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Financial Literacy for Fresh Graduates

Navigate your first salary, understand deductions, build smart savings habits, and manage PTPTN loans with confidence

Starting your career is exciting. Your first paycheck arrives and suddenly you’re responsible for your own finances. It’s a lot to figure out — payslip deductions, tax withholding, loan repayment schedules. But here’s the thing: you don’t need to understand everything immediately. We’ve put together resources covering the essentials so you can make informed decisions about your money from day one.

Essential Guides for New Earners

Start with the fundamentals and build your financial foundation

Payslip document displayed on a desk with calculator and pen beside it

Understanding Your First Payslip

Breaking down gross salary, EPF, tax deductions, and what actually goes into your bank account each month

7 min Beginner March 2026
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Person writing in a notebook with financial charts visible in the background

Building Savings Habits on Your First Salary

Practical strategies for setting aside money without feeling restricted, even when your salary feels tight

10 min Beginner March 2026
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Computer screen showing PTPTN loan information portal interface

PTPTN Loan Repayment Planning

How income-based repayment works, deferment options, and strategies to manage your loan alongside other financial goals

9 min Intermediate March 2026
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Budget planning worksheet and financial calculator on a clean desk surface

Creating Your First Monthly Budget

A straightforward approach to budgeting that doesn’t require complicated spreadsheets or financial apps

8 min Beginner March 2026
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Key Financial Principles

Five foundational concepts that guide smart financial decisions

1

Pay Yourself First

Prioritize saving even small amounts before spending on wants. When you automate transfers to savings on payday, you’re less likely to miss the money.

2

Understand Your Deductions

EPF, tax, and other deductions aren’t optional costs — they’re mandatory. Understanding what comes out and why helps you plan realistically for expenses.

3

Separate Needs from Wants

Housing, food, and transport are needs. Everything else is a want. When budgeting, cover your needs first, then allocate what’s left.

4

Build an Emergency Fund

Aim for three to six months of expenses in savings. This prevents debt when unexpected costs appear — medical bills, car repairs, job changes.

5

Plan for Loan Repayment

Whether it’s PTPTN or other loans, factor repayment into your budget from the start. Don’t treat it as extra money you have — it’s an obligation.

Getting Started This Month

Simple actions you can take right now to improve your financial situation

Review Your Payslip

Get a copy of your latest payslip. Write down the gross amount, EPF contribution, tax deduction, and net amount you receive. This is your starting point.

Set Up Automatic Savings

Contact your bank about automatic transfers. Even RM100-200 per month adds up. Schedule it for payday so you save before spending.

Check Your PTPTN Status

Log into the PTPTN website and verify your loan amount, repayment status, and income threshold. Know exactly what you owe.

List Your Fixed Expenses

Write down everything that’s the same each month — rent, utilities, PTPTN payment, insurance. This is your financial baseline.

Open a Dedicated Savings Account

Many banks offer high-interest savings accounts. Having money in a separate account makes it harder to accidentally spend your savings.

Track One Month of Spending

For one full month, write down everything you spend — every coffee, every meal, every purchase. This reveals patterns and problem areas.