Shopping in Kuala Lumpur
Discover 29 markets, shops, and shopping spots in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. From local markets to specialty stores — curated from real traveler tips.
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Starhill Gallery
Adjoining the JW Marriott Hotel. The nearest station to this mall is Monorail Bukit Bintang. Starhill is a literally an English translation of “Bukit Bintang”. An upscale, luxury retail mall that rivals Suria KLCC for designer goods, is worth a visit just to look at the different interior designs especially 'Feast' floor (Ground Floor). A must-visit for watch aficionados as the ‘Adorn’ floor (1st floor) houses the biggest selection of designer wrist-watch boutiques like, amongst others, Jaeger-Le Coultre, Roger Dubuis, Audemars Piguet, Breguet, Tag Heuer, Omega, Vacheron Constantin, IWC, Patek Philippe and Rolex, of course. Great if you have lots of cash to splurge. There is a Food Galore on the Lower Ground floor which renders an excellent culinary experience in a cosy setting that exudes grandeur.
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Lot 10
When opened in 1991, it was considered the Harrods-equivalent of Malaysia housing designer outlets like Aigner and Versace. Over the span of 2 decades, time has however taken a toll on this unique landmark mall which boasts a green facade. Nowadays it is widely-reckoned as a middle-class retail destination as most outlets have shifted as a result of competition and degradation. In 2009, Nicholai by Nicky Hilton and William Rast by Justin Timberlake opened their flagship stores to cater to the Malaysian market after widespread refurbishment to the mall at a cost of RM20 million. Anchor tenants now include H&M and Japanese department store Isetan. If food is your thing, a cornucopia of Malaysia's best offerings can be found in the lower-ground floor food court, called Hutong.
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Ampang Park
Ampang Park is recognised as one of Malaysia's first shopping centres and is located located near Suria KLCC, in Kuala Lumpur. The complex is accessible with the Kelana Jaya Line via the Ampang Park station, which is located after the KLCC Station. The train station is located opposite the shopping complex. Ampang Park is on the northern outskirts of the Golden Triangle and has clothes and jewellery shops, and money changers. It is also known as the place to go for top to toe Malay fashion and is usually packed during Hari Raya. It also houses shops dealing in electrical and electronic equipment.
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Suria KLCC
Suria KLCC is one of Malaysia's premier shopping destinations due to its location beneath the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur City Centre. It is on 6 floors, with anchor tenants Isetan, Parkson, Kinokuniya, Tanjong Golden Village, Signatures Food Court, Marks & Spencer, Louis Vuitton and Tiffany & Co. Suria is the native Malaysian word for Sunshine. It was opened on August 31, 1999. It houses mostly luxury and fashionable shops, as well as cafes, restaurants, a 12 screen cinema, a concert hall, an art gallery, and a Science Discovery Centre, over 6 floors.
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Fahrenheit 88
Renamed and refurbished, now again open for business but as of October 2010 still many unopened stores, previously the deteriorating KL Plaza. Poised to be the new hub for the hip and trendy of Kuala Lumpur, consisting of 300,000 square feet of lettable space spread over 5 levels of zoned shopping space. There are designated zones for Japanese and Korean fashion consisting of an entire floor each. It is widely speculated that Swedish-fashion chain H&M and Japanese Uniql and Muji will make their Malaysian open here late in 2011.
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Berjaya Times Square
Currently the 13th biggest shopping mall in the world boasting 12 levels of retail with a total of 320,000 m² (3.5 million ft²). Although initially aimed at the upper-echelon of society, it is currently positioned as a middle-class shopping mall offering youth fashion targeted at the younger crowds. For entertainment, it has the largest indoor theme park in Malaysia located on the 7th floor of the building. It also offers an exciting cinematic experience with its 3D-Imax theatre located on the top floor of the retail podium.
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Pavilion Kuala Lumpur
This KL's latest luxury megamall is an anchor piece of the world-class urban development comprising two luxury residential towers, a corporate office. The mall has six distinctive precincts, Couture Pavilion, Bintang Circle, Gourmet_Emporium, Connection, Seventh Heaven and Home that contains approximately 450 stores, providing customers with infinite choices and the latest in fashion, entertainment, health and beauty, electronic, gourmet food and countless others. There is pedestrian bridge that links the mall to KLCC.
