Saturday, May 23, 2026

ATX preparation for September 2026

ATX-MYS June 2026: A Completely Unhinged Survival Guide (+ Why September 2026 Candidates Should Start Now)
ATX-MYS · September 2026 Registration

So You Want to Not Fail Advanced Taxation Malaysia.

A completely unhinged, mildly aggressive, surprisingly useful guide for the ATX June 2026 exam — with a very pointed message to ATX September 2026 candidates who are pretending registration season isn't already here.

Disclaimer: No exam papers were harmed in the making of this blog post. Any resemblance to your actual panic level is entirely intentional. The author accepts zero liability for coffee consumed while reading this. JPro Business Training accepts all liability for making you actually pass.

Hi. Hello. Welcome to the moment where you realise the September 2026 ATX-MYS exam is not, in fact, "ages away." September sounds casual. September sounds like a month where things happen to other people. It is not. It is a date on a calendar that is already circling you like an IRB auditor who just found an unreconciled ledger.

The June 2026 sitting is about to happen!. That means the September 2026 registration window is open right now. Which means the candidates who will pass in September are registering, planning, and preparing today — while everyone else is still digesting their post-June results and thinking "I'll start soon."

I've studied five years' worth of past papers — Specimen right through to December 2025 — and I'm here to tell you exactly which topics are going to ruin your June 2026 morning, and more importantly, how to make sure they don't.

Buckle up. We're doing this.

01. RPGT Is In Every Single Paper. Every. One.

You know how the sun shows up in every morning whether anyone asked for him or not? That's RPGT. It was in the Specimen paper. It was in June 2024. December 2024. June 2025. December 2025. It has never missed a sitting and it is absolutely not planning to start now.

The good news: it's actually learnable. The bad news: there are about nine different ways the examiner can twist it and most candidates only study three of them.

RPC status — 75% test Acquisition price of RPC shares NGNL transfers Deceased estate — executor rules Conditional contracts Gifts to government / charities Nominees & partnerships
The thing most people get wrong: When shares are acquired before a company becomes an RPC, the acquisition date is NOT when you bought the shares. It's the date the company crossed the 75% threshold. And the acquisition price? Proportionate defined value of the real property at that date. Get this wrong and you've just donated marks to the examiner's entertainment fund.

Hot take on the deceased estate rules — they showed up in June 2025 (Rashmi scenario) with the full three-property treatment. Study ALL three property outcomes: disposal to third party, transfer to legatee with cash legacy substitution, and transfer as a specific bequest. The examiner clearly enjoyed writing that question and will probably enjoy writing another one.

September 2026 registration is open. RPGT is already in the exam.

Here's the nudge you didn't ask for but needed: JPro's September 2026 ATX-MYS intake is now taking registrations. Mr Jay's dedicated RPGT sessions walk through the full framework — RPC testing, NGNL situations, acquisition price calculations, deceased estate rules — with worked examples that actually make sense under exam pressure.

The candidates registering now will have done RPGT twice before September. The ones who register in August will have done it once, at midnight, with their laptop overheating.

Register for JPro September 2026 →

02. The "Never Been Examined" List Is Your Secret Weapon.

Here's something the textbook won't tell you but five years of past papers will: an entire chapter of your notes — Lease & Finance — has never appeared in any exam paper I've looked at. Not once. Same goes for Unit Trusts and REITs.

Now, a rational person might say: "Great! I'll skip those." That rational person will get a question on finance leases in September 2026 and immediately transform into a different kind of person entirely.

"The thing about never-tested topics is they're overdue. Very, very overdue."

The examiner has a list of perfectly good syllabus content sitting there, completely unexamined, getting increasingly impatient. Here's what I'd be nervous about for September 2026:

  • Leasing — operating vs finance lease; deemed sale triggers; lessor claims CA, lessee cannot. Chapter 12 in your JPro notes. Read it.
  • REIT / PTF — income tax at REIT level; disposal of real estate exempt from RPGT if SC-approved; IBA treatment on transfer. Chapter 13B. It has a nice ACCA technical article and everything.
  • Trust taxation — Chapter 7b. Trust annuities under s.4(e), trustee obligations, resident vs non-resident treatment. There's a full ACCA article on this. The examiner knows it exists.
  • s.65 settlements — income splitting by gifting assets to family members. The DGIR can assess the original owner anyway. This is a juicy scenario waiting to happen.
  • Employee share schemes — ESOS and ESPP. Has its own ACCA article. Has never appeared. You do the maths.
THREAT LEVEL: ORANGE s.44(5A)–(5D) shareholder continuity rules — loss and CA forfeiture on substantial change of shareholding — are sitting in your notes completely untested. The kind of thing that shows up in a Q1 corporate scenario where a company gets taken over mid-year. Just saying.

