SpearfishingMap

Malaysia

Asia · South-Eastern Asia

Spearfishing is not banned nationwide in Malaysia, but it is heavily restricted. It is absolutely prohibited inside the country's gazetted marine parks and marine reserves: under section 44 of the federal Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317) no person may carry, use or possess a spring-gun, spear gun, spearfishing equipment, harpoon or suction gun within a marine park or marine reserve in Malaysian fisheries waters. Marine parks extend two nautical miles seaward (one nautical mile around certain islands) from the islands' low-water mark and cover most of the prime reef diving spots (e.g. Tunku Abdul Rahman, Pulau Payar, Pulau Tioman, Redang/Perhentian, Pulau Tinggi). All fishing inside a marine park is an offence carrying a fine up to RM20,000 or up to two years' imprisonment. Outside marine parks, spearfishing by free-diving is generally tolerated, but the speargun itself is treated by the authorities like a firearm and ownership/import requires a licence from the Royal Malaysia Police, which is difficult to obtain. Practical effect: recreational spearfishing is legally possible only outside protected areas and with police authorisation for the gun.

Restricted
Hyder dataHyder canolig

Diweddarwyd ddiwethaf Mehefin 14, 2026

Fframwaith llywodraethu

  • §Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317), Part IX (Marine Parks and Marine Reserves), sections 41-45
  • §Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317), section 25 (general penalty)
  • §Establishment of Marine Parks Malaysia Order 1994 (gazettement of marine parks under the Fisheries Act 1985)
Trwydded yn ofynnol
Gofynnol
Gwn gwayw
Caniatáu

Y gyfraith, air am air

Testunau cyfreithiol

Y darpariaethau statudol a rheoleiddiol manwl sy'n llywodraethu pysgota â gwaywffon yma, wedi'u dyfynnu fel y'u cyhoeddwyd, gyda dolen i bob ffynhonnell swyddogol.

01Section 44Malaysia (federal Malaysian fisheries waters) · federal

Absolute prohibition of certain weapons (spear guns / spearfishing equipment) in marine parks

Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317)

ENGwreiddiol

44. (1) No person shall carry, use or possess within a marine park or marine reserve in Malaysian fisheries waters— (a) any spring-gun, spear gun, spearfishing equipment, harpoon or suction gun; or (b) any other kind of weapon potentially harmful to any aquatic plant life, aquatic animal life or to the coral reef structure. (2) The use of any weapon referred to in subsection (1) from beyond the limits of the marine park or marine reserve and aimed at or directed into the marine park or marine reserve is also prohibited.

02Section 43Malaysia (federal Malaysian fisheries waters) · federal

Offence to fish or take aquatic life in a marine park without written permission of the Director General

Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317)

ENGwreiddiol

43. (1) Any person who in any marine park or marine reserve in Malaysian fisheries waters without the permission of the Director General in writing— (a) fishes or attempts to fish; (b) takes, removes or is in possession of any aquatic animal or aquatic plant or part thereof, whether dead or alive; (c) collects or is in possession of any coral, dredges or extracts any sand or gravel, discharges or deposits any pollutant, alters or destroys the natural breeding grounds or habitat of aquatic life, or destroys any aquatic life; (d) constructs or erects any building or other structure on or over any land or waters within a marine park or marine reserve; (e) anchors any vessel by dropping any kind of weight on, or by attaching any kind of rope or chain to, any coral, rock or other submerged object; or (f) destroys, defaces or removes any object, whether animate or inanimate, in a marine park or marine reserve, shall be guilty of an offence.

03Section 41Malaysia (federal Malaysian fisheries waters) · federal

Establishment and purposes of marine parks / marine reserves

Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317)

ENGwreiddiol

41. (1) The Minister may be order in the Gazette establish any area or part of an area in Malaysian fisheries waters as a marine park or marine reserve in order to— (a) afford special protection to the aquatic flora and fauna of such area or part thereof and to protect, preserve and manage the natural breeding grounds and habitat of aquatic life, with particular regard to species of rare or endangered flora and fauna; (b) allow for the natural regeneration of aquatic life in such area or part thereof where such life has been depleted; (c) promote scientific study and research in respect of such area or part thereof; (d) preserve and enhance the pristine state and productivity of such area or part thereof; and (e) regulate recreational and other activities in such area or part thereof to avoid irreversible damage to its environment.