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Chinatown
A relatively tame area during the day that comes alive in the evenings with stalls selling fake handbags, shoes, watches, sunglasses, DVDs and other various items. Be sure to haggle furiously as many stalls will inflate the price significantly. Along with sellers hawking their goods are restaurants and food stalls lining the street who will attempt to entice you in, sometimes a little aggressively. It can get particularly busy in the evenings so be sure to keep hold of your valuables.
Along Jl Petaling and nearby streets -
Mid Valley Megamall
This really is "mega" with over 430 shops crammed into what claims to be one of South-East Asia's largest shopping malls. Anchor tenants include big department stores and hypermarkets such as AEON (Malaysian branch of AEON Japan), local store Metrojaya and French hypermarket Carrefour. If you need to change money, the lower ground floor has several '''money changers'''. The Megamall is connected to the upmarket The Gardens at Mid Valley. (KTM Komuter: Mid-Valley)
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Sungei Wang Plaza
A popular place among local teenagers where fashion clothes, shoes, accessories and other trinkets and local designer clothes can be found with affordable price. A great place to buy cameras and watches (discounts are given for cash payments, although credit cards are accepted). Sungei Wang also hosts a concentration of tailors of men's and women's clothing. This is a maze of a mall, take a compass with you to find your way out!
Jl Bukit Bintang Website -
Central Market
Kuala Lumpur's grand old market which opened in 1888 as a wet market, but has since been refurbished and has arguably lost some of its old charm, complete with air-con. The market is now aimed squarely at tourists and selling crafts, fabrics, jewelry and other trinkets, both local and foreign. A market street that runs parallel to the markets, called Kasturi Walk, also operates as part of the market.
Cnr Jl Hang Kasturi & Jl Tun Tan Cheng Lock Market Building 10:00-22:00, Kasturi Walk 10:30-22:30 Website -
Plaza Low Yat
A good place for computer hardware, game consoles and handphones. A "must visit" for the tech inclined. '''All IT Hypermart''' (4th floor) is a good one-stop shop, but there are dozens of specialist computing boutiques for the enthusiast. Do not always be fooled by the pricing as some unscrupulous sellers may have switched original components of devices with fakes. Verify before purchasing.
7 Jl Bintang Website -
Bazaar Baru Chow Kit
Boasting the title as the largest wet market in Kuala Lumpur this market gives a glimpse of how ordinary Malaysians do their daily shopping. In addition to fresh fruit, vegetables, meat and seafood you will also find stalls selling silks, fabrics, shoes and other nicknacks without the tourist price inflation. Food stalls are scattered throughout the markets too.
469-473 Jl Tuanku Abdul Rahman 9:00-17:00 -
The Gardens at Mid Valley
This mall is anchored by a high-end shopping gallery (anchor tenants include Isetan, Robinson's and Cold Storage), two landmark office towers, five-star Gardens Residences and five-star Gardens Hotel. The mall will be linked to the Abdullah Hukum LRT station in 2008 giving additional access option to shoppers. (KTM Komuter: Mid-Valley)
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Avenue K
Opposite Kuala Lumpur City Centre. With its bold tagline, "style has a new address", the complex is a hip shopping haven complimented by a classy, city-living address, "K Residence". Avenue K aims to create a "shopping culture, where lifestyle, aesthetic and social elements converge." It boasts internationally acclaimed fashion brands.
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Pasar Malam
A long night market spanning the entire length of the 'lorong'. This Saturday night market is an experience whether you are looking for a bargain, local products, or just an authentic Malaysian market experience. Food stalls are scattered throughout the market and is a great experience outside the typical tourist scene.
Along Lorong Tuanku Abdul Rahman 17:00-22:00 Saturday -
Quill City Mall
The newest shopping mall in the vicinity and possibly downtown KL, it is about 3 to 5 minutes' walk from Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman itself. Features seven retail levels, eateries, a cinema and an AEON store. Connected to Medan Tuanku Monorail station by a bridge.
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Sogo Shopping Complex
Probably the biggest department store you will ever see, with 10 floors of shopping, dining and entertainment. If you budget permits, you can shop here for everything from clothing to high-tech toys.