03. Incentives. Every. Paper. Without. Fail.

Tax incentives are like that friend who shows up to every party and somehow always ends up being the most important conversation you have. Pioneer Status, ITA, Reinvestment Allowance, AIE, PoE double deduction — all of them appeared in every single paper reviewed. All of them.

Here's the nuance most candidates miss: there are two export incentive categories most people never study properly:

  • Double deduction for promotion of export of services (not just goods) — market research costs, travel to overseas markets, tender preparation. This is separate from PoE and has barely appeared.
  • The ≥50% export increase exemption — a 30% exemption of the increased export value, separate from AIE's 10%. Almost never tested. Sitting in Chapter 9 of your notes quietly plotting something.
  • R&D incentives — approved (double deduction, s.34A) vs unapproved (single deduction, s.34(7)). Appeared in June 2025. Know both versions.
Pro tip on RA: The examiner loves testing the 36-month operation rule. "Has the company been operating long enough?" is basically a guaranteed sub-question whenever RA appears. Count the months. Don't assume. Also: RA carry-forward is restricted to 7 YAs after the 15-year window expires. ITA carry-forward is indefinite. This distinction showed up as a scepticism mark in December 2024. Know the difference.

04. SST Questions Are Now Basically Mandatory in Q3.

Sales and Service Tax has appeared in every paper since the Specimen. The examiner has found a comfortable groove with it and is clearly not leaving. What varies is which angle gets tested.

Covered recently: imported taxable services, group relief, B2B exemption, self-accounting via Form SST-2A, drawback on re-exports, construction not being a taxable service, technical support being one.

Not yet covered: SST offences and penalties (RM30k/2yr general, RM50k/3yr for incorrect info). If Q3 ever has a compliance sub-question about what happens when you don't account for imported taxable service tax, you now know what to write.

SST has been in every paper. Your September prep needs to start before July.

JPro's structured notes on Sales and Service Tax — Chapter 10 — break down every scenario type that has been tested: when you self-account, when group relief applies, when B2B saves you, and when you're just stuck paying the 8%. The SST question in December 2025 was basically written from that framework.

The September 2026 intake is enrolling now. Early registrants get access to materials ahead of classes starting — meaning you're already ahead of the September panic crowd before they even know there's a race.

Enrol in JPro's September 2026 intake →

05. Ethics Will Be There. Stop Hoping It Won't.

Every paper. Every single paper has an ethics component. The examiner loves asking you to be the voice of reason while the fictional CEO suggests something catastrophically illegal.

The scenarios rotate but the principles don't:

  • Misrepresenting facts to IRB / reclassifying expenditure = deliberate misrepresentation. Integrity. Professional behaviour. Full stop.
  • "But we'll pay more tax anyway" — irrelevant. Paying tax doesn't absolve fraud. The examiner has now tested this in two separate papers.
  • Suggesting a non-resident use a local bank account to appear resident = designed to mislead. Decline. Cease to act if client proceeds.
  • Confidentiality: you can use knowledge and experience from other clients, but you absolutely cannot share their specific data.

The professional skills marks in Q1 are worth 10 marks. Ten. You don't win those by knowing tax law. You win them by writing like an actual professional communicating actual advice to an actual client. Structure your report. Use headings. Address the client directly. Don't brain-dump every tax rule you know and hope something sticks.

FREE MARKS ALERT The professional skills marks rubric rewards: clear structure, appropriate tone, relevant and specific advice (not generic), and commercial awareness. The examiner literally publishes what they're looking for. Read the marking scheme from past papers and copy the format religiously.

06. The Anti-Avoidance Chapter Is Overdue for a Comeback.

Section 140 (general anti-avoidance) appeared in the Specimen paper in 2022. It hasn't appeared since. That's four sittings of absence. Four sittings of the examiner looking at s.140, s.140A transfer pricing, and s.65 income splitting and thinking "not this time."

September 2026 might be the time. Five sittings of absence is not a streak — it's a build-up.

The most testable scenarios:

  • s.65 settlements — high-income individual gifts rental property to low-income family member to split tax liability. DGIR assesses original owner as if the gift didn't happen. Classic exam scenario setup.
  • s.140A transfer pricing — related party transactions at non-arm's length prices. DGIR power to substitute the arm's length price. The difference between tax avoidance (legal but risky) and tax evasion (illegal, full stop).
  • s.29(3)–(5) related party interest — interest between related parties deemed obtainable on demand. Timing manipulation between connected companies. Has a dedicated section in your JPro Chapter 14 notes.

