If youâre taking a Singapore-plated car into Malaysia, you need a Vehicle Entry Permit (VEP) with an activated RFID tag. No tag, no entry without risking a fine. Itâs been fully enforced since July 2025, so this isnât a âmaybe laterâ thing anymore. Hereâs the whole process, start to finish.
| Quick Answer | Details |
|---|---|
| Do SG cars need a VEP? | Yes. Compulsory for all Singapore-registered cars entering Peninsular Malaysia |
| Enforced since | 1 July 2025 (no more grace period) |
| Tag fee | 10 MYR (~S$3), valid 5 years from activation |
| Road charge | 20 MYR (~S$6) per entry, paid via Touch ân Go only |
| Fine for no VEP | 300 MYR (~S$97) compound, and you canât exit Malaysia until itâs settled |
| Before you drive | Leave SG with a ž full tank (up to S$500 fine if not); pump RON97 in Malaysia, not RON95 |
| Where to apply | Official portal at vep.jpj.gov.my |
| How long it takes | Roughly 1â4 weeks depending on how you collect the tag |
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Image Credits: Road Transport Department Malaysia
The VEP is a permit from Malaysiaâs Road Transport Department (JPJ) that lets foreign-registered vehicles drive into Peninsular Malaysia. For Singapore drivers, it comes as a physical RFID tag you stick on your car and activate online before you cross.
Hereâs who it applies to:
One thing worth clearing up early: the VEP is a one-time registration tied to your vehicle, not a per-trip ticket. Once your tag is active, it stays valid for five years. You donât reapply every time you drive up.
Yes, every time. If your car is registered in Singapore and youâre driving it across the Causeway or Second Link, you need an activated VEP tag. This has been the rule on paper for years, but since 1 July 2025 itâs actively enforced at the checkpoints.
If you rent a car in Singapore to drive into Malaysia, the rental company is responsible for the VEP, and most reputable ones already have their fleet registered. Always confirm the tag is fitted and active before you collect the car. For a one-off trip, renting a VEP-ready car can be less hassle than registering your own.
Related Guide: Weighing up renting instead of taking your own car? Our JB car rental guide for Singaporeans covers costs, paperwork and what to check before you book.
No. Drive in without a valid, activated VEP and you risk a 300 MYR (~S$97) compound fine from JPJ. Worse, you wonât be allowed to leave Malaysia until the fine is paid and your tag is sorted, which can turn a quick day trip into a long, stressful one.
A few details on how enforcement actually works:
So the honest answer to âcan I just risk it?â is donât. The tag is cheap, the fine isnât, and getting stuck at the border on your way home is nobodyâs idea of a good weekend.
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You apply online through the official VEP portal, then collect and activate a physical tag. Itâs free to register; the only official cost is the tag fee. Hereâs the order of play.
Go to the official portal at vep.jpj.gov.my and create an account. Youâll verify your email, then add your details as the vehicle owner (you can also appoint a representative to do this for you).
Enter your vehicle details and upload the required documents:
â Vehicle log card (the LTA registration details)
â Valid motor insurance that explicitly covers West Malaysia
â Identification (NRIC for Singaporeans and PRs, passport for foreigners)
Double-check your road tax and insurance are valid before you submit, and that your policy spells out West Malaysia coverage. If that clause is missing, or your details donât match your log card, the application gets rejected. Itâs the most common stumbling block.
Once your details are approved, you pay the 10 MYR (~S$3) tag processing fee and choose how to get your tag, by self-collection or postage. More on the options below.
Fit the tag to your car, then activate it online by uploading a photo. Your VEP isnât valid until this final step is done, so donât leave it to the morning of your trip.
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Image Credits: Soya Cincau
The VEP RFID tag is a small electronic sticker that scanners at the Malaysian checkpoints read as you pass. It links to your registration and, once set up, to your toll and road-charge payments.
Where it goes depends on your windscreen:
Keep it at least 5cm clear of any metal frame, stick it on a clean, dry surface and press firmly. The tag is designed to be tamper-evident, so donât try to peel it off and move it later. A damaged tag means paying for a replacement.
