Malaysian identity card
The Malaysian identity card, is the compulsory identity card for Malaysian citizens aged 12 and above. The current identity card, known as MyKad, was introduced by the National Registration Department of Malaysia on 5 September 2001 as one of four MSC Malaysia flagship applications and a replacement for the High Quality Identity Card, Malaysia became the first country in the world to use an identification card that incorporates both photo identification and fingerprint biometric data on an in-built computer chip embedded in a piece of plastic.
Besides the main purpose of the card as a validation tool and proof of citizenship other than the birth certificate, MyKad may also serve as a valid driver's license, an ATM card, an electronic purse, and a public key, among other applications, as part of the Malaysian Government Multipurpose Card initiative, if the bearer chooses to activate the functions.
Other cards which are currently in use or soon to be introduced in the GMPC initiative and share similar features are:
- MyKid – for Malaysian citizens under age of 12 including newborns ;
- MyPR – for Malaysian Permanent Residents;
- MyTentera – for Malaysian Armed Forces personnel; and
- MyPolis – for Royal Malaysia Police personnel.
Etymology
My can be:
- the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code for Malaysia; or
- the English word '
- the Malay word for
Technical specifications
The upgraded and current version of the MyKad is a hybrid card containing two chips for both contact and contactless interfaces. Currently, this hybrid type MyKad is only issued in Malaysian states that employ the Touch 'n Go application.
The MyKad chip has a data retention up to 20 years, while the card itself has a lifespan of 10 years and has been tested according to the ISO 10373 standard.
Eligibility and adoption
All Malaysian citizens and permanent residents 12 years old or above are eligible for a MyKad. From 2001, it gradually replaced an older Malaysian Identity Card system, that had been in use since 1949 under British colonial rule, with the intention of becoming ubiquitous by 2007. Children are issued with a MyKid after birth. This card is "upgraded" to a MyKad on the 12th birthday. The MyKad must be replaced when a person reaches 18 years old, as it is a requirement that the photograph be "current".Adoption was optional but was spurred by the waiving of the application fee of between RM20 and RM50 until 31 December 2005. As of 27 December 2005, 1,180,208 Malaysians still held an old identity card. After the waiving period ended on 31 December 2005, each new first-time application comes with a fee of RM10.
Structure of the National Registration Identity Card Number (NRIC)
The current format of the Malaysian identity card number, introduced in 1990, features 12 digits separated into three block by hyphens, as illustrated below:The above format is the official format as printed on the official identity documents e.g. MyKad. However, for database purposes, the NRIC Number may have its hyphens omitted, hence:
The first six digits signify the person's date of birth in the format; for example, a person born on 16 September 1963, would have 630916 as the first six digits of their identity card. A person born on 1 January 1900 would have 000101 as the first digits, same with a person born on 1 January 2000. In cases where the person's actual date of birth according to the Gregorian calendar is uncertain, the date on which the person first applied for a MyKad is used, noted by an asterisk.
PB, the seventh and eighth digit, based on the place of birth of the person, which will be referred from the birth certificate upon application of the MyKad. Policemen and armed forces are assigned with the unique digit, 88 and 99 respectively throughout their term of service. After ending their term of service, they would gain the MyKad with the middle digits based on their place of birth.
G, the 12th digit represents the gender of the person. The odd numbers for G denote male while the even numbers denote female.
On the back of the card, there is an additional 2-digit number after the 12-digit number to indicate the number of MyKad which a person previously held.
Place of birth
Prior to 2001, originally, any person who was born abroad used digit 71 or 72 in their identity card number, regardless with or without at least one parent with Malaysian citizenship. It is estimated that about 171,023 registered voters who born abroad and used digit 71 or 72 in MyKad.However, since 2001, any baby who was born abroad after 2001 is referred according to their place of birth rather than general digit 71 or 72 in their MyKad. It also affected any person who was born abroad regardless of their year of birth; who applying MyKad without holding High Quality Identity Card after 2001. Despite that, if any person born abroad who already had High Quality Identity Card which means they registered their identity card before 2001, they still retain digit 71 or 72 to be used in their MyKad identity card number. High Quality Identity Card was in use as the Malaysia's identity card from 1990 to 2001. After 2001, a person with High Quality Identity Card is expected to renew their High Quality Identity Card with new MyKad.