07. International Tax: Know Your Derivation Rules Cold.

Employment income derivation — where the employment is exercised, not where it's paid — has appeared in every paper with an individual in it. June 2024 had Zafrul working between Malaysia and Genovia. June 2025 had Eric and Vinesh flying in to deliver consultancy services. This is not a coincidence. This is a pattern.

For September 2026, I'd specifically flag:

  • Dual residence tie-breaker rules — when someone is technically resident in two countries under domestic law, how does the DTA resolve it? Permanent home, centre of vital interests, habitual abode, nationality. Tested in Specimen. Not since.
  • DTA exemption for short-stay employees — 183 days, non-resident employer, no PE bearing the cost. The three conditions. Could appear as a follow-up to a WHT scenario.
  • Foreign income remittance for individuals — capital proceeds vs income savings. The FSIE conditions. Know the difference between what's taxable and what isn't when a Malaysian resident remits money from abroad.

There are two types of September 2026 candidates.

Type A registered with JPro in May or June, received their materials, started working through the course at a sane human pace, and will walk into September feeling prepared.

Type B is reading this blog post in late August, has technically "been meaning to register," and will spend the fortnight before the exam watching YouTube explanations of IBA at 2x speed while eating instant noodles.

Mr Jay at JPro Business Training has been preparing ATX-MYS candidates for years. The JPro course notes you've been using as your study bible? Those are his. The frameworks that make sense of a 70% discussion exam? His. The exam technique coaching that earns professional skills marks? Also him. The September 2026 intake has limited spaces and is enrolling now.

Be Type A. Register for JPro September 2026 →

08. Basis Periods: Boring Name, Surprisingly Punishing Marks.

Basis periods appeared in the Specimen, December 2024, and December 2025. The rule that trips everyone up: when a company with an existing business starts a new one, the new business follows the existing company's accounting period [s.21A(6)]. This is not intuitive. The examiner knows it's not intuitive. That's why it keeps appearing.

Also: a first basis period of less than six months = exempt from tax estimate submission. This is a detail that earns half a mark every time it appears and most candidates skip it because it seems too small. Half marks add up. Do not skip small things.

09. The Tax Administration Chapter Is a Free Mark Machine.

The examiner occasionally drops a compliance question — filing deadlines, WHT payment timelines, notification of new employees — and candidates who haven't touched Chapter 11 proceed to leave marks on the table like they're paying a service charge.

The ones most likely to appear based on gaps in the five papers:

  • Error or mistake relief — conditions: tax already paid, assessment is in excess, assessment is not final and conclusive. Simple. Learnable. Untested so far.
  • Penalties for incorrect returns — 45% for understatement of income. 10% + 10% for late WHT compliance. Know the numbers.
  • Appeals process — 6 months to appeal a DG decision, Form N for extension, 12-month deemed agreement if DG doesn't act. Appeared in notes, not in papers.

10. The Actual, No-Nonsense Revision Plan.

Right. We've covered the what. Here's the how, in the style of someone who has watched too many action movies and not enough revision webinars:

Week 1–2: Lock down the guaranteed topics. RPGT (all variations). Incentives (PS, ITA, RA, AIE, PoE). SST. International tax derivation + WHT. These are in every paper. Know them cold.

Week 3: Attack the overdue topics. Leasing & finance. Unit trusts. REIT. Trust taxation. Anti-avoidance (s.65, s.140A). If one of these is in September 2026, you're the only person in the room who prepared for it.

Week 4: Past paper practice under timed conditions. Full papers. Not cherry-picking questions. The professional skills marks only come from writing full, structured, professional answers. You cannot practise that by doing calculations only.

Finals Week: Read the examiner's reports. Read the marking schemes. Understand why marks were awarded, not just what the correct answer is. The difference between a 49 and a 55 is usually professional skills marks, not technical knowledge.
"The exam doesn't reward knowing the most. It rewards communicating what you know, clearly, to a stranger, under pressure, in 3 hours 15 minutes."

That's actually harder than it sounds. Which is why people who study with a structured programme — one that teaches you how to answer ATX-MYS questions, not just what the rules are — consistently outperform people who study alone with a textbook and optimism.