04Section 25Malaysia (federal Malaysian fisheries waters) · federal

General penalty for offences under the Act (applies to marine park fishing offences)

Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317)

ENGwreiddiol

25. Any person who contravenes or fails to comply with any provision of this Act shall be guilty of an offence and where no special penalty is provided in relation thereto, such person shall be liable— (a) where the vessel concerned is a foreign fishing vessel or the person concerned is a foreign national, to a fine not exceeding one million ringgit each in the case of the owner or master, and one hundred thousand ringgit in the case of every member of the crew; (b) in all other cases, to a fine not exceeding twenty thousand ringgit or a term of imprisonment not exceeding two years or both.

05Section 2 (interpretation)Malaysia (federal Malaysian fisheries waters) · federal

Definition of 'fishing' under the Act

Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317)

ENGwreiddiol

“fishing” means— (a) the catching, taking or killing of fish by any method; (b) the attempted catching, taking or killing of fish; (c) engaging in any activity which can reasonably be expected to result in the catching, taking or killing of fish; or (d) any operation in support of, or in preparation for, any activity described in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) of this definition;

Pryd gallwch blymio

Tymhorau a chyfyngiadau amser

Cyfnodau caeëdig, agored a chyfyngedig drwy gydol y flwyddyn. Cadarnhewch bob amser gaead rhywogaethau penodol yn lleol.

Dim tymhorau caeëdig wedi'u cofnodi — gwiriwch yn lleol cyn plymio.

Caniatâd i bysgota

Trwydded

Beth sydd ei angen arnoch i gael caniatâd i fod yn y dŵr, faint mae'n ei gostio, a sut i'w chael.

Trwydded yn ofynnoltrwy Royal Malaysia Police (speargun authorisation); Department of Fisheries Malaysia (marine park permissions)

Apply to the Royal Malaysia Police for authorisation to own/import a speargun (treated like a firearm; applications reported as difficult to obtain). Recreational angling charters fall under the Peninsular Malaysia Marine Department, but such permits do not authorise the use of fishing equipment such as spearguns.

Cael eich trwydded

Yn agor y porth swyddogol · dof.gov.my

Trwydded yn ofynnol
Math
No dedicated recreational spearfishing licence exists at federal level. Possession/use of a speargun requires a firearm-type licence from the Royal Malaysia Police (PDRM). All fishing inside marine parks requires written permission from the Director General of Fisheries, which is not granted for recreational spearfishing.
Cost
unknown
Dilysrwydd
unknown
Sut i'w chael
Apply to the Royal Malaysia Police for authorisation to own/import a speargun (treated like a firearm; applications reported as difficult to obtain). Recreational angling charters fall under the Peninsular Malaysia Marine Department, but such permits do not authorise the use of fishing equipment such as spearguns.
Awdurdod
Royal Malaysia Police (speargun authorisation); Department of Fisheries Malaysia (marine park permissions)

Offer a thechneg

Rheolau offer

Pa offer sydd wedi'i ganiatáu, sut y gellir ei ddefnyddio, a'r amodau sydd ynghlwm.

Gwn gwaywCaniatáu

Cyfyngiadau

  • Spring-guns, spear guns, spearfishing equipment, harpoons and suction guns are absolutely prohibited inside any marine park or marine reserve (Fisheries Act 1985 s.44).
  • Spearguns are treated by Malaysian authorities like firearms; ownership and import require a licence from the Royal Malaysia Police.
  • Common community guidance is that spearfishing is tolerated only by free-diving (without scuba) outside protected areas; scuba-assisted spearfishing is discouraged/treated as unsporting and may breach marine-park or local rules.

speargun_allowed=true reflects that spearguns are legal to own outside marine parks only with a Royal Malaysia Police licence; they are categorically banned inside marine parks. scuba_allowed left null - no clear verbatim federal rule on scuba-assisted spearfishing was found outside marine parks.

Beth y cewch ei gymryd

Terfynau dal a rhywogaethau gwarchodedig

Cwotâu dyddiol, meintiau lleiafswm, a rhywogaethau na ddylid byth eu cymryd.

Terfyn dyddiol

unknown

Rhywogaethau gwarchodedig — peidiwch â'u cymryd

  • GwarchodedigTurtles (excluded from the definition of 'fish' under the Fisheries Act 1985 and protected separately)
  • GwarchodedigOtters (excluded from the definition of 'fish' under the Fisheries Act 1985)

No federal recreational daily/size limits specific to spearfishing were located. The Fisheries Act 1985 definition of 'fish' expressly excludes otters, turtles and their eggs; turtles are protected under separate legislation. Additional protected-species and size rules may exist under state law (Sabah and Sarawak have their own fisheries/wildlife controls).

Pwy sy'n cael pysgota

Ymwelwyr a phreswylwyr

Sut mae'r rheolau'n wahanol ar gyfer ymwelwyr tramor a phreswylwyr lleol.