PB | Place of birth |
00 | |
01 | Johor |
02 | Kedah |
03 | Kelantan |
04 | Malacca |
05 | Negeri Sembilan |
06 | Pahang |
07 | Penang |
08 | Perak |
09 | Perlis |
10 | Selangor |
11 | Terengganu |
12 | Sabah |
13 | Sarawak |
14 | Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur |
15 | Federal Territory of Labuan |
16 | Federal Territory of Putrajaya |
17 | |
18 | |
19 | |
20 | |
21 | Johor |
22 | Johor |
23 | Johor |
24 | Johor |
25 | Kedah |
26 | Kedah |
27 | Kedah |
28 | Kelantan |
29 | Kelantan |
30 | Malacca |
31 | Negeri Sembilan |
32 | Pahang |
33 | Pahang |
34 | Penang |
35 | Penang |
36 | Perak |
37 | Perak |
38 | Perak |
39 | Perak |
40 | Perlis |
41 | Selangor |
42 | Selangor |
43 | Selangor |
44 | Selangor |
45 | Terengganu |
46 | Terengganu |
47 | Sabah |
48 | Sabah |
49 | Sabah |
50 | Sarawak |
51 | Sarawak |
52 | Sarawak |
53 | Sarawak |
54 | Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur |
55 | Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur |
56 | Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur |
57 | Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur |
58 | Federal Territory of Labuan |
59 | Negeri Sembilan |
PB | Place of birth |
60 | Brunei |
61 | Indonesia |
62 | Cambodia / Democratic Kampuchea / Kampuchea |
63 | Laos |
64 | Myanmar |
65 | Philippines |
66 | Singapore |
67 | Thailand |
68 | Vietnam |
69 | |
70 | |
71 | A person born outside Malaysia prior to 2001 Excluding those born abroad without holding High Quality Identity Card |
72 | A person born outside Malaysia prior to 2001 Excluding those born abroad without holding High Quality Identity Card |
73 | |
74 | China |
75 | India |
76 | Pakistan |
77 | Saudi Arabia |
78 | Sri Lanka |
79 | Bangladesh |
80 | |
81 | |
82 | Unknown state |
83 | American Samoa / Asia-Pacific / Australia / Christmas Island / Cocos Islands / Cook Islands / Fiji / French Polynesia / Guam / Heard Island and McDonald Islands / Marshall Islands / Micronesia / New Caledonia / New Zealand / Niue / Norfolk Island / Papua New Guinea / Timor Leste / Tokelau / United States Minor Outlying Islands / Wallis and Futuna Islands |
84 | Anguilla / Argentina / Aruba / Bolivia / Brazil / Chile / Colombia / Ecuador / French Guinea / Guadeloupe / Guyana / Paraguay / Peru / South America / South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands / Suriname / Uruguay / Venezuela |
85 | Africa / Algeria / Angola / Botswana / Burundi / Cameroon / Central African Republic / Chad / Congo-Brazzaville / Congo-Kinshasa / Djibouti / Egypt / Eritrea / Ethiopia / Gabon / Gambia / Ghana / Guinea / Kenya / Liberia / Malawi / Mali / Mauritania / Mayotte / Morocco / Mozambique / Namibia / Niger / Nigeria / Rwanda / Réunion / Senegal / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / Sudan / Swaziland / Tanzania / Togo / Tonga / Tunisia / Uganda / Western Sahara / Zaire / Zambia / Zimbabwe |
86 | Armenia / Austria / Belgium / Cyprus / Denmark / Europe / Faroe Islands / France / Finland / Finland, Metropolitan / Germany / Germany, Democratic Republic / Germany, Federal Republic / Greece / Holy See / Italy / Luxembourg / Macedonia / Malta / Mediterranean / Monaco / Netherlands / Norway / Portugal / Republic of Moldova / Slovakia / Slovenia / Spain / Sweden / Switzerland / United Kingdom-Dependent Territories / United Kingdom-National Overseas / United Kingdom-Overseas Citizen / United Kingdom-Protected Person / United Kingdom-Subject |
87 | Britain / Great Britain / Ireland |
88 | Bahrain / Iran / Iraq / Palestine / Jordan / Kuwait / Lebanon / Middle East / Oman / Qatar / Republic of Yemen / Syria / Turkey / United Arab Emirates / Yemen Arab Republic / Yemen People's Democratic Republic / Israel |
89 | Far East / Japan / North Korea / South Korea / Taiwan |
90 | Bahamas / Barbados / Belize / Caribbean / Costa Rica / Cuba / Dominica / Dominican Republic / El Salvador / Grenada / Guatemala / Haiti / Honduras / Jamaica / Martinique / Mexico / Nicaragua / Panama / Puerto Rico / Saint Kitts and Nevis / Saint Lucia / Saint Vincent and the Grenadines / Trinidad and Tobago / Turks and Caicos Islands / Virgin Islands |
91 | Canada / Greenland / Netherlands Antilles / North America / Saint Pierre and Miquelon / United States of America |
92 | Albania / Belarus / Bosnia and Herzegovina / Bulgaria / Byelorussia / Croatia / Czech Republic / Czechoslovakia / Estonia / Georgia / Hungary / Latvia / Lithuania / Montenegro / Poland / Republic of Kosovo / Romania / Russian Federation / Serbia / Soviet Union / U.S.S.R. / Ukraine |
93 | Afghanistan / Andorra / Antarctica / Antigua and Barbuda / Azerbaijan / Benin / Bermuda / Bhutan / Bora Bora / Bouvet Island / British Indian Ocean Territory / Burkina Faso / Cape Verde / Cayman Islands / Comoros / Dahomey / Equatorial Guinea / Falkland Islands / French Southern Territories / Gibraltar / Guinea-Bissau / Hong Kong / Iceland / Ivory Coast / Kazakhstan / Kiribati / Kyrgyzstan / Lesotho / Libya / Liechtenstein / Macau / Madagascar / Maghribi / Malagasy / Maldives / Mauritius / Mongolia / Montserrat / Nauru / Nepal / Northern Marianas Islands / Outer Mongolia / Palau / Palestine / Pitcairn Islands / Saint Helena / Saint Lucia / Saint Vincent and the Grenadines / Samoa / San Marino / São Tomé and Príncipe / Seychelles / Solomon Islands / Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands / Tajikistan / Turkmenistan / Tuvalu / Upper Volta / Uzbekistan / Vanuatu / Vatican City / Virgin Islands / Western Samoa / Yugoslavia |
94 | |
95 | |
96 | |
97 | |
98 | Stateless / Stateless Person Article 1/1954 |
99 | Mecca / Neutral Zone / No Information / Refugee / Refugee Article 1/1951 / United Nations Specialized Agency / United Nations Organization / Unspecified Nationality |
Applications on MyKad
The MyKad project was developed was originally intended to have four functions:- Identity card, including fingerprints and photo
- Driving licence
- Travel document in Malaysia and several neighbouring countries. However, a conventional passport is still required for international travel: the card is aimed at reducing congestion at the border by enabling the use of unmanned gates using biometric identification.