JPro Business Training — ATX-MYS September 2026 Intake: Now Open

Mr Jay's programme is built specifically for Malaysian ATX candidates. Structured notes. Live sessions. Exam technique coaching. Gap analysis built into the teaching — so you're not just covering content, you're covering the right content at the right depth.

The September 2026 registration window is open right now. Not "soon." Not "coming up." Now. The cohort fills up. The candidates who register first get materials first. The candidates who get materials first start first. Starting first is the only legal cheat code this exam has.

You've read the whole guide. You know the topics. You know the gaps. The only remaining question is whether you're going to do something about it before July, or if you're going to let August-You deal with it.

August-You is not going to be happy about that decision.

Register for JPro September 2026 at jprotraining.com →

Good luck. Register early. Study hard. Drink water. And if the September 2026 exam asks about unit trust tax treatment — you're welcome. And also: told you so.

— Written by someone who has read more tax marking schemes than is healthy for any normal human being.

Friday, February 27, 2026

ACCA March 2026 ATX MYS tips for the coming sitting

It is time for that period again when you are thinking why did I take this paper? So much to remember and sooo little time!

Well if you are last minute person; then either you found a hard disk that can be carried in your head like NEO in MATRIX or you end up stressed like the cats that see a cat cake being cut.

However as in lord of the rings Boromirs statement

One does not simply walk into ACCA ATX (MYS) exam unless you are willing to face the evil that lives in the exam room!

However sometime a guide on what can come out may help those lost souls and this is just a guide; you should have done you work properly before this!

Q1 Large Corporate Scenario (Almost Certain Mix)

  • Ethics issues (aggressive tax planning, disclosure risk, compliance failures, incentive misuse)

  • MITC

  • ASIE

  • Pioneer Status (PS) vs ITA comparison

  • Reinvestment Allowance

  • Agricultural allowance

  • Listed Investment Holding Company

  • REIT structure

  • Tax-EBITDA / interest restriction

  • Double tax relief

  • Withholding tax on royalties (foreign entity with Malaysian operations)

Trend: Integrated scenario requiring advice, comparison and risk commentary — not just computation.


Q2 Individual / Property / Structuring

  • Residence determination

  • Settlement of assets

  • RPGT implications

  • Group situation for RPGT (transfer within group, clawback risk)

  • 2% dividend assessment

  • Estate planning angles


Q3 Indirect Tax / Group / Cross-Border

  • Group relief (70% rule)

  • Service tax in group cross-charges

  • Imported services

  • Registration thresholds

  • Cross-border royalty & WHT

  • PE considerations


Overall Examiner Pattern

  • Incentives rarely tested in isolation

  • Group + international issues integrated

  • Ethics appearing within corporate advisory context

  • Professional skills marks tied to clarity and commercial reasoning

Good luck in the coming ACCA March 2026 ATX MYS exam

 

Monday, February 16, 2026

ATX MYS 2026 : “Malaysian ACCA Tax Examiner Repeats Same Advice For Three Years; Candidates Finally Realise ACCA ATX Is Not About Memorising Every Relief — It’s About Knowing When To Use It And How To Explain Why.”

  

ACCA Malaysian Tax Desk Special:

“ACCA ATX-MYS Examiner Reports (Jun 2023 → Dec 2025): Same Tax
, Different Ways To Lose Marks”

Between June 2023 and December 2025, the ACCA ATX-MYS examiner reports read like a long-running sitcom where the examiner patiently repeats the same advice every six months, and candidates politely ignore it before showing up with beautifully structured but strangely inaccurate tax advice. If you read the reports year by year — alongside the syllabus updates and exam format changes — a very clear storyline emerges: the paper itself didn’t suddenly become harder; it simply started expecting candidates to behave like real tax advisers rather than enthusiastic calculators.


2023: The Year ATX Became Half Consulting Exam, Half Reality Check

The June 2023 period marked a subtle turning point. The biggest structural shift wasn’t even technical — it was philosophical. ACCA introduced a new exam structure (fully applied to ATX-MYS from December 2023) where a single 50-mark Section A case study dominates the paper, with professional skills embedded into the marking scheme. Ethics marks became mandatory, and communication suddenly mattered as much as technical accuracy. 

What did this mean in practice? Candidates discovered that writing long tax computations without explaining implications felt oddly incomplete. Examiner comments around this period consistently noted that answers lacked advisory tone — students wrote as if they were completing TX-level exercises rather than advising Malaysian clients facing real tax consequences.

