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- 254,000 Cars Sold So Far In 2026! A Look At Which Malaysian States Are Freezing In Traffic
254,000 Cars Sold So Far In 2026! A Look At Which Malaysian States Are Freezing In Traffic

The Malaysian Automotive Association (MAA) just dropped the data for the first four months of 2026, and the numbers are staggering. Total Industry Volume (TIV) edged up to 254,318 units delivered from January to April.
While manufacturers are celebrating a 2% year-on-year bump, everyday commuters are facing a completely different reality. We are actively buying cars faster than our infrastructure can handle, and it is turning our major state routes into sprawling, stationary parking lots.
TIV 2026: The Story So Far
The story of Malaysia's Total Industry Volume (TIV) so far in 2026 has been a roller coaster of shifting momentum. The year kicked off with a strong January surge that saw 64,298 vehicles delivered, before hitting a predictable speed bump during the festive season shutdowns of February and March, which recorded 52,414 units and 63,489 units respectively.
However, the market roared right back to life in April, charting a massive 14% month-on-month jump with 72,113 units rolling out of showrooms. This explosive post-holiday recovery has officially pushed total year-to-date deliveries to a staggering 254,318 cars in just the first four months of the year.
The Gridlock Breakdown: Where Traffic Is Freezing
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With over a quarter-million new vehicles hitting local tarmac in just 120 days, certain states are bearing the brunt of the weight. Based on the latest data from the TomTom Traffic Index (focusing strictly on the 'City' boundary metrics rather than broader 'Metro' areas) and regional tracking metrics from the Malaysian Highway Authority (LLM), here is exactly where the gridlock is hitting the hardest:

Data via TomTom
1. Penang (George Town & Seberang Perai)
Officially the undisputed traffic nightmare of Malaysia. According to TomTom’s latest data, George Town ranks as the #1 most congested city in the country with a brutal 56.7% congestion level. Island limitations meet massive vehicle density here, causing the average commuter to lose a staggering 100 hours a year purely to rush-hour gridlock. To make matters worse, its mainland counterpart, Seberang Perai, sits closely at #4 nationwide with a 42.4% congestion level.
The Chokepoints: The Penang Bridge (both bounds), Tun Dr Lim Chong Eu Expressway, and the narrow, historic grid of George Town.
2. Kelantan (Kota Bharu)
The biggest surprise on the national index. Kota Bharu has climbed to become the #2 most congested city in Malaysia, registering an intense 47.9% congestion level. Despite lacking the heavy urban rail infrastructure of the Klang Valley, its localized town center bottlenecks mean drivers here waste 84 hours a year trapped in bumper-to-bumper queues, matching Kuala Lumpur minute-for-minute.
The Chokepoints: Sultan Yahya Petra Bridge, Jalan Sultan Ibrahim, and the central commercial intersections of the city during peak hours.
3. Kuala Lumpur & Selangor (The Klang Valley)
Sitting at #3 on the national index, Kuala Lumpur maintains a heavy 43.4% congestion level (marking a 0.9 percentage point increase from previous metrics). The sprawling nature of the Klang Valley means drivers collectively lose 84 hours a year during peak windows, while neighboring hub Kajang also clocks into the top tier (#7 nationwide) at 29.4%. A single minor mishap on any main arterial instantly triggers localized paralysis across the valley.
The Chokepoints: The Federal Highway, Jalan Tuanku Abdul Halim (Jalan Duta), and the high-volume routes flanking Mid Valley.
4. Johor (Johor Bahru)
Ranking at #5 nationwide, Johor Bahru is experiencing the highest rate of congestion growth on the list, surging by an aggressive 2.6 percentage points to a 39.5% congestion level. JB drivers are now losing 65 hours a year to a volatile mix of daily local commuters, heavy industrial port logistics, and massive cross-border traffic flowing to and from Singapore.
The Chokepoints: The Johor Bahru Eastern Dispersal Link (EDL), Pasir Gudang Highway, and the southern PLUS stretches around Simpang Renggam and Sedenak.
5. Perak (Ipoh)
While city traffic inside Ipoh is building (#6 nationwide at 34.4% congestion, costing drivers 62 hours a year), Perak’s ultimate issue is its role as the definitive transit spine of the North-South Expressway (PLUS). Whenever long weekends or holiday return rushes trigger, the city lines bleed directly onto the highway, effectively freezing the state's transit routes over.
The Chokepoints: The notorious Menora Tunnel stretch, Slim River to Sungkai, and the high-volume bottleneck between Tapah and Gopeng.
The Economic & Psychological Toll
RM21,250 Per Person: The staggering annual economic loss suffered by an individual Klang Valley worker just from sitting in traffic.
According to occupational safety and health expert Dr. Ismaniza Ismail from Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM), this gridlock functions as a "hidden time tax" that continuously erodes the efficiency of the national workforce. Based on an hourly productivity value of RM42.50 and a standard two-hour daily round-trip commute, a single worker effectively burns RM85 a day doing nothing but idling on the tarmac.
When you scale that up across a workforce, the macro-economic reality becomes terrifying. If just one million urban commuters face these exact road conditions, Malaysia risks draining up to RM21.2 billion annually in lost national productivity.
What’s Driving the Momentum?

The local automotive engine isn't showing signs of slowing down just yet. The market's steady climb is being sustained by a few distinct catalysts:
- Production Normalization: Local assembly plants have ramped up utilization post-festive breaks, rolling out 70,611 units in April alone to clear backlogged waiting lists.
- The First-Car Segment: Value-focused giants Perodua and Proton continue to anchor massive volume through models like the Bezza, Axia, and Saga.
- The EV Shift: A dramatic influx of New Energy Vehicles (NEVs), led heavily by mass-market options like the Proton eMas 5 and aggressive portfolio expansions from brands like BYD, is capturing a brand-new segment of urban commuters.
MAA expects this sales velocity to hold firm through May. Great news for the industry's balance sheets, but maybe it's time to start leaving 20 minutes earlier for your morning commute.
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Written By
Sofea Najmi
A Bachelor of English Language and Literature graduate with an obsession for the finer details. Sofea uses her background in translation to decode the technicalities of automotive innovation. She is dedicated to delivering impactful, meticulously researched articles that provide a narrative far beyond the spec sheet. LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3C018vv
