Visa-free · 90 days

Malaysia for South Korea passport holders: visa-free 90 days, KL as a regional hub, MYR tips

South Korea passport holders enter Malaysia visa-free for 90 days. Malaysia Airlines connects KL direct to ICN in 13 hours. KL is an excellent base for regional Southeast Asian travel. Revolut or Wise handles EUR→MYR with zero markup.

Updated June 1, 202610 min read

Visa requirements

Type
Visa-free
Max stay
90 days
Fee
Free (Free)
Processing
Instant

German passport holders enter Malaysia visa-free for 90 days — stamp issued on arrival at KLIA.

Documents required

  • Valid German passport (6+ months validity)

Flights from South Korea to Malaysia

Korean Air
Daily
Direct · 7h
$300
economy return
$1350
business return
Malaysia Airlines
Daily
Direct · 7h
$280
economy return
$1260
business return

Money, cards & forex fees

Standard South Korea bank cards charge 1.5% on every MYR purchase. On a $2,000 trip that's $30 in hidden fees. Use one of the cards below to avoid this.
Shinhan SOL Travel Debit
debit
Forex fee: ZeroATM: No forex fee; overseas ATM fee applies

Best Korean card for international travel

Kakao Pay International
prepaid
Forex fee: ZeroATM: Limited ATM access; best for card payments

Korean travelers using mobile payments abroad

Wise KRW Card
debit
Forex fee: 0.35%ATM: 2 free withdrawals/month up to ₩350,000

Mid-market rate for KRW holders

ATMs in Malaysia

Best ATMs: Maybank, CIMB, Public Bank ATMs — widespread across KL and major cities.

Typical surcharge: RM 10-15 at Malaysian ATMs for international cards

Withdrawal tip: Malaysia is largely card-friendly in cities. Cash useful for street food and smaller vendors.

DCC warning: Malaysian ATMs offer DCC to EUR — always choose MYR.
Visa PlusMastercard CirrusAmerican Express

Top cities in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur

avg daily budget
$70/day

The Petronas Twin Towers, Batu Caves, diverse food scene (Malay, Chinese, Indian), Bukit Bintang shopping, and the vibrant street food culture. KL is a multicultural city that's very easy to navigate. KLCC and Bukit Bintang are walkable luxury zones.

Petronas Twin Towers & KLCCBatu CavesPetaling Street (Chinatown)Bukit BintangKL Bird Park
Payments: mostly card

Penang

avg daily budget
$55/day

George Town — UNESCO World Heritage Site with extraordinary street art, colonial architecture, clan jetties, and the world's best hawker food. Penang is Malaysia's food capital. The Kek Lok Si temple is impressive. Day trip from KL (1h flight or 4h bus).

George Town street artClan JettiesPenang HillKek Lok Si TempleHawker centres (Gurney Drive)
Payments: mostly card

Borneo (Sabah/Sarawak)

avg daily budget
$110/day

Sepilok Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre, the world's longest cave system (Mulu National Park), proboscis monkeys, pygmy elephants, and world-class diving (Sipadan Island). Borneo is one of the world's great wildlife destinations.

Sepilok Orangutan CentreKinabatangan River wildlife cruiseSipadan Island divingMulu Caves National Park
Payments: mixed

Kuala Lumpur as a Southeast Asia hub for German travellers

KLIA is one of Southeast Asia's best-connected airports — AirAsia, Malindo, and Batik Air connect KL to Bali (2h), Bangkok (2h), Singapore (1h), Ho Chi Minh City (2h), Hanoi (3h), Yangon (3h), Colombo (4h), and dozens of other Asian destinations at very low budget fares. South Korea travellers using KL as a hub can combine Malaysia (Penang, Borneo) with Indonesia, Thailand, or Vietnam in a 2-3 week itinerary at low intra-regional fares.

On-arrival tips

  • 1KLIA Ekspres train to KL Sentral: RM 55 (€12) — 28 minutes, much faster than taxi
  • 2Drug laws: extremely strict — zero tolerance
  • 3Grab app essential for KL transport — taxis can be unreliable

Key takeaways

  • South Korea passport: 90 days visa-free Malaysia — stamp on arrival at KLIA
  • Malaysia Airlines direct KL to ICN in 13 hours
  • Revolut or Wise: zero forex EUR→MYR
  • Drug laws extremely strict — zero tolerance
  • KL is an excellent hub for low-cost regional Southeast Asian travel (AirAsia)

Related visa guides

Visa information is based on publicly available government sources and official embassy data. Entry requirements, fees, and procedures change frequently — always verify with the official embassy or consulate of Malaysia before travelling. ForexFee is not a legal adviser.