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After the tag is fitted, you activate it by uploading a photo to the VEP activation portal (VEPAMS). The photo needs to clearly show your carâs number plate and the fitted tag in the same frame.
The steps:
Until you see that âactiveâ status, your VEP doesnât count, even if the tag is physically on your car. Activate it a few days before you travel so thereâs a buffer if the photo gets rejected and you need to resubmit.
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Plan for one to four weeks from registration to an active tag, depending on how you collect it. The online registration is quick; the wait is mostly the tag.
| Collection method | Rough timeline |
|---|---|
| Self-collect in Johor (Danga Bay) | Fastest, by appointment |
| Self-collect in Woodlands (via agent) | Around 7â10 working days |
| Postage to your Singapore address | Around 2â4 weeks |
Activation itself usually clears within about a week once you upload the photo, but delays do happen, so build in buffer rather than cutting it fine. The lesson: donât start your VEP application the week before a trip. If youâre driving up for a long weekend next month, register now and pick the collection method that fits your timeline.
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The official VEP tag costs 10 MYR (~S$3) and lasts five years. Thatâs the only fee JPJ charges. Everything else is either a separate road charge or an optional service fee if you use an agent.
Hereâs the honest breakdown so you know whatâs official and what isnât:
| Cost | Amount | What itâs for |
|---|---|---|
| RFID tag (official) | 10 MYR (~S$3) | The tag itself, valid 5 years |
| Road charge (official) | 20 MYR (~S$6) per entry | Charged each time a private car enters, via Touch ân Go |
| Woodlands collection agent fee | ~S$39 | Optional, paid to a third-party agent for SG-side collection |
| Postage | ~30 MYR (~S$10) service + ~15 MYR (~S$5) postage | Optional third-party mailing, if you want it sent to you |
You can do the whole thing yourself for just the 10 MYR tag fee by collecting in Johor. The S$39-type fees youâll see advertised are third-party agents charging for convenience, not an official cost. Worth knowing before you pay one.
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Separate from the one-off tag fee, Malaysia charges a 20 MYR (~S$6) road charge every time a foreign private car enters. Itâs paid through Touch ân Go (TNG), never cash, and your VEP tag links to your TNG eWallet so the charge and your tolls come off automatically. Commercial vehicles and motorcycles are exempt; only private cars pay it.
Hereâs how it works once your tag is active:
Open the Touch ân Go eWallet app and confirm the tag is connected before you drive:
To keep tabs on what youâve been charged, check the Transactions tab in the app. And itâs worth keeping a physical Touch ân Go card with some balance in the car as a backup, in case a reader doesnât pick up your tag at a booth.
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Most VEP headaches come down to a few recurring issues. Hereâs what trips people up and how to handle it:
If youâre stuck, JPJâs VEP helpline (+603 8892 1501/1502) and email (aduanvep@jpj.gov.my) are the official channels for support.
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Your VEP tag is valid for five years from activation, and you renew it before it expires, not after. The portal sends renewal reminders at 60, 30 and 10 days before the expiry date, though itâs wise to renew a few months ahead so thereâs no gap before a planned trip.
If your car details change in the meantime, say you switch insurers or renew your road tax, update them in the VEP portal so your records stay valid. An out-of-date record can flag your tag at the checkpoint even if it hasnât technically expired.
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You deregister a VEP when you sell or scrap the car, so the tag is no longer tied to a vehicle you donât own. Itâs done online, and it matters more than people expect: sell a car without deregistering, and the new owner canât register it for VEP until your old record is cleared. Itâs one of the most common reasons a second-hand car gets stuck at registration.
To deregister:
You can only apply for a new VEP tag on that vehicle once the deregistration shows as complete. One thing worth knowing: an expired VEP deregisters automatically five years after registration, so if youâre simply letting it lapse, you donât need to do anything.
