Norway vs Malaysia Tax Comparison
Side-by-side comparison of tax rates and systems
Tax Rate Comparison
Rate Comparison
Top Income Tax
47.4%
30%Lower
Corporate Tax
22%Lower
24%
Capital Gains
37.8%
10%Lower
VAT / Sales Tax
25%
8%Lower
| Category | ||
|---|---|---|
| Tax System | Progressive (Dual income) | Progressive |
| Top Income Tax | 47.4% | 30% |
| Corporate Tax | 22% | 24% |
| Capital Gains | 37.8% | 10% |
| VAT / Sales Tax | 25% | 8% |
| Crypto Tax | Yes | No |
| Wealth Tax | Yes | No |
| Tax Treaties | 85 | 75 |
| Currency | NOK | MYR |
The bottom line: Norway vs Malaysia
Malaysia has the lower headline rate on 3 of the four main taxes (income, corporate, capital gains and VAT), making it the lighter-taxed of the two on paper. Norway runs a progressive (dual income) tax system, while Malaysia uses a progressive one. On crypto, Malaysia is the more favourable — it does not tax cryptocurrency gains. Norway has the wider tax-treaty network (85 agreements), which can reduce withholding tax on cross-border income.
- Income tax: Malaysia is lower (47.4% vs 30%)
- Corporate tax: Norway is lower (22% vs 24%)
- Capital gains tax: Malaysia is lower (37.8% vs 10%)
- VAT / sales tax: Malaysia is lower (25% vs 8%)