- Storage of health information
Current applications
- e-cash, an "electronic wallet" system intended for low-value, high-volume transactions
- ATM integration
- Touch 'n Go, Malaysia's toll road tolling system and also public transport payment
- Digital certificate, commonly known as Public Key Infrastructure, only supported by the 64Kb version
Future / proposed applications
The extensible design of the card may be leading to functionality creep. Further applications envisaged by the government include:- Frequent travellers' card
- Merge with the Payment Multi-Purpose Card, giving the MyKad credit and debit card functions that will pave the way for other financial uses
Personal identification
No unauthorised people, including security guards, are allowed to retain the MyKads of other people. Only those authorised by the National Registration Department, like the police and immigration officers, can do so.
For Muslim citizens, "Islam" is printed on the card below the picture of the holder. This is to help the enforcement of Shariah law which is only applicable to Muslims.
As the state of Sabah and Sarawak maintain separate immigration controls, citizens who have permanent residency in the state of Sabah and Sarawak are denoted by the letters "H" and "K" respectively on the bottom right corner of the card.
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)
MyKad's Public Key Infrastructure application allows for two digital certificates to be inserted. MyKad holders can apply and purchase the digital certificates from two of Malaysia's certification authority, and .PKI allows for easy securing of private data over public telecommunications networks, thus allowing, secure electronic transactions over the Internet which include:
- Online submission of tax returns
- Internet banking
- Secure email
MyKad as a travel document
Malaysia and Brunei signed a frequent travellers cards agreement on 10 September 2007, allowing Malaysian and Bruneian frequent travellers to register to use their national identity cards for travel between Malaysia and Brunei.
As Malaysia stopped issuing and renewing Restricted Passports for citizens from Peninsular Malaysia to travel to Singapore beginning 1 January 2005, Malaysia considered negotiating with Singapore to allow frequent Malaysian travellers to enter Singapore using MyKad. However, Singapore rejected the use of MyKad by frequent Malaysian travellers to enter the country, citing security concerns.
MyID
The MyID is a Malaysian Government initiative that implements the National Registration Identity Card Number as the sole reference number for Malaysians in their transactions as an individual with the government agencies.Other cards with similar MyKad features
MyKid
MyKid is a chip-based children identity card or personal identification document issued to children under the age of 12. Introduced on 1 January 2003, MyKid contains features similar to MyKad except that it does not include a photograph and thumbprint biometric data. For registration of new birth, MyKid will be processed during the application for registration of birth. Children born before 2003 do not get a MyKid.The term Kid refers to:
- Slang for child in the English language; or
- Acronym for Kad Identiti Diri or Personal Identification Card.
- The heading Kad Pengenalan Kanak-kanak Malaysia
- NRIC Numbers
- Full name
- Permanent address
- Gender
- Citizenship status
- Parent's religion
- Birth data e.g., information on birth parents
- Health information e.g., immunisation records
- Education information e.g., enrolment in schools
- Reduces use of paper forms when dealing with government or private agencies
- Used in transactions with departments or agencies such as hospitals or clinics for medical examination, schooling, etc.
- Portable due to its small size
- Contains security features to prevent abuse
- Uses chip technology where information can be read on the card or in the chip. The information in the chip can also be updated easily.
- Attractive design
MyPR
- The heading: Malaysia Permanent Resident Identity Card
- Full name
- NRIC number
- Permanent address
- Gender
- Permanent residence status
MyKAS
MyKAS must be renewed within five years.
MyTentera
The MyTentera will replace the current BAT C 10 document .The MyTentera will be silver and feature the Malaysian Armed Forces logo at the back top-right corner. It will also contain a 12-digit military identification number similar to the NRIC Number.