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7 Best Bitcoin Exchanges in Malaysia for 2026

Compare trusted Bitcoin exchanges available in Malaysia by fees, payment methods, security, and ease of use.

Last updated: May 2026

Top exchange
Luno
Bitcoin owners Estimated Bitcoin/crypto users and share of population.
1M ยท 2.78%
BTC price
MYR 250,210
Platforms
7

Quick compare

Compare Bitcoin Exchanges in Malaysia

Rank Exchange Best for Fees Funding
#1
Luno
Best Overall 0.10% maker / 0.25% taker Bank transfer, Debit/credit card
#2
Binance
Best for Low Fees 0.10% maker / 0.10% taker Bank transfer, Credit/debit card
#3
OKX
Best for Low Fees 0.08% maker / 0.10% taker Bank transfer, Credit/debit card
#4
Kraken
Best for Advanced Traders 0.23% maker / 0.40% taker ACH, SEPA
#2

Binance

Best for Low Fees

Within 8 months of launching in July 2017, Binance quickly skyrocketed into the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume.

Trading fees 0.10% maker / 0.10% taker
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, P2P
Users 280M+
Trust World's largest exchange
Good for
Low fees High liquidity Global users
#3

OKX

Best for Low Fees

OKX is a leading cryptocurrency exchange known for its vast selection of cryptocurrencies.

Trading fees 0.08% maker / 0.10% taker
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, P2P
Users 120M+
Trust 0.08% maker / 0.10% taker spot
Good for
Low fees Global users Trusted platform
#4

Kraken

Best for Advanced Traders

With millions of active users, an international market, and strategic investors on board, Kraken, joins Coinbase and Binance to become the big.

Trading fees 0.23% maker / 0.40% taker
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, Crypto deposit
Users 15M+
Trust $2T+ platform volume
Good for
Advanced Traders High liquidity 190+ countries
#5

Crypto.com

Best for Beginners

Crypto.com is a Singapore-based cryptocurrency exchange offering a wide range of financial services, including spot trading, margin trading.

Trading fees Fees shown before trade
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, Crypto deposit
Users 150M+
Trust Exchange and app pricing differ
Good for
Beginners Global users Exchange and app pricing
#6

Changelly

Best for Beginners

Changelly allows one to exchange one cryptocurrency for another and also buy using a bank card.

Trading fees 0.25% service fee + network fees
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, Apple Pay
Users 2M+
Trust Instant exchange model
Good for
Beginners Fast swaps Global users
#7

HTX

Best for Advanced Traders

Launched in 2013, Huobi (now rebranded to HTX) is one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the world by volume.

Trading fees Variable by payment method
Payment methods Bank transfer, Card, Third-party
Users 9M+
Trust Asian-market liquidity venue
Good for
Advanced Traders High liquidity P2P options

Exchange availability, fees, and verification requirements can change. Confirm all terms directly with the platform before opening an account or depositing funds.

Country guide

Bitcoin in Malaysia: Practical Buying Guide for Exchanges, Payments, and Local Friction

In Malaysia, Luno and local bank transfer support give buyers a domestic benchmark, while global exchanges need to be checked for MYR funding and withdrawals. The first pass is simple: compare Luno, Binance, OKX, and Kraken, then look past the logo and check how the account is funded, what the final Bitcoin quote looks like, and whether withdrawals are straightforward.

Luno also deserve a closer look because local onboarding and documentation can matter more than a few basis points of trading cost. The payment rails to check first are Bank transfer, Debit/credit card, and Local bank transfer, but the useful comparison is the amount of Bitcoin received after spread, funding cost, and withdrawal fees. The goal is to choose the exchange that fits how people in Malaysia actually fund, verify, hold, and move Bitcoin.

How People Buy Bitcoin in Malaysia

In Malaysia, Luno and local bank transfer support give buyers a domestic benchmark, while global exchanges need to be checked for MYR funding and withdrawals. Luno, Binance, OKX, and Kraken are the first platforms to compare, but the ranking should not be read as a command to pick the biggest brand.

Local or regional names such as Luno can be better for domestic payment rails, support, or documentation. For the current list, Bank transfer, Debit/credit card, and Local bank transfer are the payment routes to inspect first.

If you intend to hold Bitcoin rather than trade it, confirm self-custody withdrawals before buying. A cheap-looking exchange is a poor choice if moving coins out is slow, expensive, or unclear.

Payment Methods in Malaysia

The current exchange data for Malaysia shows Bank transfer, Debit/credit card, Local bank transfer, and Crypto deposit as available routes across the ranked platforms. Treat payment method as a pricing decision, not only a convenience choice.

