Service route: Taizhou to Kuala Lumpur;
Service mode: door-to-door moving one-stop service;
Case Overview: Ms Jin entrusted Hippo International to transport her furniture items from her home in Xiamen to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia by sea.

Kuala Lumpur is the capital and largest city of Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur is an international metropolis with great influence on culture, education, sports, finance, economy, commerce and finance in Southeast Asia. Because many international-level diplomatic conferences held in Southeast Asia are held in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore, Kuala Lumpur is also considered to be one of the two major centres of diplomacy in Southeast Asia. The Petronas Twin Towers is a famous landmark in Kuala Lumpur, symbolising Malaysia's future growth and prosperity along with the surrounding skyscrapers.

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Ms Kim studied in Kuala Lumpur when she was young and later returned home for work. After her retirement, Ms Kim decided to settle in Kuala Lumpur for a long time, considering that the Chinese language can be used in Kuala Lumpur and that many traditional Chinese customs are still preserved. After discussing with her husband, she decided to ship her furniture and paintings to Kuala Lumpur when her property in Taizhou was ready for disposal.

Through a friend's introduction, Mrs Jin learnt about Hipu International Moving Company, and after contacting and communicating with the staff, Mrs Jin decided to entrust our company to carry out the moving service. Professional packers will make a packing plan according to the items, and for fragile items such as paintings and calligraphy, they will pack them in layers to prevent them from being bumped during the transport.

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For those who want to migrate to Malaysia, it is vital to understand the mode of migration. Malaysia is divided into different categories for immigrants and there are three main ways to obtain a Malaysian Permanent Resident Visa: for a Red Card (MyPR), for a Blue Card (MyKAD) or for a Second Home (MM2H). Each category has different conditions and requirements.

1.Malaysia Red Card

Malaysian Permanent Resident Card, also known as Red Card. According to the Malaysian Immigration Act regulations, any foreign national is granted permanent resident status will be granted an entry permit and red card identity card (MyPR). myPR permanent resident status has no annual limit, valid for life, for the red card threshold is low, you can directly take the permanent resident card; require proof of no crime, no major disability. Exempt from all visas will be required to enter and permanently reside in Malaysia, red card and Malaysia resident identity card utility.

2.Malaysia Blue Card

Malaysia blue card, also known as ‘Malaysia card’ or ‘government multi-purpose smart card’. It is also known as the Malaysian passport, the premise is to become a Malaysian citizen, that is to say, naturalised Malaysian citizenship. This entitles you to the same rights and benefits as Malaysian citizens, including the right to vote and stand for election. It should be noted that Malaysia does not recognise dual citizenship. Although you do not have to give up your Chinese citizenship, you will not be able to use your Chinese passport to enter Malaysia after you get your Malaysian passport.

3.Second Home Programme

Malaysia's second home is the Malaysian government to attract foreign investment, promote tourism and economic development and launched an immigration policy. Originally for the retired people of the silver family plan, now the Malaysian government to encourage foreigners to live in Malaysia for a long time, launched this long-term visa-free programme. Its low cost, simple procedures, fast processing and other advantages, highly favoured by the market.

The above is about several common ways to apply for Malaysian immigration, there are some places where there may be misconceptions about Malaysian immigration. One misconception is that applying for a second home is more favourable than the Malaysian Red Card. The Malaysian Red Card is the real sense of the Malaysian permanent residence permit (also commonly known as green card). The Second Home programme is a visa that allows for a long term stay. There are many differences between the two, the most intuitive difference being that newborns of Red Card holders directly acquire Malaysian citizenship, which is not the case with the Second Home programme. Both the 10-year visa and the second home are essentially just long-term visas, and only the Red Card is what we usually refer to as an immigrant in the true sense of the word.