6 Part-Time Job Types in Malaysia for Bangladeshi Students

Student Life

“Can I work part-time in Malaysia?” is one of the first questions Bangladeshi students ask after landing. The short answer is yes, but within specific limits. The more useful question is: which type of job actually suits a student’s schedule, skills, and situation?

This guide gives you a clear overview of the 6 most common part-time job types that international students in Malaysia take up — with a snapshot of what each pays, who it suits best, and what to expect. Each job type has a dedicated full guide in this series for students who want to go deeper.

What Does an F&B Part-Time Job Actually Involve?

F&B stands for Food & Beverage — and it covers a wide range of roles inside cafés, restaurants, food courts, fast food chains, bakeries, and bubble tea outlets. The work is physical and customer-facing, and most roles involve being on your feet for the majority of the shift.

Here is what each common role typically looks like on the ground:

Service Crew / Waiter

This is the most entry-level role and the most widely available. Your job is to take orders, serve food and drinks, keep the dining area clean, and handle basic customer interactions. No specific skill is required — just a willingness to work fast and communicate clearly. Most employers will show you the menu and basic procedures on your first day.

Kitchen Helper / Food Prep

Kitchen helpers work behind the counter or in the back — washing, cutting, preparing ingredients, plating dishes, and keeping the kitchen area clean and organised. It is less customer-facing than service crew but equally physical. If you prefer to avoid direct customer interaction, this is often the better starting point.

Barista

A barista prepares coffee, tea, and other drinks. This role pays better than most other F&B positions because it requires a specific skill. The good news is that many cafés will train you from scratch — especially if you show genuine interest and availability. Once you know how to operate an espresso machine and follow drink recipes consistently, you become a more valuable hire and can command better pay.

Cashier / Counter Staff

Counter staff manage the payment process, handle the POS system, manage queues, and sometimes assist with packing orders. This role requires basic attention to detail with numbers and customer service. It is common in fast food outlets and larger food court chains.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
Service Crew / WaiterMYR 6 – 8/hr
Kitchen HelperMYR 6 – 7/hr
BaristaMYR 7 – 10/hr
Barista roles sit at the higher end because they require a specific skill — but many cafés will train you on the job. Even a consistent F&B job during weekends can cover a student’s monthly food and transport expenses.

There is more to know — realistic monthly earnings, which platforms to use, what a typical shift looks like, and the things students often find out the hard way.

→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Café & Restaurant Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

2. Retail & Convenience Store Jobs

Retail is the second most common job type among international students in Malaysia. This covers supermarkets like Aeon and Lotus’s, convenience chains like 99 Speedmart, 7-Eleven and KK Super Mart, and clothing or lifestyle outlets in shopping malls.

Students often prefer retail over F&B because shifts tend to be calmer and more structured. A fixed weekly schedule makes it easier to plan around lectures, assignments, and exam periods.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
Retail Assistant / Sales CrewMYR 6 – 8/hr
CashierMYR 6 – 10/hr
Stock / Shelf OrganiserMYR 6 – 8/hr
Cashier roles can reach the higher end of the pay range depending on the outlet and location, making it one of the better-paying fixed positions in retail. The full guide covers which chains hire most actively, how to apply, and what to watch out for in your first contract
→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Retail & Convenience Store Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

3. Event & Promoter Jobs

Event and promoter jobs work differently from F&B and retail. Instead of a fixed schedule, you pick up individual shifts — a mall roadshow today, a brand activation event next weekend, an exhibition crew job the week after that. You work when you want, and you get paid per shift.

This flexibility makes promoter jobs especially attractive to students whose class timetables change every semester. Platforms like TROOPERS are the most widely used among Malaysian students for sourcing these opportunities, and pay rates tend to be higher per hour compared to fixed-schedule jobs.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
Product PromoterMYR 7 – 10/hr
Event CrewMYR 7 – 9/hr
Brand AmbassadorMYR 9 – 13/hr
Brand ambassador roles sit at the top of this pay range — but they come with specific requirements around appearance, communication, and reliability. The full guide covers exactly what agencies look for, how to register on shift platforms, and how to build a track record that gets you invited to better-paying assignments.
→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Event & Promoter Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

4. Cleaning & Housekeeping Jobs

Cleaning and housekeeping roles rarely come up in student conversations, but they are one of the most consistently available job types in Malaysia. Hotels, serviced apartments, office buildings, and private homes all need regular cleaning staff and the application process is usually simpler than F&B or retail.

