Credit Bureau Singapore and Experian Malaysia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to develop a two-way cross-border credit reporting service between Singapore and Malaysia.
The proposed service aims to support individuals with financial footprints in both countries. It could help lenders assess applicants more fairly by considering verified credit histories from across the border.
The collaboration comes as both markets strengthen digital financial services, cross-border business activity, and economic ties through initiatives such as the Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone.
Singapore and Malaysia share one of ASEAN’s closest economic relationships, supported by trade, employment, education, and business links.
As more people work, study, invest, or run businesses across both markets, their financial records may no longer sit neatly within one country. This can create challenges when applying for loans, credit cards, or other financial products.
The proposed framework aims to address this gap by enabling consent-based credit report applications between both countries in a structured and secure way.
For consumers, the initiative could reduce the risk of being treated as “new-to-credit” when moving between Malaysia and Singapore.
This is especially relevant for professionals, digital workers, entrepreneurs, and platform-based business owners whose income or financial activity may span both sides of the Causeway.
With verified credit information, lenders may be able to make more complete assessments, giving eligible consumers better access to suitable financial products.
For banks and financial institutions, cross-border credit data can provide a clearer view of an applicant’s financial obligations.
This may support stronger underwriting, better fraud detection, and more confident lending decisions, especially as digital banking, fintech, e-commerce, and SME financing continue to grow.
The collaboration is also aligned with the JS-SEZ’s focus on digital industries, data-driven services, and technology-enabled business growth.
CBS and Experian Malaysia said consumer consent, data protection, and regulatory compliance will be central to the initiative.
The proposed framework will define the roles of the source and processing bureaus, secure consent mechanisms, personal data safeguards, and governance models for implementation.
Both parties will work within their respective legal and regulatory frameworks while engaging relevant authorities to support responsible rollout.
The MOU reflects how financial infrastructure must evolve as ASEAN economies become more connected.
By allowing credit histories to move responsibly across borders, Singapore and Malaysia could improve financial inclusion while supporting safer, more transparent lending.
If implemented successfully, the initiative may also become a useful model for future cross-border financial data collaboration in the region.
As Southeast Asia’s economies become more connected, trusted financial infrastructure will play a larger role in supporting mobility, trade, digital business, and inclusive access to capital. RiseAsia tracks the partnerships and innovations shaping this next phase of regional growth.
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Cross-border credit reporting allows approved credit information from one country to be used by authorised parties in another country, with consumer consent.
The MOU was signed by Credit Bureau Singapore and Experian Information Services Malaysia.
It may help people with financial records in both Singapore and Malaysia access credit more fairly, instead of being assessed as new applicants in each market.