Background: Ensuring quality in healthcare calls for a coordinated, systematic, congruous and sustained approach. Nevertheless, it demands defining what the quality of healthcare means in the local context. Presently the Malaysian healthcare system utilises various definitions of quality of healthcare across the different initiatives and levels of healthcare which can lead to fragmented or ineffective quality improvement. The study aims to describe the process undertaken in developing an explicit definition of the quality of healthcare tailored to the Malaysian context, which is currently lacking. Methods: A pluralistic method was used to explore the different perspectives. Three distinct approaches were used to understand how quality is defined among the different stakeholder groups: 1) interactive policy-makers engagement sessions, 2) a review of local quality-related documents, and 3) an online survey engaging the public. The domains depicting quality of healthcare that emerged through these three approaches were mapped against a framework and synthesised to form the local definition of quality. A national quality-related technical working group convened on several sessions to achieve consensus and finalise the definition of quality of healthcare. Results: Quality healthcare in Malaysia is defined as providing high quality healthcare that is safe, timely, effective, equitable, efficient, people-centred, and accessible [STEEEPA] which is innovative and responsive to the needs of the people, and is delivered as a team, in a caring and professional manner in order to improve health outcomes and client experience. Conclusion: The consensus-driven local definition of healthcare quality will guide policies and ensure standardisation in measuring quality, thereby steering efforts to improve the quality of healthcare services delivered in Malaysia.