Some students also take on private cleaning work for homes or Airbnb-listed properties. The hourly rate for private gigs is noticeably higher than hotel or commercial cleaning, but it requires more self-organisation to find and retain clients.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
General CleanerMYR 6 – 7.50/hr
Hotel Room AttendantMYR 6 – 8/hr
Private / Airbnb CleanerMYR 60 – 100/session
Private cleaning is where the hourly rate gets genuinely competitive — but students need to understand how to find clients safely, what to charge, and how to handle the informal nature of these arrangements. The full guide breaks all of this down.
→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Cleaning & Housekeeping Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

5. Delivery Jobs in Malaysia

A common misconception among Bangladeshi students is that delivery work means signing up for GrabFood or foodpanda. App-based food delivery platforms in Malaysia are open to local citizens only — international students on a student pass are not eligible to register as riders on these platforms.

What international students can do is take on delivery work directly through cafés, restaurants, or small businesses. These employers hire delivery staff either on a per-delivery basis or as a regular part-time staff member paid by the hour and the arrangement is agreed directly between the student and the employer, not through a third-party app.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
Restaurant Delivery (per delivery)MYR 5 – 10/delivery (distance-based)
Restaurant Delivery (hourly)MYR 6 – 9/hr (like regular staff)
For per-delivery arrangements, fuel costs are typically borne by the delivery person. For hourly-based roles, some employers cover fuel separately but this varies by employer and is worth confirming before you start. The full guide covers how to find these roles, what to ask before agreeing, and how to calculate whether the pay genuinely covers your costs.
→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Delivery Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

6. Campus-Based Jobs

Campus jobs are the most overlooked option and arguably the most underrated. Arranged through the university itself, these roles are structured around student schedules and are almost always properly documented, making them the safest choice from an immigration compliance standpoint.

Roles include library assistant, student ambassador, research assistant, IT support, lab assistant, and administrative positions across faculty offices. Not every university actively advertises these to international students, so the key is knowing how to ask and where to look.

Salary Snapshot
Common RolesPay Rate (MYR)
Library / Admin AssistantMYR 5 – 8/hr
Student AmbassadorMYR 50 – 120/event
Research AssistantMYR 500 – 1,500/month
Research assistant roles — typically available for postgraduate students — sit at a completely different earning level. But they also come with specific eligibility requirements. The full guide explains how to identify which roles are open to international students at your university and how to position yourself to get them.
→ Want the full picture on this? Read: Campus Jobs in Malaysia for International Students

All 6 Job Types at a Glance

Not sure which category fits your situation? Here is a side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to start:

Job CategoryPay Range (MYR)Best For
F&B (Café & Restaurant)MYR 6 – 10/hrFirst-timers, quick entry
Retail & Convenience StoreMYR 6 – 10/hrSteady, predictable hours
Event & PromoterMYR 7 – 13/hrFlexible, shift-based work
Cleaning & HousekeepingMYR 6 – 8/hr or per sessionSimple entry, less competition
Restaurant-Based DeliveryMYR 5 – 10/delivery or hourlyOwn vehicle, near campus
Campus-Based JobsMYR 5 – 9/hrSafest, CV-building value
All salary figures reflect typical market rates in Malaysia as of 2025–2026. Actual pay varies by employer, city, and experience level.

Where Should You Start?

Most Bangladeshi students begin with F&B — it is the most accessible and the easiest to get without prior experience. But the right starting point depends on your location, your availability during weekdays/weekends, and what you are comfortable with.

Still unsure which job type suits your specific situation?
Click the floating WhatsApp icon and ask us directly. Sometimes the best guidance starts with one simple question.

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