People interested in the prospect of making investments in the area of Malaysia property lots should be sure to apprise themselves with the laws surrounding what is generally regarded in the real estate market as an increasingly viable target for financial investments. In this regard, the system of Malaysia property laws now in place may be noted as combining the theoretical underpinnings of the British legal system, a survivor of the country’s colonialist period, and Sharia law, a reflection of the culture’s Muslim faith. Interested in encouraging Malaysia property investment, the Malaysian state enacted legislative changes at the end of 2006 made it newly legal for people to purchase Malaysia property lots even if they came from outside of the country and were not Malaysian citizens. It should be noted, however, that regulatory limitations mean that non-Malaysians cannot buy in housing which is placed at the low or medium price brackets, in that the government is most interested in drawing on the resources of investors abroad in regard to large developments and commercial real estate. A period of rapid improvement in Malaysia property value was followed, as occurred throughout the world in a similar fashion and for comparable reasons, by a period of contraction in the market for Malaysian real estate market offerings, as occurred during 2009, as linked to the global economic downturn. Real estate guides believe that Malaysia property purchases will pick up in the 2010 period and recover some of their previous health, influenced partly by new administration having taken office.