number, the number appears on your receipts and may help you recover service tax paid, subject to the conditions set by the Malaysian authority. Service tax in Malaysia is not a broad input-credit system in the way GST was, so recovery is not guaranteed simply because you were charged. Keep every Meta receipt with the service-tax line itemised, note your registration number on the account, and ask a licensed agent or the Royal Malaysian Customs Department how the rules apply to your specific business before assuming you can claim it.",{"question":389,"answer":390},"Do I have to pay withholding tax on my Facebook ad payments to Meta?","This is the genuinely unsettled part, and honest guidance flags it rather than giving you a single answer. Meta is a non-resident, and LHDN Practice Note 1\u002F2018 treats payments for digital advertising to a non-resident as royalty under Section 109 where you use a platform or app to build your own campaign, which describes typical self-serve Facebook and Instagram Ads, and as service income under Section 109B where you buy a pure managed service. Both carry a 10% statutory rate. But whether, in practice, ordinary Malaysian advertisers are expected to withhold on self-serve spend, and how the royalty-versus-service line falls for your facts, is actively debated among practitioners. Do not act on a blanket rule from a blog. Confirm your position with LHDN or a licensed tax agent.",{"question":392,"answer":393},"Does the service tax apply if I boost a post for personal reasons, not business?","Yes. Meta applies the service tax whenever it charges a Malaysian 'Sold to' account, regardless of whether the ads are bought for business or personal purposes. The tax attaches to the digital service being supplied to a consumer in Malaysia, not to your business status, so an individual boosting a personal post is charged the same 8% on top as a registered company running a campaign. The difference shows up later, in your own records: a business may have a registration number to add and a reason to keep the receipts for its accounts, while a personal booster simply pays the tax-inclusive amount. Either way the amount billed is your ad charge plus 8%, and there is no personal-use exemption on the service-tax side.",{"question":395,"answer":396},"Why did my Meta ad bill go up in early 2024 even though my budget stayed the same?","The most likely reason is the service-tax rate change. On 1 March 2024 the Malaysian service tax on digital services supplied by a foreign provider rose from 6% to 8%, following the Royal Malaysian Customs Department's increase to the general rate. Because Meta adds this tax on top of your ad charge, the same RM1,000 of delivery that carried RM60 of tax before the change carried RM80 after it, so your total billed amount rose by RM20 on that spend without your budget moving at all. If your bill jumped by more than that, look for other causes too, such as auction pressure raising your cost per result, but the tax step-up is the one that hit every Malaysian advertiser on the same date.",{"question":398,"answer":399},"Where does the service tax show up on my Meta invoices, and can I get a proper receipt for LHDN?","The service tax appears as its own line on your Meta ad receipts, added on top of the ad charge rather than folded into it, so you can see exactly how much tax you paid on each billing. If you have entered your service-tax registration number in payment settings, that number also prints on the receipts, which makes them cleaner supporting documents for your accounts. You can download billing receipts from the billing section of Meta Ads Manager. For any filing with LHDN or the Royal Malaysian Customs Department, keep these itemised receipts as your record of tax paid, and give them to your agent so the service-tax and any income-tax treatment are handled from the actual figures rather than estimates.","\u002Fimages\u002Fblog\u002Fsst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia-hero.webp","You opened your Meta ad invoice, saw a service-tax line you never added, and want to know whether it is correct, whether you can recover it, and whether a second tax bill is hiding behind your ad spend. Part of this is fully settled and printed in black and white by the Malaysian authorities, and part of it is genuinely contested among tax practitioners. This guide keeps the two apart so you know exactly what you owe, what Meta already handles for you, and where you need to ask your own agent.",{"reviewedAt":403},"2026-07-07",true,"\u002Fblog\u002Fsst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia","2026-07-13",{"title":5,"description":372},[409,413,417,420,423,427],{"label":410,"url":411,"year":412},"RMCD - Guidelines: Transitional Rules for the Change in Service Tax Rate to 8% on Digital Service Provided by Foreign Registered Person","https:\u002F\u002Fmystods.customs.gov.my\u002Fstorage\u002Fapp\u002Fmedia\u002Fpdf\u002Fguide\u002Fguide-on-transitional-rules-for-the-change-in-st-rate-to-8-on-digital-service-provided-by-frp.pdf","2024",{"label":414,"url":415,"year":416},"RMCD MySToDS - About MySToDS (SToDS definition, RM500,000 threshold, section 56B)","https:\u002F\u002Fmystods.customs.gov.my\u002Fabout-mystods","2026",{"label":418,"url":419,"year":416},"Meta Business Help Center - About Malaysia service tax","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Fbusiness\u002Fhelp\u002F518599602329608?locale=en_US",{"label":421,"url":422,"year":416},"LHDN - Withholding Tax (royalty Section 109 and special classes Section 109B rates)","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.hasil.gov.my\u002Fen\u002Flegislation\u002Fwithholding-tax\u002F",{"label":424,"url":425,"year":426},"LHDN - Practice Note No. 1\u002F2018: Tax Treatment on Digital Advertising Provided by a Non-Resident","https:\u002F\u002Fphl.hasil.gov.my\u002Fpdf\u002Fpdfam\u002FPN_NO_1_2018.pdf","2018",{"label":428,"url":429,"year":416},"3E Accounting Malaysia - Tax Treatment on Digital Advertising Provided by a Non-Resident","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.3ecpa.com.my\u002Fresources\u002Fmalaysia-taxation\u002Ftax-treatment-on-digital-advertising-provided-by-a-non-resident\u002F",[431,435,438,442,446,450,452],{"label":432,"value":433,"source":434},"Service tax on digital services by a foreign provider, from 1 March 2024","8%","RMCD, 2024",{"label":436,"value":437,"source":434},"Previous digital-services rate, 1 Jan 2020 to 29 Feb 2024","6%",{"label":439,"value":440,"source":441},"Service tax on RM1,000 of Meta ad delivery, billed on top","RM80 (RM1,080 total)","Meta Business Help Center, 2026",{"label":443,"value":444,"source":445},"Foreign digital-service provider registration threshold (section 56B)","RM500,000","RMCD MySToDS, 2026",{"label":447,"value":448,"source":449},"Withholding tax on royalty to a non-resident (Section 109)","10%","LHDN, 2026",{"label":451,"value":448,"source":449},"Withholding tax on special classes of income (Section 109B)",{"label":453,"value":454,"source":434},"Foreign-provider return filing frequency via MySToDS","Quarterly (DST-02)","blog\u002Fsst-on-facebook-ads-malaysia","dKZdRVXFX5edqmxrRZOB2tFCHEfnUfhAwoeHL0teBFw",1783904569459]