The good news first
Kuala Lumpur is one of the more affordable major cities you could choose to study in. Compared with London, Sydney, Toronto or most of Europe, your money goes much further here — particularly on the two things students spend on daily: food and transport. That affordability, alongside English-taught degrees, is a big reason international students choose Malaysia.
This guide breaks your cost of living into clear categories so you can build a budget you trust. For the bigger financial picture — tuition, visa and the rest — pair it with how much it costs to study in Malaysia.
A note on numbers: prices change, and exchange rates from your home currency move, so we deliberately don't quote figures here that could quickly go stale or mislead. Instead we build a realistic, current budget with you for your exact situation — free.
Where your money goes: the categories
Accommodation — your biggest lever
Rent is almost always a student's largest monthly cost in KL, and it varies enormously based on how you live:
- On-campus halls / hostels — convenient, social, and often the simplest option for a first year.
- Shared apartments — splitting a condo with other students is the most popular way to keep rent down while getting more space and facilities (many KL condos have a pool and gym).
- Private studios — the most independence, at the highest cost.
Because accommodation is the biggest variable, it's where smart choices save the most. We cover your options in detail in accommodation for international students in Malaysia.
Food — genuinely cheap and genuinely good
One of the joys of living in Malaysia: eating well costs very little. Local restaurants, food courts and campus cafeterias serve excellent meals at low prices, and Malaysia's food culture — Malay, Chinese, Indian and more — is part of the experience. Cooking at home is even cheaper. Food is rarely what blows a student budget here.
Transport — easy and inexpensive
Kuala Lumpur has a good rail network (LRT, MRT and monorail), plus buses and affordable ride-hailing. Many students live without a car and get around cheaply. If you choose accommodation near your campus or a train line, transport stays a small line in your budget.
Mobile, internet and utilities
A local SIM with generous data is inexpensive, and if you're renting, utilities (electricity, water, internet) are modest — and usually shared if you live with others. Budget a little here, but it won't dominate.
Everyday life and fun
Set aside something for the things that make student life worth living: a social budget, the occasional trip (Malaysia and the region are wonderful and cheap to explore), clothes, toiletries, and a buffer for the unexpected. KL offers a lot to do without spending much.
One-off costs when you arrive
Beyond your monthly budget, plan for some setup costs in your first weeks:
- An accommodation deposit.
- Bedding, kitchen basics and household bits.
- A local SIM and any tech you need.
- A little buffer while you find your feet.
How to keep your budget healthy
- Share accommodation. The single biggest saving available to you.
- Eat local. Campus and neighbourhood food is cheap and excellent.
- Use the trains. Skip daily taxis; live near a line.
- Pick your area wisely. Some suburbs offer far better value than central KL.
- Track the first month. Your real spending becomes clear fast — adjust from there.
Build your real budget with us — free
The honest answer to "how much will it cost me?" depends on choices only you can make: where you live, how you live, and your home currency's exchange rate. That's why a generic online figure is always a rough guess.
In a free YSTC consultation we'll build a realistic monthly budget for your exact situation — the city or suburb, your accommodation type, and your lifestyle — alongside your confirmed tuition and visa costs. You'll know what to expect before you arrive, with no surprises and no pressure. Many students also offset costs with part-time work; see can international students work part-time in Malaysia.