5 listings

KLCC Luxury Condos for Sale

KLCC is the most established luxury address in Kuala Lumpur. It covers the streets around the Petronas Twin Towers, Suria KLCC, and KLCC Park, and it is usually where overseas buyers start when they look at the city. This page lists every KLCC condo we currently have for sale, with a 2026 price comparison and a short buyer's guide for both local and foreign buyers.

MRT Access

Putrajaya Line (KLCC Station)

Tenure

Freehold & Leasehold available

Price from

RM 1,000,000

KLCC Condo Prices in 2026

DevelopmentTenurePrice fromAvg RM/sq ftSize (sq ft)Nearest MRT/Monorail
Eaton ResidencesleaseholdRM 1,000,000RM 1,600635 to 1,7225 min walk to Conlay (Putrajaya Line)
The ConlayfreeholdRM 1,145,000RM 2,450743 to 1,3355 min walk to Conlay (Putrajaya Line)
Aria ResidencesfreeholdRM 1,200,000RM 1,500630 to 1,5025 min walk to Conlay (Putrajaya Line)
Sofitel KLCCfreeholdRM 1,655,000RM 2,300566 to 5,0443 min walk to KLCC (Putrajaya Line)
Royal Lexis KLCCfreeholdRM 1,800,000RM 3,000573 to 1,2253 min walk to Bukit Nanas (KL Monorail Line)

Indicative entry prices for currently marketed units. Contact Ryan Tan for live availability, floor plans, and best-priced stock.

KLCC condo prices in 2026

Most KLCC condos sell for somewhere between RM 1,500 and RM 3,000 per square foot in 2026. The lowest entry point is around RM 1,000,000 for a smaller leasehold unit. Leasehold projects like Eaton Residences sit near the bottom of that range, at about RM 1,600 psf. The freehold branded residences, The Conlay and Royal Lexis KLCC among them, are the priciest, at RM 2,450 to RM 3,000 psf.

Tenure is the main thing that moves price here. Freehold units resell for roughly 10 to 20% more than comparable leasehold ones, mostly because there is so little freehold land left inside KLCC. If you are buying to hold for the long term, paying the freehold premium is usually worth it.

Why buy in KLCC

KLCC has the deepest resale market of any prime district in KL, so it is easier to sell again when you need to. The tenant pool is strong as well: bankers, oil and gas executives, diplomats, and MM2H retirees who want to live within walking distance of the office, the mall, and the park.

Getting around is easy. Most buildings are a three to five minute walk from KLCC station on the Putrajaya Line, which now runs straight through to TRX and on to Putrajaya. Limited new freehold supply and steady tenant demand are why KLCC has stayed at the top of the market for more than twenty years.

Can foreigners buy in KLCC?

Yes. A foreigner can buy a KLCC condo and hold it in their own name, on freehold or leasehold title. You do not need a local partner or a company. The one real condition is price. In Kuala Lumpur a foreign buyer has to spend at least RM 1,000,000 per unit, and most KLCC condos are above that anyway.

If you are applying for MM2H, the same rules apply, and a KLCC unit often doubles as the property you need for the programme. We handle the whole process for overseas buyers: viewings in person or by video, price negotiation, the sale and purchase agreement, the lawyer, the MM2H paperwork, and renting the unit out after handover.

Rental yields and outlook

A well-chosen KLCC condo usually returns about 3.5 to 5% gross. Furnished units in buildings with full facilities, such as Sofitel KLCC or The Conlay, tend to rent fastest and sit empty the least. Most of the demand comes from expatriates working nearby and from the embassies off Jalan Tun Razak and Ampang.

The 2026 picture is straightforward. Almost no new freehold land is coming up inside KLCC, and the kind of tenant who rents here keeps coming back. If your priority is yield, look at the leasehold entry points. If it is long-term value and an easy resale later, pay for freehold.

The best KLCC condos for sale right now

We currently list five KLCC condos for sale, and they suit very different buyers. Here is the plain rundown, cheapest first.

Eaton Residences is the lowest cash entry, from RM 1,000,000 for a leasehold unit at about RM 1,600 per square foot. It finished in 2022 and sits a five minute walk from Conlay station on the Putrajaya Line. Layouts run large, up to 1,722 square feet, so it is the one to buy when you want the most space for your money.

Aria Residences is the value freehold. From RM 1,200,000 at roughly RM 1,500 per square foot, it is the lowest price per foot on this list and still freehold, which is rare inside KLCC. Hap Seng Land finished it in 2019, a five minute walk from Conlay station, so you can move in or rent it out today.

The Conlay is the branded pick, from RM 1,145,000 at about RM 2,450 per square foot. Eastern and Oriental built it with Mitsui Fudosan and handed it over in 2024, with hotel-grade management a short walk from Pavilion KL and Conlay station.

Sofitel KLCC is the one closest to the action, a three minute walk to KLCC station and next to Suria KLCC and KLCC Park. Prices start at RM 1,655,000, about RM 2,300 per square foot, with units running up to 5,044 square foot penthouses for the top of the market.

Royal Lexis KLCC is the newest, a freehold launch by KL Metro Group due around 2029. It is the priciest at about RM 3,000 per square foot from RM 1,800,000. Look at it if you want brand-new stock near Bukit Nanas on the KL Monorail Line and you are comfortable buying off the plan.