The problems highlighted were almost poetic in their repetition. Candidates mixed up terminology, ignored scenario details, or applied rules too generically. The examiner wasn’t asking for obscure legislation; the frustration stemmed from candidates failing to explain why a tax treatment applied or how it affected commercial decisions. In, 2023 was the year the examiner gently announced: “Congratulations, you are now a tax consultant — please stop writing like a revision kit.”


2024: The Era Of ‘Straightforward Questions’ That Somehow Weren’t

If 2023 was about format changes, 2024 was about adjustment pains. Examiner commentary across the year repeatedly described questions as fair and accessible, which is exam-report language for: “We didn’t try to trick you.” And yet, performance gaps remained.

One recurring issue was language precision. Candidates frequently used technically incorrect wording — confusing “resident” with “citizen,” or treating exemptions and non-taxable income as identical concepts. The examiner reports stressed that precision reflects professional competence, not academic nit-picking.

Another theme was over-generalisation. Candidates often recognised the topic — incentives, RPGT, or restructuring — but failed to analyse conditions, timelines, or compliance risks. In essence, they knew what the question was about but struggled with how to advise.

From a syllabus perspective, 2024 also introduced notable examinable-content adjustments. Certain corporate income-tax areas were temporarily excluded because legislation was not fully implemented, while new RPGT content — such as deemed disposals on asset reclassification — became examinable. 

“Examiner Removes Topic Due To Incomplete Legislation; Candidates Still Somehow Study It More Than The Actual Syllabus.”


2025: The Professional Skills Era — Or, ‘Please Explain Your Advice Like A Human’

By 2025, the examiner reports began sounding less like criticism and more like a therapist’s notes. Technical knowledge was generally adequate, but candidates continued losing marks because their answers lacked structure, commercial reasoning, or clear explanations.

Professional skills had by then become fully embedded in the ATX marking approach. Communication, analysis, scepticism, and commercial awareness were no longer optional extras; they were the difference between a technically correct answer and a high-scoring one. 

A curious irony appeared throughout 2025 feedback. Many questions were described as straightforward applications of syllabus areas, yet candidates struggled because they defaulted to memorised templates. Instead of tailoring advice to the scenario, they produced generic lists of reliefs or incentives — as if every Malaysian company exists purely to maximise tax allowances without reading the fine print.

Legislatively, the examinable environment also shifted. Exams in the December 2025 to September 2026 cycle were based on Finance Act 2024 and related enforcement legislation, reflecting ACCA’s annual rule that tax exams follow laws passed before the 31 March cut-off. 

This meant students had to adjust to updated compliance frameworks and evolving policy contexts, reinforcing the examiner’s push toward advisory thinking rather than rote memorisation.


Recurring Problems Across All Three Years — The Examiner’s Greatest Hits

Reading the reports chronologically feels like watching the same storyline with new characters. Candidates consistently:

  • Recognised topics but failed to analyse eligibility or consequences.

  • Used imprecise terminology that weakened otherwise correct answers.

  • Treated Section A like a technical question rather than an advisory case study.

  • Ignored ethics marks or professional skills despite them forming a significant portion of available marks after the new format was introduced. 

“You knew the tax law. You just didn’t explain it like someone we would hire.”


Syllabus And Exam Changes Detected (2023–2025)

From reviewing the syllabus documents and examinable-content updates, the changes during this period were evolutionary rather than revolutionary.

The biggest structural shift came with the revised exam format: three compulsory questions, heavier weighting on Section A, and expanded professional skills marks. Ethics became a permanent feature of Question 1, reinforcing the advisory nature of the paper. 

Technically, ACCA made targeted syllabus adjustments rather than sweeping reforms. Some corporate tax topics were temporarily excluded due to incomplete legislation, while additional RPGT scenarios became examinable — particularly deemed disposals arising from asset reclassification. 

The result was not a smaller syllabus but a more focused one, nudging candidates toward practical application instead of theoretical breadth.


The JPRO’s Year-By-Year Verdict

Looking back from June 2023 to December 2025, ATX-MYS did not dramatically reinvent itself. Instead, it matured. The examiner moved the paper away from being a technical checklist and closer to a professional advisory simulation.

In 2023, candidates struggled with the new exam structure and underestimated the importance of communication.

In 2024, they recognised topics but still answered too generically, often missing technical nuances.

By 2025, the examiner seemed to be waiting patiently for candidates to sound like real tax advisers — to explain, evaluate, and justify, not just calculate.

“Malaysian Tax Examiner Repeats Same Advice For Three Years; Candidates Finally Realise ATX Is Not About Memorising Every Relief — It’s About Knowing When To Use It And How To Explain Why.”