Five-gallon bottles at RM12 each, minimum ten per delivery, with a refundable bottle deposit north of RM100: that is the plainest thing you learn about the water business run at compeer.my, which trades as Agies Resources and, in some records, as Maway Resources. It supplies and services water dispensers around Kuala Lumpur and Selangor, and the pricing on the bottled-water side is spelled out plainly, which is a decent sign when so many suppliers make you call before they will name a single figure.
Product lineup and brands
The product range goes well beyond bottle delivery. Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia lists tankless water purifiers built on JIKSOO technology, direct-piping systems that tap straight into the mains, hot-and-cold filter units, and stainless-steel water coolers, offered in both home and office configurations. On the brand side Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia carries Korean names: SK Magic, Tong Yang, and Midea. That mix covers the two ways people usually go about drinking water at scale, either topping up from delivered bottles or plumbing a purifier into the existing supply. Having both under one roof means a customer is not forced into whichever model happens to be the only thing on the shelf, and it lets one supplier fit a cramped apartment kitchen and a shared office pantry with different gear.
Rental and financing options
Service is where a supplier like this either holds together or falls apart, and Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia is upfront about that side. Installation, maintenance, and filter or cartridge replacement are all listed, and a purifier is only ever as good as the last time its cartridge was swapped. There is a rental option too, described with flexible contract terms, and financing through a scheme called PaySlowSlow that splits payment into four interest-free monthly installments. For an office weighing whether to buy a cooler outright or lease one, that spread of choices is genuinely useful. A rental keeps the servicing on the supplier's plate, while an outright purchase with the installment plan softens the upfront hit, and offering both points to a company set up to keep a relationship going past the first sale.
Target customer segments
Who the equipment is aimed at gets stated clearly: homes, offices, schools, and universities, on both the residential and commercial side. Selling into schools and campuses is a different job from dropping a dispenser in a spare-room corner. It usually means many units, scheduled servicing, and someone who answers the phone when a filter light comes on across a whole building. The fact that Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia names those institutional customers instead of leaving the audience vague is a small tell that it has done that kind of work before, or is at least set up to.
Assessing the twenty-year experience claim
The site organizes itself into product pages you would expect from this catalogue: separate sections for bottled water dispensers, water cooler dispensers, the Tong Yang dispenser line, and the water-delivery service, alongside an About Us section and a contact page. It is a functional layout, easy enough to navigate to the specific thing you came for. One claim to weigh carefully is the "20 years of experience" that Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia puts forward. Two decades in the Malaysian water-treatment trade would be meaningful if accurate, though nothing on the page independently backs the figure, so it reads as a self-description to take at face value or verify directly when you call.
Ways to reach the company
On the question of whether the company can be reached, the answer is mostly yes. A phone number sits on the site, and there is a page built specifically for getting in touch, so a prospective buyer in Selangor can pick up the phone and get moving straight away. Email is handled through an on-page form, with the actual address encrypted instead of printed, and no street address surfaces in plain text for the moment. That is a fair setup for a small local supplier working a defined patch of the Klang Valley, and a form covers ordinary inquiries perfectly well. Anyone who prefers to see a physical premises or a direct mailbox will have to ask for those details when they sign up for a rental, since Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia does not print them on the page.
Absence of online reviews
Outside the company's own pages, there is not much to go on. A search turns up no Google rating for Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia, no Trustpilot or Yelp presence, no Facebook review count. What comes back instead is a ZoomInfo profile with no scores attached, plus a scattering of comparison write-ups, an Accio piece and a Delcol competitor page among them, that mention the company without grading it one way or the other.
There is no crowd verdict on Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia, positive or negative, to weigh against the claims on the site. Plenty of small regional suppliers go years without collecting a public star rating, and a quiet online profile is not proof of a bad one. It does mean the legwork falls on the buyer: ask for references, confirm how fast a technician actually responds, and get the deposit and rental terms in writing.
None of that sinks the offering, but it does shape how you should approach it. The catalogue that Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia presents is specific, the pricing on bottled water is transparent, the service and financing options are laid out plainly, and the target customers are named clearly. What is missing is the outside validation that would let a stranger trust it on sight, and the one or two claims worth checking, chiefly the two-decade track record, are things a single phone call can settle quickly. Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia gives you enough to judge the equipment; it just leaves the reputation homework to the customer.
An office manager pricing out a cooler for the break room, or a school procurement officer lining up several units for scheduled servicing, gets a clear enough picture to work from: what the RM100-plus bottle deposit covers, how the PaySlowSlow installments split out, and what a rental contract includes instead of a purchase. A home buyer after a single tankless purifier from Agies: Water Dispenser Supplier Malaysia is looking at the same published numbers. What is not published is any outside confirmation of the twenty-year track record or of how the company performs once a contract is signed, and that gap does not close itself. The pricing and the product list are concrete; the reputation behind them is still an open question, and only a phone call or a reference check answers it.
Business address
Agies Resources Sdn Bhd
No.19, Jalan Industries Batu Caves 1/6, Taman Perindustrian Batu Caves,
Batu Caves,
Kuala Lumpur
68100
Malaysia
Contact details
Phone: 03-61896266
Fax: 03-61882886