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Masjid India Bazaar
A covered bazaar stretching out from LRT Masjid Jamek towards Little India, quite similar in feel to the more famous Jalan Petaling but not as large or crowded -- not necessarily a bad thing.
Along Jl Melayu, Jl Masjid India Daily -
Semua House
Located next to Plaza City One, here one can find fashion, cosmetics, perfume as well as jewellery. Food court located one floor below ground.
Closes at 20:00 -
Great Eastern Mall
Great Eastern Mall is adjoined with the Menara Great Eastern and professes to offer a 'fine lifestyle and relaxation' shopping experience.
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Campbell Complex
Great shopping centre to buy textiles. Site of the infamous Campbell Complex fire in 1976, regarded as Malaysia's own "Towering Inferno".
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Pertama Complex
Opened in 1976 as Kuala Lumpur's very first shopping mall, and still good for cheap shoes, leather ware and other knick-knacks.
1222 Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman -
Wisma Shen
StarPoints Hotel occupies the upper floors of the building. On the ground level there is a Haniffa Department Store.
149 Jalan Masjid India Website -
Plaza City One
Textile and fashion stores congregate here. At the second floor above ground level there is a food court.
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Ampang Point Shopping Centre
Located along Jalan Ampang, this is one of Ampang's main malls and also serves as a RapidKL bus hub.
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GS Gills
The top sporting goods distributes in Mayalsia, carrying all sorts of sporting equipment and attire.
9th Floor, Wisma Harwant, 106 Jalan Tuanku Adbul Rahman -
Plaza Mont' Kiara Fiesta Nite
A bazaar every Thursday, selling food, clothing, toys, household appliances, etc.
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Maju Junction
A Parkson store opened in the mall in 2015.
at the intersection of Jalan TAR Jalan Sultan Ismail, and opposite Tune Hotel Website
Travel tips by Wikivoyage contributors (CC BY-SA 3.0). Verify opening hours before visiting.
Shopping Guide for Kuala Lumpur: Markets, Stores & Souvenirs
Shopping in Kuala Lumpur is one of the best ways to experience local culture beyond the usual tourist trail. Whether you're browsing open-air markets for fresh produce and local specialties, hunting for antiques in backstreet shops, or looking for handcrafted souvenirs to bring home, Kuala Lumpur's shopping scene has something for every kind of traveler.
This guide lists 29 shopping spots in Kuala Lumpur sourced from Wikivoyage — the community travel guide written by real travelers. These are the shops, markets, and stores that visitors actually recommend to each other.
Shopping Tips for Travelers in Kuala Lumpur
- Visit markets early for the best selection at Kuala Lumpur's food and craft markets.
- Carry local cash — many independent vendors and market stalls prefer cash over cards.
- Check opening days — many specialty shops in Kuala Lumpur are closed on Sundays or have limited weekend hours.
- Ask about local products — the best souvenirs are made locally, not imported for tourist shops.
- Use Nomax to connect with travelers currently in Kuala Lumpur who can share real-time shopping tips.
Meet Fellow Travelers in Kuala Lumpur
Download Nomax to see other travelers currently in Kuala Lumpur. Find a market companion, share shopping discoveries, or join city activities organized by the traveler community. Free on iOS and Android.
Frequently Asked Questions: Shopping in Kuala Lumpur
Where to shop in Kuala Lumpur?
Kuala Lumpur has 29 curated shopping spots including markets, specialty stores, and local boutiques. This guide covers the best places to shop in Kuala Lumpur, from open-air markets to specialist shops. Use Nomax to connect with fellow travelers who can share shopping tips.
What souvenirs to buy in Kuala Lumpur?
The best souvenirs from Kuala Lumpur are locally produced food and drink, handmade crafts, books about the city, and artisan goods. Markets are the best place to find authentic products. Check listings in this guide for specialty shops and markets in Kuala Lumpur.
Are there markets in Kuala Lumpur?
Yes, Kuala Lumpur has several markets in this guide including food markets, antique fairs, and craft markets. Opening days and hours vary by market — check individual listings before visiting.
Is Nomax free to use in Kuala Lumpur?
Yes, Nomax is completely free. Download it on iOS or Android to connect with travelers currently in Kuala Lumpur, join activities, and get shopping recommendations from people who know the city.
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