Data centre land in Johor is among the most actively traded industrial asset in the JS-SEZ in 2026, driven by hyperscale cloud provider demand and the Sedenak Tech Valley designation. Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation data centre policy.
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Why Johor Has Become Southeast Asia’s Data Centre Hub
Johor’s emergence as a hyperscale data centre destination is not accidental. The state offers a combination of factors that has made it the fastest-growing data centre market in Southeast Asia: proximity to Singapore’s submarine cable landing stations with land prices 85–90% lower, stable Tenaga Nasional power grid with dedicated industrial feeds, abundant water for cooling, and a state government that has made data centre attraction a policy priority backed by the JS-SEZ incentive framework.
Quick answer: Johor has over 3 GW of data centre capacity announced or under construction as of mid-2026, with Sedenak Tech Valley, Nusajaya Tech Park, and Peng Gerang emerging as the primary clusters. Land can still be acquired freehold at RM 15–80 psf depending on zone and infrastructure readiness.
The Major Data Centre Clusters in Johor
Sedenak Tech Valley, Kulai
Johor’s flagship data centre township, developed by Johor Corporation (JCorp) and positioned as the state’s primary answer to Singapore’s land constraints. Sedenak has signed tenants including Microsoft, Oracle, and multiple hyperscalers. Infrastructure highlights: 132kV dedicated substations, high-capacity fibre backbone, industrial water supply, and a JB-KL expressway interchange within 5 minutes. Land prices: RM 30–60 psf for industrial-zoned land with data centre entitlement.
Nusajaya Tech Park, Iskandar Puteri
A 1,600-acre industrial and tech park within the Iskandar Malaysia growth corridor, adjacent to the Medini JS-SEZ zone. Hosts EdgeConneX, GDS Holdings, and regional colocation providers. Closer to Singapore than Sedenak, with direct connection to the Second Link freight corridor. Land prices: RM 40–80 psf for titled data centre-ready land.
Tanjung Pelepas / Gelang Patah
Emerging data centre cluster adjacent to Port of Tanjung Pelepas. Benefits from established submarine cable infrastructure (several cables land near PTP), strong logistics connectivity, and large available land parcels. Less mature ecosystem than Sedenak but attracting new-entrant hyperscalers seeking lower land costs. Land prices: RM 15–35 psf.
Senai Airport City
Airport-adjacent data centre development driven by proximity to Senai International Airport for equipment import/export and staff access. Smaller cluster than Sedenak but growing; suited to regional-scale operators rather than hyperscalers. Land prices: RM 25–50 psf.
Land Specifications: What Data Centre Operators Need
| Requirement | Specification | Johor Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Power capacity | Minimum 20 MW for hyperscale; 2–5 MW for colocation | Good — TNB industrial feeds available; dedicated substations in Sedenak and Nusajaya |
| Land size | 5–50 acres for hyperscale; 1–5 acres for regional | Excellent — large contiguous parcels available |
| Connectivity | Dual-route fibre, sub-20ms latency to Singapore | Good — multiple carriers; latency ~5ms to Singapore PoPs |
| Water supply | Industrial water for cooling; 500,000–5M litres/day | Good — Johor Water Board industrial allocations available |
| Flood risk | Low — above 100-year flood line | Zone-dependent — Sedenak and Senai are low-risk; some coastal zones require flood mitigation |
| Tenure | Freehold or 99-year leasehold | Both available; freehold increasingly common for industrial land in Johor |
JS-SEZ Incentives for Data Centre Operators
Data centres are among the 11 priority sectors under the JS-SEZ framework. Qualifying data centre operators can access: 5% corporate tax on qualifying income for 15 years (vs standard Malaysian 24% CIT), import duty and sales tax exemptions on qualifying equipment, and expedited approvals through the one-stop IMFC-J window. For hyperscalers investing more than RM 500 million, bespoke incentive packages can be negotiated directly with MIDA.
Colocation vs. Build-to-Own: Which Route for Singapore Companies?
For most Singapore companies, colocation in an existing Johor data centre is the faster and lower-risk route. Build-to-own is typically only viable for operators with 5 MW+ requirements and a 10-year commitment horizon. Key colocation providers active in Johor include AIMS, Bridge Data Centres, EdgeConneX, GDS, and several Singapore-based operators expanding south. Rack rates in Johor colocation facilities run RM 1,500–3,000 per rack per month — roughly 40–50% below equivalent Singapore colocation costs.
Risks and Due Diligence Points
- Power allocation confirmation: Confirm TNB allocation letters before land purchase — some developments market power availability that is not yet formally allocated.
- Foreign ownership rules: Industrial land in Johor is generally available to foreign companies but subject to state authority approval. Engage a local legal firm familiar with the state consent process.
- Interconnection: Ensure your colocation or owned facility has or can obtain carrier-neutral interconnection — critical for redundancy and latency management to Singapore.
- Cooling water permits: Industrial water allocations for cooling towers require Johor Water Board approval, which can take 3–6 months. Factor this into project timelines.
Internal Linking Opportunities
- Sedenak Tech Valley: Advanced Manufacturing & Data Centres
- Johor Industrial & Factory Space Guide 2026: Every Zone
- The 11 JS-SEZ Priority Sectors and Their Incentives
- JS-SEZ Investment Risks: Oversupply, Timing & Policy
- Johor Commercial Property Investment Outlook 2026–2029
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Johor data centre land still available for new entrants in 2026?
Yes, but the most infrastructure-ready parcels in Sedenak and Nusajaya Tech Park are being absorbed quickly. Secondary clusters in Gelang Patah and eastern Johor still have significant available supply. The window for freehold land at sub-RM 40 psf with full utility entitlements is narrowing.
What is the latency from a Johor data centre to Singapore?
Typically 3–8 milliseconds, depending on the specific facility and carrier. This is well within the threshold for most cloud, enterprise, and financial services workloads. Sub-10ms latency to Singapore is readily achievable from any of the major Johor data centre clusters.
References
- Johor State Investment Centre — data centre land bank
- MIDA — Digital Economy incentive guidelines
- Tenaga Nasional Berhad — industrial power connection procedures
- DC Byte / Structure Research — Johor data centre capacity trackers (public summaries)