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Two fuel rules trip up Singapore drivers, and both carry real penalties. Sort them before you reach the checkpoint, along with the documents you need on you.
Keep these on you for the drive, separate from the documents you uploaded to register:
And save the local emergency numbers before you set off: 999 reaches police, ambulance and fire across Malaysia, and 112 works from any mobile, even with no SIM or signal.
Related Guide: Wondering what a tank actually costs across the Causeway? Our JB petrol price guide breaks down RON97 and where Singapore cards still work.
Once youâre cleared to drive in, the next quiet money-drainer is how you pay. Between the road charge, tolls, petrol, parking and food, a JB trip racks up plenty of small ringgit spends, and the wrong payment method adds a 3% or so foreign-transaction fee on top of each one.
Hereâs a clean way to handle payments across the border:
1. Tap your YouTrip card for fuel, food, parking and retail anywhere Mastercard contactless is accepted. Thereâs no foreign-transaction fee, and every tap converts your SGD to ringgit at the Mastercard wholesale rate, far better than a credit card stacking 3â3.5% FX on each spend. Singapore cards still work fine at the pump for RON97. You can also load and hold MYR in your YouTrip wallet to lock the rate before you go.
2. Cash, withdrawn from a Malaysian ATM, for the cash-only hawker stalls and small shops. With YouTrip, your first S$400 of overseas ATM withdrawals each calendar month is free, then a flat 2% after (some ATM operators add their own on-screen fee, so check before you confirm). The allowance resets on the 1st. That beats a money changer, which quietly bakes a markup of a few percent into the rate.
3. Touch ân Go eWallet for the VEP road charge and highway tolls, since those canât be paid any other way. Keep it topped up before each trip. One honest note: topping up a TNG wallet with any foreign-issued card can carry a fee of up to 2.6%, so factor that in when you reload.
For deeper detail, see our Malaysia ATM withdrawal guide and the SGD to MYR rate guide.
Yes. Every Singapore-registered car driving into Peninsular Malaysia needs a valid, activated VEP RFID tag. Itâs been fully enforced since 1 July 2025, and driving in without one risks a 300 MYR (~S$97) fine.
The official RFID tag costs 10 MYR (~S$3) and lasts five years. On top of that, private cars pay a 20 MYR (~S$6) road charge each time they enter, via Touch ân Go. Any other fees you see are optional third-party agent or postage charges.
No. Without a valid activated VEP, you face a 300 MYR (~S$97) compound fine and wonât be allowed to exit Malaysia until itâs paid and your tag is sorted. Repeat or contested cases can reach 2,000 MYR (~S$645).
Between one and four weeks, depending on collection. Self-collecting the tag in Johor is fastest; postage to a Singapore address takes around three to four weeks. Register well ahead of your trip, not the week before.
Yes, but the rental company handles it. Most Singapore rental firms keep their fleet VEP-registered, so just confirm the tag is fitted and active before you collect the car.
Not right now. Singapore-registered motorcycles are currently exempt from the VEP and the road charge, though Malaysia has signalled it intends to include bikes in future.
You need at least a three-quarter full tank when leaving Singapore by land. Itâs a Singapore Customs rule, and coming up short means a composition sum of up to S$500 and a U-turn to refuel before youâre let through.
No. Since enforcement widened on 1 April 2026, foreign-registered cars (Singapore plates included) canât buy subsidised RON95. You fill up with RON97 instead, which costs a bit more but is still cheaper than petrol back home.
Deregister it at vepams.jpj.gov.my under âRequest for Deregistrationâ, entering your vehicle plate and uploading your NRIC and log card. It matters: if you donât, the buyer canât register the car for VEP. An expired VEP deregisters automatically after five years.
The VEP is a one-time bit of admin that buys you five years of easy Causeway runs. Sort it early, keep your Touch ân Go topped up, and pay smart once youâre across, and the only thing left to plan is where to eat first.
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Happy travels!
The post VEP Malaysia: How to Apply for Your Singapore Car (2026) appeared first on YouTrip Singapore.

