Malaysia has made a significant new move in the long-running search for MH370, offering fresh hope to the families of those on board.

17:26, Mon, Jun 29, 2026 Updated: 17:28, Mon, Jun 29, 2026

Malaysian Airlines Flight Reported Missing On Route To Beijing

Malaysia has extended the search for MH370 for another year (Image: Getty)

The Malaysian Government has extended its agreement with marine robotics company Ocean Infinity for another year in a renewed effort to locate the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370. The move reaffirmed the Government's commitment to providing answers to the families of the 239 people who disappeared aboard the aircraft more than 12 years ago.

Transport Minister Anthony Loke announced Monday that the Cabinet had approved an extension of the "no-find, no-fee" contract with Ocean Infinity until June 30 next year. The agreement allows the company to continue its deep-sea search in the southern Indian Ocean, where investigators believe the Boeing 777 crashed after mysteriously veering off course in 2014.

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5th Annual MH370 Remembrance Event

More than 12 years after MH370 vanished, the search for the missing plane is set to continue (Image: Getty)

"This decision is a manifestation of the Government's continuous and unwavering commitment to provide closure for the next of kin of the passengers aboard flight MH370," Loke said in a statement.

The extension gives Ocean Infinity time to complete the remaining 7,428.54-square-kilometre (2,868-square-mile) search area after the company temporarily redeployed its primary search vessels to fulfil other commercial contracts.

Flight MH370 disappeared from radar on March 8, 2014, shortly after taking off from Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing with 239 passengers and crew, the majority of whom were Chinese nationals. Satellite analysis later indicated the aircraft had deviated dramatically from its planned route before flying south into the remote southern Indian Ocean, where investigators believe it ultimately crashed.

Despite one of the largest and most expensive multinational search operations in aviation history, the aircraft has never been found. While pieces of debris confirmed to be from MH370 later washed ashore along the East African coastline and on several Indian Ocean islands, the plane's main wreckage remains missing.

Ocean Infinity previously conducted a private search in 2018, but the mission did not locate the aircraft. In 2025, Malaysian authorities approved a renewed search covering a new 15,000-square-kilometre (5,800-square-mile) target zone identified through updated analysis and technological advances.

Under the terms of the agreement, Ocean Infinity will receive payment only if the aircraft is successfully located. The company, which has headquarters in both the United States and the United Kingdom, stands to earn $70 million upon discovery of the wreckage.

According to Loke, Ocean Infinity's vessels are expected to return to the search area between November and April next year, when calmer weather and sea conditions provide the safest and most effective window for deep-water operations.

For the families of those aboard MH370, the latest extension offers renewed hope that one of aviation's greatest mysteries may finally be solved. More than a decade after the aircraft vanished without explanation, Malaysian authorities say they remain committed to pursuing every opportunity to uncover the truth and bring long-awaited closure to those left behind.