Rotary Clubs in Sabah: Service in District 3310
What are the Rotary clubs in Sabah?
Rotary clubs in Sabah are local chapters of Rotary International within District 3310. They include the Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu Pearl and the Rotary Club of Luyang, which run community service projects such as rural English education.
Rotary in Sabah at a glance
Rotary brings together professionals and community members in Sabah to deliver service projects, from education to health. The state's clubs sit within Rotary District 3310, the administrative district covering this region, and connect local volunteers to a worldwide service network.
Two clubs stand out in the Kota Kinabalu area. The Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu Pearl, chartered in 2015, is recognised as the first all-women Rotary club in the region. The Rotary Club of Luyang, founded in 1997, has a longer history and a record of nurturing younger service groups.
Sabah's Rotary clubs include Kota Kinabalu Pearl (chartered 2015) and Luyang (founded 1997), both within Rotary District 3310.
Rotary International and District 3310
Rotary International is a global service organisation that links clubs of volunteers committed to community and humanitarian work. Each club belongs to a numbered district, and Sabah's clubs fall under District 3310, which covers this region.
Belonging to a district means local clubs are not isolated. They share resources, training and project ideas with neighbouring clubs, and can draw on Rotary's wider international framework. For a club in Sabah, that connection turns a small group of local members into part of a far larger movement.
The district structure also helps coordinate larger initiatives. When a club such as Kota Kinabalu Pearl scales a project across many schools, the district network and external partners make that growth possible.
Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu Pearl
The Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu Pearl was chartered in 2015 and holds a distinctive place as the first all-women Rotary club in the region. From the outset, it has focused on education and service for rural communities in Sabah.
The club's identity is closely tied to its flagship project, the REAL English programme, which has become one of its best-known contributions. Through it, the club has built partnerships that reach well beyond Sabah, linking local members with supporters in other countries.
More information about the club is available through its website, rotaryclubkk.org, which documents its projects and activities for those interested in supporting or joining its work.
The REAL English programme
REAL (Rural-Focus English For All) is the flagship project of the Rotary Club of Kota Kinabalu Pearl, launched in 2015 to improve English in rural Sabahan schools. It addresses a practical need: stronger English skills can open doors for students in rural areas.
The programme has grown markedly. By 2020 it had reached 16 rural schools and about 4,000 students, and by 2024 it had expanded to more than 34 schools and over 12,000 students. That growth reflects both demand and the club's organising capacity.
REAL's reach is supported by partners including the Australian Embassy, Taiwan Rotarians and Kuala Lumpur Rotary members, showing how a Sabah project can draw on an international network.
Rotary Club of Luyang
The Rotary Club of Luyang was founded on 18 June 1997 and was incorporated with the Registry of Societies on 2 March 1998. Like Kota Kinabalu Pearl, it belongs to Rotary District 3310 and serves the Kota Kinabalu area.
One of the club's strengths has been nurturing the next generation of service-minded members. In 1997 it sponsored the Interact Club of Shan Tao, a Rotary club for younger students, and in 1998 it helped establish the Rotaract Club of Luyang for young adults.
Those sponsorships show how an established club extends Rotary's values to younger people. Details of the club's ongoing work can be found through its website, rotaryluyang.com.
How to get involved
Joining a Rotary club is usually done through invitation or by reaching out directly to a club, and Sabah's clubs welcome people interested in service. Those drawn to education and rural development may find Kota Kinabalu Pearl's focus a natural fit, while others may prefer Luyang's broader community work.
The simplest first step is to contact a club through its website. Kota Kinabalu Pearl can be reached via rotaryclubkk.org and Luyang via rotaryluyang.com, where current projects and contact details are listed.
Beyond full membership, clubs often welcome volunteers, donors and partners for specific projects. Supporting an initiative such as REAL is one way to contribute without committing to full membership straight away.