Bank transfers are usually better for larger planned buys, cards are faster but often more expensive, and P2P or cash routes need stronger counterparty checks. Compare the final Bitcoin received after spread, deposit cost, conversion, withdrawal fee, and network fee.

Regulation and Compliance in Malaysia

Before choosing an exchange in Malaysia, separate two questions: whether the platform can currently onboard local residents, and what local tax, banking, or reporting rules apply after you trade. Use official sources where available, keep account and transaction records, and verify country support directly with the exchange before depositing funds.

Local Exchanges and Global Platforms

Buyers in Malaysia should compare local or regional options such as Luno against larger global platforms. Local providers can be better for domestic transfers, language, and paperwork; global platforms may win on liquidity, trading tools, and narrower spot spreads. The better choice depends on whether you are buying once, trading actively, or planning to withdraw to self-custody.

Bitcoin ATMs and Cash Purchases in Malaysia

A Bitcoin ATM in Malaysia should be treated as a convenience route, not the default way to get the best price. It can make sense for a small cash purchase, but the spread can be much worse than an online exchange and the machine may still require identity checks. Use the ATM map below to see nearby locations, then compare the quoted Bitcoin price with an exchange quote, check the operator, and make sure the receiving wallet address is yours before inserting cash.

Tax and Recordkeeping

Keep records from the first purchase in Malaysia: bank or card deposits, exchange receipts, trade confirmations, wallet addresses, transaction IDs, withdrawal records, and fees. The documentation problem usually appears later, when you sell, move coins between wallets, or need to explain the source of funds to a bank or tax professional. Good records are boring until they become useful.

Local User Concerns in Malaysia

What local users tend to care about is practical rather than theoretical: Luno, Binance, and OKX are worth checking first, but only after confirming local onboarding; Bank transfer, Debit/credit card, and Local bank transfer can look similar until the final quote shows spreads, funding costs, and settlement speed; Luno offers a useful local comparison point; and Bitcoin withdrawals should be checked before buying, not after. Public forum discussions can surface these pain points, but exchange support pages and official sources should be used for final decisions.

How to Choose a Bitcoin Exchange in Malaysia

Start with the route, then choose the exchange. For Malaysia, the right platform is the one that gives you a clean funding method, a fair final Bitcoin quote, clear verification, usable support, and a simple withdrawal path.

If two exchanges look similar, choose the one that is clearer about fees, custody, and records. A small test buy and test withdrawal can reveal more than a polished homepage.

How We Ranked These Exchanges

For Malaysia, Newhedge weighs practical local fit alongside exchange size. We compare country availability, funding routes, final price transparency, trading fees, liquidity, reputation, verification, support, custody terms, and whether Bitcoin withdrawals are clear enough for users who want self-custody.

Sources and References

FAQ

Common Questions

What is the best Bitcoin exchange in Malaysia?

Luno is the first exchange to compare in Malaysia. Treat that ranking as a shortlist signal, not a command to pick the biggest logo. Compare the final quote, funding route, ID requirements, support, and Bitcoin withdrawal rules before choosing.

Can I buy Bitcoin in Malaysia with Bank transfer?

Yes, Bank transfer appears on the current Malaysia exchange shortlist. Before using it, compare the final BTC amount received, any funding or card fees, and whether Bitcoin withdrawals are available after the purchase.

Is Bitcoin legal in Malaysia?

Before choosing an exchange in Malaysia, separate two questions: whether the platform can currently onboard local residents, and what local tax, banking, or reporting rules apply after you trade. Use official sources where available, keep account and transaction records, and verify country support directly with the exchange before depositing funds. For a buyer, the practical point is to confirm exchange availability, banking rules, ID checks, and tax or reporting obligations before moving meaningful money.

Should I use a Bitcoin ATM in Malaysia?

Only if convenience matters more than price. ATMs can be useful for small cash purchases, but they often quote worse prices than online exchanges and may still require identity checks. Compare the machine quote with an exchange quote first.

What records should I keep after buying Bitcoin?

Keep deposit receipts, order confirmations, wallet addresses, transaction IDs, withdrawal records, and fee details. These records are useful for tax reporting, bank questions, and proving the source of funds later.

How many Bitcoin owners are in Malaysia?

Our estimate puts Bitcoin and crypto ownership in Malaysia at roughly 1M people, equal to about 2.78% of the population. While adoption looks different in every market, that points to a real base of people already buying, holding, or experimenting with Bitcoin.

What is the price of Bitcoin in Malaysia?

The current Bitcoin price is MYR 250,210. The BTC to MYR price moves throughout the day as Bitcoin trades across global markets. If you are buying Bitcoin in Malaysia, compare the final quote after exchange fees, spreads, and payment-method costs.