Ymwelwyr tramor

Trwydded arbennig yn ofynnol

Gofynion

  • Foreign nationals must not import or carry a speargun into Malaysia without authorisation from the Royal Malaysia Police; bringing a speargun in luggage without a licence is prohibited.
  • No spearfishing or fishing of any kind inside marine parks/reserves.

Cyfyngiadau

  • Under section 25(a) of the Fisheries Act 1985, a foreign national who commits a fishing offence faces a substantially higher fine (up to one million ringgit for owner/master) than a local offender.
  • Speargun import without proper authorisation can lead to legal consequences (treated like a firearm).

allowed left null - foreigners are not specifically banned from spearfishing outside marine parks, but the firearm-style speargun licensing makes lawful spearfishing impractical for visitors. Penalties for fishing offences are markedly higher for foreign nationals.

Preswylwyr

Speargun ownership/use requires a Royal Malaysia Police licence; no dedicated recreational spearfishing permit from the Department of Fisheries.

Gofynion

  • Obtain a speargun licence from the Royal Malaysia Police before owning or using a speargun.
  • Do not spearfish inside any gazetted marine park or marine reserve.

Same firearm-style speargun licensing applies to residents and citizens. Sabah and Sarawak operate their own fisheries administrations alongside the federal framework.

Ble ar yr arfordir

Parthau caniatáu a gwaharddedig

Ardaloedd penodol sydd ar agor i neu wedi'u cau ar gyfer pysgota â gwaywffon. Gweler y darlun llawn ar y map rhyngweithiol.

Ardaloedd gwaharddedig

  • Malaysia's first marine park (established 1974), off Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. Spearfishing and all fishing are prohibited within the marine park under the Fisheries Act 1985.

  • Kedah Marine Park comprising Pulau Payar, Pulau Lembu, Pulau Kaca and Pulau Segantang, south of Langkawi. The marine park extends two nautical miles seaward from the outermost points of the islands at low water mark. Fishing is absolutely prohibited and an offence under the Fisheries Act 1985.

  • Pahang Marine Park; Pulau Tioman and eight nearby islands are declared marine parks/reserves under the Fisheries Act 1985, with a two-nautical-mile protected zone. Fishing and spearfishing prohibited.

  • Fisheries Protected Areas / marine park covering a two-nautical-mile band seaward from the low-water mark of the islands Perhentian Kecil, Perhentian Besar, Susu Dara, Lima, Redang, Lang Tengah, Ekor Tebu, Pinang, Nyireh, Kapas and Tenggol (Kapas Island zoned to one nautical mile). Fishing and spearfishing prohibited under the Fisheries Act 1985.

  • Johor Marine Park, gazetted under the Fisheries Act 1985; two-nautical-mile protected zone where fishing and spearfishing are prohibited.

  • Federal Territory of Labuan marine park (Kuraman, Rusukan Besar, Rusukan Kecil islands), gazetted under the Fisheries Act 1985. Protected zone of one nautical mile around these islands. Fishing and spearfishing prohibited.

  • Malacca (Melaka) Marine Park, gazetted by the Department of Fisheries Malaysia on 4 April 2023 under s.41 Part IX Fisheries Act 1985, comprising Pulau Undan, Pulau Dodol and Pulau Nangka in the Strait of Malacca. As a marine park under the Fisheries Act 1985, spearguns/spearfishing equipment are absolutely prohibited (s.44) and all fishing is an offence (s.43). Center point near Pulau Undan, off the Melaka coast.

  • Sabah marine park at the entrance to Darvel Bay off Semporna, east coast of Sabah, comprising the islands Bodgaya, Boheydulang, Sebangkat, Selakan, Maiga, Sibuan and Mantabuan and surrounding reefs. Managed by Sabah Parks; the park is zoned (no-take, general-use, preservation zones) and fishing/spearfishing is prohibited within its no-take zones.

  • Sarawak's first marine national park (~19,414 ha), covering the shore and surrounding waters of four islands (Talang-Talang Besar, Talang-Talang Kecil, Satang Besar, Satang Kecil) off the Sarawak coast near Kuching/Sematan/Santubong. A turtle sanctuary managed by Sarawak Forestry Corporation; access and water activities are heavily restricted to designated areas and taking of marine life is prohibited for turtle conservation.

Cyflyrau ar y dŵr

Cyflyrau byw

Cipolwg morol a thywydd byw ger pwynt cyfeirio arfordirol yn Malaysia, o Open-Meteo. Mae cyflyrau'n amrywio ar hyd yr arfordir — triniwch fel dangosol.

Morol byw a thywydd ger Tunku Abdul Rahman Marine Park.

