School bullying in Malaysia is significantly more prevalent than official figures suggest. The Ministry of Education (KPM) recorded 2,889 bullying cases in 2025 — 740 in primary schools and 2,149 in secondary schools — up from previous years as reporting mechanisms improve. But these are only reported cases. A 2025 Ipsos Malaysia survey found 67% of Malaysians experienced bullying in the past year, with schools identified as the most common venue at 65% of all incidents. UNICEF Malaysia has identified Malaysian students as among the most bullied globally.
Bullying takes multiple forms in Malaysian schools: physical (hitting, pushing, property damage and theft), verbal (name-calling, threats, public humiliation), social or relational (exclusion, rumour-spreading, reputation damage), and cyberbullying (which now extends school bullying into the home via phones and social media). Research consistently shows that social and relational bullying — particularly among girls — is the most underreported and the most damaging to long-term mental health.
The consequences of untreated bullying are severe. Victims have a 2–9× higher risk of suicidal ideation compared to non-victims. Long-term studies find bullying victimisation is associated with depression, anxiety, difficulty forming trusting relationships, and reduced adult employment outcomes — effects that persist decades later. Critically, bullying also harms perpetrators: children who bully others are at significantly higher risk of antisocial behaviour and criminal involvement in adulthood.
The July 2026 attack at SMK Bandar Banting — in which a 15-year-old student was stabbed 16 times by a former classmate, with bullying cited as the suspected motive — illustrates the most extreme consequence of unresolved bullying trauma. The Ministry of Education has since deployed psychosocial support teams and committed RM5 million for CCTV installation in 333 residential schools, plus 600 new hostel wardens in 2026. These are system measures — but individual parental action remains the most reliable early intervention.