What a KLCC condo costs beyond the asking price

The sticker price is not the whole bill. On a RM 1,200,000 KLCC condo, plan for roughly RM 44,000 to RM 50,000 in buying costs on top of the price, about 3.7 to 4.2%. That covers stamp duty on the transfer, legal fees on the sale and purchase agreement, and loan documentation if you borrow.

Stamp duty on the transfer is tiered: 1% on the first RM 100,000, 2% up to RM 500,000, 3% up to RM 1,000,000, and 4% on anything above that. On a RM 1,200,000 condo that comes to about RM 32,000. Legal fees for the agreement run close to 1% of the price. So on that same unit you are looking at roughly RM 44,000 to RM 50,000 in transaction costs on top of the price, before any furnishing.

Foreign buyers should plan for a loan margin of about 70%, so a 30% deposit, though it varies by bank and profile. On the way out, the gain is taxed under RPGT, at 30% if you sell within five years and 10% after. None of this is a reason not to buy. It is a reason to hold for the medium term rather than flip, which suits KLCC anyway.

KLCC or TRX: which one to buy

A lot of KLCC buyers also look at TRX, the newer financial district one stop down the Putrajaya Line. Here is the short version of why most of them still choose KLCC.

KLCC is the established market. It has the deepest pool of buyers and tenants in Kuala Lumpur, the most freehold stock, and a track record stretching back more than twenty years. That is what makes resale easier and prices steadier here than anywhere else in the city, and it is why a KLCC condo holds its value when you come to sell.

TRX is the growth play, for buyers who want brand-new stock and will hold while the district fills in. If that is you, read our TRX condos for sale. But if you want a proven address, an easy resale, and freehold title near the Petronas Twin Towers, KLCC is the safer buy.

Written and reviewed by Ryan Tan, Senior Negotiator (REN 39046)

Ryan negotiates KLCC and TRX luxury condo sales for Zeon Properties International and advises local and overseas buyers, including MM2H applicants. For live availability or a viewing, reach him on WhatsApp (+60 10-450 9896).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the price range for KLCC luxury condos in 2026?

Most KLCC condos for sale go for RM 1,500 to RM 3,000 per square foot in 2026. The lowest entry point is around RM 1,000,000 for a smaller leasehold unit.

Can foreigners buy a condo in KLCC?

Yes. Foreigners can buy a KLCC condo in their own name. The main rule is the price floor: a foreign buyer in Kuala Lumpur must spend at least RM 1,000,000 per unit, which most KLCC condos clear. MM2H holders buy on the same terms.

Are freehold properties available in KLCC?

Yes, but the supply is limited. Aria Residences, The Conlay, Sofitel KLCC, and Royal Lexis KLCC all offer freehold title near the Twin Towers. Expect to pay roughly 10 to 20% more than for a similar leasehold unit, and to get most of that back when you sell.

What rental yield can a KLCC condo achieve?

Around 3.5 to 5% gross for a well-located unit. Furnished apartments in full-facility buildings rent the fastest, helped by steady demand from expatriates working in the area.

Which KLCC condos are best for investment?

It depends on your goal. For resale value and an easy exit, the freehold branded residences like The Conlay, Sofitel KLCC, and Royal Lexis KLCC are the safer pick. For a lower entry price and higher yield, a leasehold option such as Eaton Residences works better.

How close is KLCC to the nearest MRT station?

Most KLCC buildings are a three to five minute walk from KLCC station on the Putrajaya Line, which connects directly to TRX, KL Sentral, and Putrajaya.

Is a KLCC apartment for sale the same as a condo?

Yes. In Kuala Lumpur, apartment and condo mean the same high-rise unit, so a KLCC apartment for sale and a KLCC condo for sale are the same listings. What moves the price is tenure, the building's age and management, and how close it sits to KLCC Park and the LRT, not the word on the advert.

Are there condos near KLCC within walking distance of the park?

Several. Sofitel KLCC is about a three minute walk to KLCC station, right next to Suria KLCC and the park. Most other towers sit three to five minutes from KLCC or Conlay station on the Putrajaya Line. Ask which entrance faces the park, because that changes the daily walk more than the map distance does.

Do foreigners pay capital gains tax when selling a KLCC condo?

Malaysia has no general capital gains tax, but a property sale is subject to RPGT (Real Property Gains Tax). A foreign seller pays 30% on the gain within the first 5 years and 10% after that. Malaysian citizens and permanent residents pay nothing from the sixth year. Factor it into your holding period.

What is the cheapest KLCC condo for sale?

Eaton Residences is the lowest cash entry, from RM 1,000,000 for a leasehold unit at about RM 1,600 per square foot. If you want freehold for not much more, Aria Residences starts at RM 1,200,000 and has the lowest price per square foot on our KLCC list, around RM 1,500.

Which KLCC condo offers the best value?

Aria Residences, on the numbers. It is freehold at about RM 1,500 per square foot, the lowest on our KLCC list, and it completed in 2019 so you can move in or rent it out now. Eaton Residences is cheaper to enter at RM 1,000,000 but the title is leasehold.

How long does it take a foreigner to buy a KLCC condo?

Plan for about three to six months from offer to keys. The sale and purchase agreement and the loan take roughly six to ten weeks, and foreign buyers also need state consent to transfer the title, which adds a few weeks. We run the whole timeline for you, including viewings by video if you are overseas.