Cyflyrau

Pwy i ofyn iddynt

Awdurdodau

Y cyrff swyddogol sy'n gyfrifol am bysgodfeydd a thrwyddedu.

  • Department of Fisheries Malaysia (Jabatan Perikanan Malaysia)

    fisheries authority

    dof.gov.myWisma Tani, Putrajaya, Malaysia
  • Department of Fisheries Malaysia - Marine Park & Resources Management Division

    marine protected area authority

  • Royal Malaysia Police (Polis Diraja Malaysia, PDRM)

    firearms / speargun licensing authority

  • Marine Department of Peninsular Malaysia (Jabatan Laut Semenanjung Malaysia)

    maritime authority

O ble daw hyn

Ffynonellau

Mae pob honiad ar y dudalen hon yn deillio o un o'r cyfeiriadau hyn.

  1. [01]

    Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317) - online updated reprint (FAO FAOLEX)

    Swyddogol
    faolex.fao.orgCyrchwyd Meh 14
  2. [02]

    Management of Marine Parks, Turtle Centres and Sanctuaries - Department of Fisheries Malaysia

    Swyddogol
    dof.gov.myCyrchwyd Meh 14
  3. [03]

    Frequently Asked Questions - Marine Park & Resources Management, Department of Fisheries Malaysia

    Swyddogol
    marinepark.dof.gov.myCyrchwyd Meh 14
  4. [04]

    Licensing FAQ - Department of Fisheries Malaysia

    Swyddogol
    dof.gov.myCyrchwyd Meh 14
  5. [05]

    Marine Park, Malaysia (Perhentian / Terengganu marine park, 2 nautical mile boundary, island list)

    Eilradd
    pulauperhentian.com.myCyrchwyd Meh 14
  6. [06]

    Marine Park Rules - Marine Parks of Malaysia

    Eilradd
  7. [07]

    Tunku Abdul Rahman National Park - Wikipedia (coordinates, year established)

    Eilradd
    en.wikipedia.orgCyrchwyd Meh 14
  8. [08]

    Payar Island - Wikipedia (coordinates)

    Eilradd
    en.wikipedia.orgCyrchwyd Meh 14
  9. [09]

    Tioman Island - Wikipedia (coordinates, marine park status)

    Eilradd
    en.wikipedia.orgCyrchwyd Meh 14
  10. [10]

    Is Spearfishing Legal in Malaysia? - Lancaster Scuba (speargun = firearm licence; marine park ban)

    community
    lancasterscuba.comCyrchwyd Meh 14

Nodiadau'r ymchwilydd

Malaysia has no single national 'spearfishing' statute. Legality is governed by (1) the federal Fisheries Act 1985 (Act 317), which under Part IX absolutely prohibits spearguns/spearfishing equipment inside marine parks and marine reserves (s.44) and makes all fishing in them an offence (s.43), punishable by a fine up to RM20,000 or up to two years' imprisonment (s.25 general penalty; the official DOF marine-park FAQ states 'a fine up to RM20,000 or two years jail'); and (2) firearm-style licensing of spearguns by the Royal Malaysia Police. Marine parks extend two nautical miles (one nautical mile around certain islands such as Kapas and the Labuan group) from the islands' low-water mark and cover most of Malaysia's well-known dive sites, so de facto spearfishing must occur outside those zones. The six gazetted marine park clusters are Johor (Pulau Tinggi), Kedah (Pulau Payar), Pahang (Pulau Tioman), Terengganu (Redang/Perhentian/Lang Tengah/Kapas/Tenggol), Melaka and Labuan; Sabah additionally manages parks such as Tunku Abdul Rahman, Tun Sakaran and Tun Mustapha. Sabah and Sarawak retain some of their own fisheries/wildlife jurisdiction; state-specific recreational catch limits and seasons were not retrievable as verbatim text and are marked unknown/empty rather than guessed. Verbatim law text in law_texts[] comes from the FAOLEX online reprint of Act 317; section numbering and wording were extracted directly from that PDF. data_confidence=medium: the federal prohibition is strongly sourced and verbatim, but recreational licensing specifics (cost, validity), state-level rules, and any open/closed seasons could not be confirmed from primary sources.

Aros yn gyfredolMynediad cynnar

Hysbysu fi pan fo rheolau Malaysia yn newid

Byddwn yn anfon e-bost atoch pan fo tymhorau neu reoliadau Malaysia yn cael eu diweddaru yn ein set ddata.

Hysbysu fi am

Dim sbam — rhybuddion newid yn unig. Dad-danysgrifio unrhyw bryd. Nid ydym byth yn gwerthu eich e-bost.