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RON95 in Malaysia is cheaper than in Saudi Arabia and other ASEAN countries, except for Brunei – KPDN

RON95 in Malaysia is cheaper than in Saudi Arabia and other ASEAN countries, except for Brunei – KPDN

Despite the climb in fuel prices, the price of RON 95 petrol in Malaysia remains among the lowest the region as well as Saudi Arabia, according to the ministry of domestic trade and cost of living (KPDN).

Based on retail fuel prices in Malaysia for the week of April 2 to 8, 2026, an illustration by Jabatan Penerangan Malaysia showed that petrol and diesel fuels in Malaysia are still cheaper than in other ASEAN countries and in Saudi Arabia, except for Brunei, where petrol is at the equivalent of RM1.67 per litre, and diesel at the equivalent of RM0.98 per litre.

Among other neighbouring countries, fuel prices in Thailand were listed as the equivalent of RM6.48 per litre for petrol, and the equivalent of RM4.95 per litre for diesel. Meanwhile for Singapore, fuel prices in the city-state were listed as the equivalent of RM10.30 per per litre for petrol, and the equivalent of RM12.05 per litre for diesel.

Other countries listed in terms of prices for fuels include Laos (petrol RM7.20, diesel RM7.65), the Philippines (petrol RM6.43, diesel RM7.99), Myanmar (petrol RM6.35, diesel RM7.05), Cambodia (petrol RM6.26, diesel RM7.27), Vietnam (petrol RM2.96, diesel RM3.49), and Indonesia (petrol 2.96, diesel RM3.49).

Last month, prime minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim announced that the initial 300 litre monthly quota for RON 95 petrol under the Budi Madani RON 95 fuel subsidy programme is to be temporarily reduced to 200 litres a month.

Meanwhile for diesel fuel, the ministry of finance (MoF) announced earlier this week that the monthly cash assistance under the Budi Madani Diesel initiative will be maintained at RM300 for the month of April 2026.

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Mick Chan

Open roads and closed circuits hold great allure for Mick Chan. Driving heaven to him is exercising a playful chassis on twisty paths; prizes ergonomics and involvement over gadgetry. Spent three years at a motoring newspaper and short stint with a magazine prior to joining this website.

 

Comments

  • sue brain on Apr 03, 2026 at 11:17 am

    many thanks to PH and DSAI, you think BN will give us budi95 if najib was still PM?

    Thumb up 56 Thumb down 26
  • Tin Kosong on Apr 03, 2026 at 11:24 am

    but not for the semenanjung diesel…

    Thumb up 9 Thumb down 0
  • pengayuhbasikal on Apr 03, 2026 at 12:15 pm

    mai dahh….modal lama…hahahahahaha

    Thumb up 12 Thumb down 0
  • anonymous on Apr 03, 2026 at 12:43 pm

    ok congratulations do they want a trophy ?

    Thumb up 11 Thumb down 0
  • I hate paying so much taxes to subsidise others Budi95. Give me lower income taxes I’m happy to pay RM3.87 a litre which is already very cheap in our region.

    Thumb up 16 Thumb down 5
    • Tbh, the old subsidy was fine at 2.15 ~ 2.20 per liter.

      Everyone talks about how BUDI95 is such a amazing fuel savings scheme for the people.
      But everyone seems to forget the one big advantage the old subsidy had.

      It was unlimited, there was no quota.

      We had unlimited subsidised petrol for ~0.25 Sen more but we for some reason celebrate the fact that we have it 20 Sen cheaper but limited to 300L which is now temporarily reduced to 200L.

      Thumb up 12 Thumb down 4
      • anak merdeka on Apr 03, 2026 at 11:11 pm

        There are many rakyat marhaen who ride kapchai motorbikes and so this 200 or 300 liter per month quota at about 15 to 20 sen cheaper per liter than the old prices with no quota is not a big worry for them.

        Thumb up 8 Thumb down 0
      • we have to curb the loss of subsidized fuels smuggling issue, i think its a win win situation

        Thumb up 0 Thumb down 1
      • Keadilan on Apr 04, 2026 at 9:51 pm

        Tapi….BANGLA,VIETNAM,ROHINGNYA maupun ENDON dan sepertinya kalau subcd lama mereka adik-beradik ni lah yg mendapat faedah daripada subcd lama yg disalahgunakan oleh non-M’sian.

        Thumb up 1 Thumb down 3
  • Grandpa Ash Burn Baginda on Apr 03, 2026 at 2:05 pm

    Fuel Pricing is tied to the whereabouts of refinery plants and its logistics not the crude oil source KEK

    Thumb up 2 Thumb down 0
  • Lofude on Apr 03, 2026 at 5:14 pm

    Ok Ok .. noted with thanks.

    Selective comparison just to score brownie points.

    Thumb up 8 Thumb down 0
  • Drivingrider on Apr 03, 2026 at 5:47 pm

    So in reality, without subsidies, Malaysia prices are higher than Saudi, Indonesia and Vietnam …

    Thumb up 9 Thumb down 0
  • suppose apple to apple..no need convert la

    Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0
  • Thinking on Apr 04, 2026 at 5:57 pm

    Should mention the grade…

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Mangkuk on Apr 05, 2026 at 4:20 pm

    Come lah compare price with oil producing company not importer and third world county

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Anonymous user00 on Apr 05, 2026 at 4:47 pm

    Malaysian has fuel subsidy that’s why Msia scream “I only drive pure petrol cars, not hybrid EV trash” … I would love our fellow Malaysians scream the same when they have to pay rm4 rm5 rm6 per litre for Ron95… Our automotive industry stuck in the past is because of fuel subsidy, nobody sees the need to invest in Hybrids EVs in Malaysia. The government should take back 3Billion per month subsidy money and use it for better crucial places. Enough with the subsidy distorting the market.

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
  • Junkies otr on Apr 07, 2026 at 7:47 am

    Good. Pls maintain the diesel price. U can see many lorries not speeding.

    Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0
 

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