Malaysia Packing List — What to Bring for Beaches, Cities, Jungle, and Borneo

Malaysia covers more ground than most packing lists account for. In a two-week trip you might go from the air-conditioned museums of KL to snorkeling at the Perhentians to a Kinabatangan River cruise to the mossy forest trails of Gunung Brinchang — four completely different environmental demands on your pack. This list works through each scenario and then gives you the universal Malaysia must-haves that cut across all of them.

The Universal Malaysia Kit

These items apply regardless of what you’re doing or where you’re going.

Power and Charging: Malaysia uses the British Type G plug (three rectangular pins, 240V). You need a Type G adapter — no exceptions. Your phone, laptop, and most electronics from North America and Europe require one. Buy before you leave or grab one at KLCC or any airport. RM10-20 at the airport, much cheaper at hardware stores in the city.

Clothing: Malaysia is hot and humid. Pack light and breathable. Quick-dry synthetics or merino wool — cotton takes forever to dry in humidity. For city days: light trousers (or long shorts) and shirts that cover shoulders are standard for temple and mosque visits. The country is majority Muslim; modest dress in heritage and religious areas is expected and respectful.

For women: loose linen or cotton trousers and shirts that cover shoulders and knees are suitable for everything from hawker centres to mosque visits. Carry a sarong or shawl for adding coverage when needed.

For men: lightweight long trousers and collared shirts for city days. Board shorts are fine at the beach; switch to something longer for the village and mosque areas.

Documents and Money: Malaysia is generally a cash economy for hawker stalls, markets, and local transport. Cards are accepted at hotels, malls, and most restaurants, but keep RM200-500 in cash at all times. ATMs are Maybank, CIMB, and HSBC — your foreign card works at all of them with a standard international transaction fee.

Health: Dengue fever is present in Malaysia — mosquito prevention is not optional. DEET repellent (30%+ concentration) for dawn and dusk, and any jungle or mangrove environments. Staying in air-conditioned accommodation at night significantly reduces exposure. Malaria is present in specific rural areas of Sabah and Sarawak — check the current situation with your travel doctor before departure and take appropriate prophylaxis.

Tap water in major cities is technically treated but I drink bottled. RM1-3/1.5L bottle at any 7-Eleven.

Packing for KL and the Heritage Cities

KL, Penang’s George Town, Malacca, and Ipoh are urban destinations with infrastructure. You don’t need to overpack for these.

Essentials:

Skip:

Packing for East Coast Islands (Perhentians, Tioman, Redang)

The islands operate on a simple economy: swimwear during the day, something to cover up with in the evenings at beach restaurants and through the village. That’s your wardrobe for island life.

Essentials:

Skip:

Packing for Jungle and Taman Negara

Taman Negara, Cameron Highlands, Kinabatangan River, and Borneo jungle tracking require a different kit entirely.

Essentials:

For the Kinabatangan River specifically:

Packing for Borneo (Sabah/Sarawak)

The Borneo additions to the jungle kit above:

What You Don’t Need in Malaysia

Towels: All accommodation provides them, including budget guesthouses. Exception: camping at wildlife hides in Taman Negara.

A full first aid kit: Pharmacies (Guardian, Watsons, local pharmacies) are everywhere in Malaysian cities. Buy what you need when you arrive. Bring a prescription medications letter and enough of any prescription meds for the trip.

Expensive camera gear: Unless you’re a serious wildlife photographer, your phone is fine. If you are wildlife shooting (Kinabatangan, Mulu bats), bring your own gear — rental options don’t exist in the jungle.

Lots of cash before arriving: Exchange on arrival at Malaysian bank ATMs — better rates than airport exchanges. Don’t carry more than you’d be comfortable losing.

A guidebook: Download offline maps (Maps.me or Google Maps offline for Peninsular Malaysia) and offline Wikipedia entries for heritage sites. Physical guidebooks are heavy and go out of date faster than digital resources.

A Note on Bag Size

Malaysia’s domestic airports (especially Mulu and Sandakan) use small turboprop aircraft with strict baggage limits. If you’re flying MASwings on internal Sabah/Sarawak routes, carry-on limits can be as low as 7kg. Pack for the whole Malaysia trip in one bag that fits this constraint, or be prepared to check baggage on domestic legs. A 40L carry-on backpack works for 2-3 weeks in Malaysia across all environments with careful packing.

The Malaysia Packing List — Quick Reference

Universal:

Beach (east coast islands):

Jungle/Borneo:

Kinabalu Summit only: