Planning for retirement is one of the most important financial decisions in life. The biggest challenge most people face is ...
A 35-year-old manager aiming for RM1.5 million by age 55 has Malaysians reflecting on pay, opportunity, and long-term ...
If a member turns 58 and doesn’t withdraw the EPF balance, interest is paid for up to three years from eligibility. After this period, the EPF account is marked inoperative ...
If both EPF and NPS contributions are structured under CTC, your take-home pay may be reduced, which can be partly offset by tax savings ...
Recent data shows that nearly 74% of active EPF contributors have less than RM100,000 in their accounts upon retirement — a ...
Many Malaysians are far less prepared for retirement than they realise, with optimism bias masking a growing savings gap.
The Employees Provident Fund (EPF) is expected to announce its dividends soon, and experts believe it could maintain the dividend rate for conventional savings at 6.3% in 2025.
The labour ministry is working on a project where a certain proportion of the EPF will be frozen, and a large chunk will be ...
Building a strong retirement corpus is a dream for most salaried employees. Many people believe that becoming a crorepati ...
The Employees Provident Fund (EPF) is expected to deliver a dividend rate of between 6.3% and 6.5% for 2025, says Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Dr Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid.
EPFO members can withdraw money up to 50 per cent from the EPF account for their own marriage, the marriage of their daughter, son, sister or brother.
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