Drastically fewer complaints after subsidised cooking oil ban for foreigners

LocalBusiness & Finance
24 Apr 2026 • 9:24 PM MYT
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Effective enforcement of the ban on subsidised cooking oil packets for foreigners has led to only three offences recorded and a sharp drop in public complaints since March 1

PUTRAJAYA: Effective enforcement of the ban on the sale of subsidised cooking oil packets to foreign nationals since March 1 has resulted in only three offences recorded so far, alongside a sharp decline in public complaints.

Domestic Trade and Cost of Living Ministry (KPDN) enforcement director-general Datuk Azman Adam said out of the three offences, two cases were in Kedah and one in Selangor.

He said the ban, announced by Domestic Trade and Cost of Living Minister Datuk Armizan Mohd Ali in Parliament on Jan 29, is aimed at ensuring Malaysians continue to enjoy subsidised cooking oil.

“Complaints data received by the ministry also show a similar approach, when we begin enforcement of the ban, public tip offs on foreigners buying cooking oil packs dropped drastically,” he said during a conference on the enforcement of Ops Tiris from 2025 to March this year here today.

A similar trend has been observed following the ban on sales and purchase of RON95 petrol by foreign-registered vehicles, which has been in effect since April.

This is along with the government’s introduction of a policy controlling fuel filling limits of 50 litres, 100 litres and 150 litres, especially in Sabah and Sarawak, to ensure supply continuity and curb misuse.

The government will also continue to improve its cooking oil supply monitoring system through the Cooking Oil Price Stabilisation Scheme System (eCOSS) that allows tracking of the supply chain from refining factories to consumers.

Last year’s enforcement audit results show that 27 cooking oil packaging companies were subject to action, including suspension of quotas, licence revocation and court action.

Meanwhile, 94 parties at the wholesaler and retailer level faced similar actions, Azman said.

Since the enforcement of the eCOSS system, cases where foreigner-owned shops selling subsidised cooking oil packs were rarely reported as they were not allowed to register their business premises in the system.

He also said the limit for purchasing cooking oil packets was set at three kilogrammes per person since 2022, based on the estimated adequate household use according to the Department of Statistics Malaysia.

The government has also maintained a controlled price for bottled cooking oil at a rate of RM6.90 to RM30.90 since 2022 even with the rise in palm oil prices on the global market, he said.

Azman pointed out that the approach was taken to ensure consumers were not burdened with rising cost of living and to support the implementation of various government programmes, including the Rahmah Sales programme, throughout the country.