https://www.therakyatpost.com/living/2025/1...-gen-z-burnout/
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[Watch] RM2,000 Monthly Escape: Malaysian Youth Retirement Home Addresses Gen Z Burnout
The retreat targets core issues facing Malaysia’s younger generation, including high living costs, work burnout, housing pressures, and the desire for low-pressure living environments.
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Malaysia’s first “youth retirement home” has opened in Perak, offering young adults a month-long retreat from city life for RM2,000 – and it’s said to be already fully booked.
The unconventional concept, located on an eight-acre plot in Gopeng, has sparked widespread discussion among young Malaysians grappling with rising living costs, work burnout, and housing pressures.
The facility offers accommodation, meals, and a peaceful environment where young people can take a break from the daily grind.
The retreat was started by someone whose family already runs a regular nursing home in Ipoh.
Instead of joining the family business, they decided to use their parents’ land for something completely different – creating a getaway spot just for burnt-out young adults.
The idea seems to have really clicked with Malaysia’s younger crowd, who are starting to question whether the traditional “work till you drop” lifestyle is really worth it, especially with everything getting more expensive.
What Young People Are Really Seeking
The retreat addresses core concerns of modern young adults:
At RM2,000 per month, including meals and accommodation, the package costs significantly less than typical urban living expenses, combining rent, food, utilities, and transportation. (Pix: Facebook: 务边青年养老院 – Gopeng, PERAK)
Social media responses have been polarised.
Supporters praise the concept as addressing the real needs of overwhelmed young people, with comments like “We need more places like this!” and “Finally, Malaysia has this!”
Others question its long-term viability and whether it encourages avoidance of real-world responsibilities.
The facility’s spacious, rural setting, with clean air and a slower pace, offers what many describe as a “Buddhist paradise” compared to the urban grind – some even suggesting it’s better than paying mortgages. (Facebook: 务边青年养老院 – Gopeng, PERAK)
The idea isn’t entirely new – similar “youth retirement homes” became a hit in China when young people there got fed up with the crazy pace of city life and started looking for alternatives.
What makes the Malaysian version work is that it gets to the heart of what young people really want these days: to live more easily.
It’s a pretty significant shift from how older generations think.
Instead of the whole “work yourself to death and push through no matter what” mindset, young Malaysians are saying, “Actually, my mental health matters more than climbing the corporate ladder.”
Now, whether this whole concept can actually work long-term or if society will accept it as a real option – that’s still up in the air.
But the instant buzz around it proves one thing: Malaysia’s young people are genuinely struggling with modern life pressures, and they’re willing to try something completely different to address them.
The retreat targets core issues facing Malaysia’s younger generation, including high living costs, work burnout, housing pressures, and the desire for low-pressure living environments.
Subscribe to our FREE Newsletter, or Telegram and WhatsApp channels for the latest stories and updates.
Malaysia’s first “youth retirement home” has opened in Perak, offering young adults a month-long retreat from city life for RM2,000 – and it’s said to be already fully booked.
The unconventional concept, located on an eight-acre plot in Gopeng, has sparked widespread discussion among young Malaysians grappling with rising living costs, work burnout, and housing pressures.
The facility offers accommodation, meals, and a peaceful environment where young people can take a break from the daily grind.
The retreat was started by someone whose family already runs a regular nursing home in Ipoh.
Instead of joining the family business, they decided to use their parents’ land for something completely different – creating a getaway spot just for burnt-out young adults.
The idea seems to have really clicked with Malaysia’s younger crowd, who are starting to question whether the traditional “work till you drop” lifestyle is really worth it, especially with everything getting more expensive.
What Young People Are Really Seeking
The retreat addresses core concerns of modern young adults:
At RM2,000 per month, including meals and accommodation, the package costs significantly less than typical urban living expenses, combining rent, food, utilities, and transportation. (Pix: Facebook: 务边青年养老院 – Gopeng, PERAK)
Social media responses have been polarised.
Supporters praise the concept as addressing the real needs of overwhelmed young people, with comments like “We need more places like this!” and “Finally, Malaysia has this!”
Others question its long-term viability and whether it encourages avoidance of real-world responsibilities.
The facility’s spacious, rural setting, with clean air and a slower pace, offers what many describe as a “Buddhist paradise” compared to the urban grind – some even suggesting it’s better than paying mortgages. (Facebook: 务边青年养老院 – Gopeng, PERAK)
The idea isn’t entirely new – similar “youth retirement homes” became a hit in China when young people there got fed up with the crazy pace of city life and started looking for alternatives.
What makes the Malaysian version work is that it gets to the heart of what young people really want these days: to live more easily.
It’s a pretty significant shift from how older generations think.
Instead of the whole “work yourself to death and push through no matter what” mindset, young Malaysians are saying, “Actually, my mental health matters more than climbing the corporate ladder.”
Now, whether this whole concept can actually work long-term or if society will accept it as a real option – that’s still up in the air.
But the instant buzz around it proves one thing: Malaysia’s young people are genuinely struggling with modern life pressures, and they’re willing to try something completely different to address them.
Dec 9 2025, 05:53 PM, updated 4d ago
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