Why Maintenance Planning Matters
Here is a golden rule in property investing: deferred maintenance always costs more. A small leak ignored today becomes a ceiling collapse tomorrow. A RM 200 plumbing fix turns into a RM 5,000 renovation job. Smart landlords plan and budget for maintenance before problems arise.
Types of Maintenance
There are three categories every landlord should understand:
- Preventive maintenance: Scheduled tasks to prevent breakdowns. Examples include annual aircon servicing (RM 80-150 per unit), water heater inspection, and repainting every 3-5 years.
- Corrective maintenance: Fixing things after they break. A burst pipe, faulty wiring, or broken door lock. These are unpredictable but inevitable.
- Capital improvements: Major upgrades that extend the property's lifespan or increase its value. Kitchen renovations, bathroom overhauls, or replacing old windows.
Building a Maintenance Budget
A common rule of thumb is to set aside 1-2% of your property's value per year for maintenance. For a RM 400,000 property, that means RM 4,000-8,000 annually.
Here is a sample annual maintenance budget for a typical Malaysian condo:
| Item | Estimated Cost (RM) |
|---|---|
| Aircon servicing (2 units x 2 times) | 600 |
| Plumbing checks and minor repairs | 500 |
| Electrical inspection | 300 |
| Repainting (amortized over 4 years) | 1,000 |
| Emergency repair fund | 2,000 |
| Appliance replacement fund | 1,500 |
| Total | 5,900 |
The Emergency Fund
Beyond your annual budget, keep a separate emergency fund equal to at least 3 months of rental income. If your property rents for RM 2,000/month, keep RM 6,000 set aside for emergencies. This prevents you from dipping into personal savings or, worse, delaying critical repairs that could cause tenant dissatisfaction.
Tracking Expenses
Use a simple spreadsheet or property management app to log every expense with the date, description, amount, and receipt. This record is essential for tax purposes and helps you spot patterns. If you are spending RM 500 every quarter on plumbing, it might be cheaper to replace the old pipes entirely.
Good maintenance budgeting is not about spending more. It is about spending smart and being prepared for the unexpected.
