Country Overview
Malta is a small but vibrant island nation in the Mediterranean, known for its rich history, sunny climate, and friendly, English-speaking populace. Despite its size, Malta boasts a robust economy — particularly in iGaming, financial services, and technology — and a large international expat community relative to its population. Valletta is the capital, and larger urban centres include St Paul’s Bay, Birkirkara, Mosta, Sliema, and Qormi.
Both Maltese and English are official languages, making the country particularly accessible for international workers. Approximately 29% of the population is foreign-born, and international teams integrate naturally. As an EU member state, Malta offers free movement to EU/EEA/Swiss nationals, while non-EU citizens require work authorisation through the Single Permit system.
*This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and should not be viewed as legal or tax advice. The information discussed may change frequently, and Access Financial cannot guarantee that all content remains current at all times.
2026 Key Legislative Updates
National minimum wage rises to €229.44/week from January 2026 (COLA increase of €4.66/week). New parental tax bands introduced for resident parents of children under 18. All retirement pension income is fully tax-exempt from age 61. Miscarriage leave (7 days) and Special Parental Bereavement Leave (7 days) introduced. Highly Qualified Persons (HQP) and sectoral schemes consolidated under the new Highly Skilled Individuals Rules (LN 20 of 2026).
Contracts
Maltese employment contracts define the terms of engagement — type, duration, notice, pay, and benefits. Employment relationships are governed by the Employment and Industrial Relations Act (EIRA) and are quite employee-protective. All employees are entitled to a written statement of conditions of employment.
Contract Types
| Contract Type | Duration | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Indefinite | Indefinite | Open-ended; continues until terminated by either party with notice |
| Fixed-Term (Definite) | Specified end date | Ends on a date or project completion; same statutory rights as indefinite employees |
| Part-Time | Indefinite or fixed | Pro-rata rights equal to full-time; same hourly rate as a comparable full-timer |
| Casual / Reduced-Hours | Variable | Less than 8 hours/week with one employer; limited social security coverage |
Fixed-Term to Indefinite — 4-Year Rule
If you are on a series of fixed-term contracts with the same employer for a combined period of 4 years or more, the next renewal must be indefinite — unless the employer can demonstrate a genuine business reason to keep the arrangement temporary. Many international firms convert contractors to indefinite status earlier to retain talent.
What Your Contract Must Include
Mandatory from Day One
- Job title and description
- Start date and contract duration (if fixed-term)
- Salary or pay rate and pay frequency
- Working hours and location
- Vacation leave entitlement
- Notice period (both sides)
- Sick leave and sick pay entitlement
- Probation period (typically 6 months)
Common Additional Clauses
- Confidentiality / NDA provisions
- Intellectual property assignment
- Restrictive covenants (non-compete, non-solicit)
- Statutory bonuses and weekly allowances
- Bonus and commission structure
- Reference to applicable Wages Council Order (WRO)
- Disciplinary and grievance procedure reference
Working Hours & Overtime
The typical full-time schedule in Malta is 40 hours per week (usually 8 hours per day, 5 days a week). Many office jobs follow a roughly 8:30/9:00 to 17:30/18:00 schedule with a lunch break. As an EU country, Malta is subject to the Working Time Directive — an absolute maximum of 48 hours per week on average over a 17-week reference period. Employees can agree in writing to opt out of the 48-hour limit, but it is not common.
| Parameter | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard hours | 40 hrs/week | Stated in contract; typically 8 hrs/day, Monday to Friday |
| Maximum (WTD) | 48 hrs/week avg | Calculated over 17-week reference period |
| WTD opt-out | Allowed | Must be voluntary and in writing |
| Daily rest | 11 consecutive hrs | Per 24-hour period — mandatory |
| Weekly rest | 24 hrs | Per 7-day period — typically Sunday |
| Overtime pay | 1.5× (standard) | Time-and-a-half; higher rates often apply on Sundays/Public Holidays |
Working Hours & Overtime
The Working Time Directive sets maximum hours, rest breaks, and entitlements. Overtime rates are often defined by sectoral Wages Council Orders (WROs).
| Parameter | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum weekly hours | 48 hrs avg | 17-week reference period |
| WTD opt-out | Allowed | Must be in writing; voluntary; revocable |
| Standard full-time hours | 40 hrs | Set by law; usually 8 hrs × 5 days |
| Rest break (>6 hrs) | 15-min minimum | As per contract or WRO |
| Daily rest | 11 consecutive hrs | Per 24-hour period |
| Weekly rest | 24 hrs | Per 7-day period |
| Overtime rate | 1.5× standard | Time-and-a-half where no WRO applies; sectoral rates may differ |
| Overtime tax relief | 15% flat rate | First 100 hrs of overtime taxed at 15% if base salary under ~€20,000 |
Pay Transparency Directive
Since 27 August 2025, Malta has implemented the EU Pay Transparency Directive. Job applicants can request details of the initial salary or salary range before commencing employment, along with relevant pay terms from any applicable collective agreement.
Probation Period
The default probation period in Malta is 6 months for most roles. For senior or executive positions, it may extend to 1 year by mutual agreement.
| Parameter | Standard practice | Legal notes |
|---|---|---|
| Typical duration | 6 months | Default by statute; senior roles may extend to 12 months |
| Notice during probation | 1 week | Applies after the first month of employment; no notice required in the first month |
| Reason for dismissal | Not required | Employer can terminate without cause (except discriminatory grounds) |
| Day-one statutory rights | Full from day one | Minimum wage, holiday pay, anti-discrimination, pregnancy protection |
Immigration & Work Visas
Malta operates a combined work-and-residence permit system known as the Single Permit. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens enjoy free movement; non-EU nationals require authorisation before starting work.
Pre-Departure Course — January 2026
From January 2026, all first-time Single Permit applicants must complete a mandatory Pre-Departure Course (€250), including English-language proficiency requirements. Suitability checks are stricter, but employers may renew TCN permits for longer than one year subject to conditions.
EU vs Non-EU Citizens
EU/EEA/Swiss citizens can enter Malta with a passport or national ID card and start work immediately. They must register with Identità (formerly Identity Malta) within 3 months to obtain an EU Residence Registration Certificate and eResidence card. Non-EU nationals must secure a Single Permit before commencing work; the application is typically employer-sponsored.
| Visa / Permit Route | Min. Salary | Sponsor? | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Permit (standard) | No statutory minimum | Yes — employer | 1 year; renewable |
| Key Employee Initiative (KEI) | €45,000/yr | Yes — employer | 1 year; expedited (~5 working days) |
| EU Blue Card | ~1.5× average wage | Yes — employer | 1–2 years; intra-EU mobility after 18 months |
| Intra-Corporate Transferee (ICT) | Sector-dependent | Group entity required | Up to 3 years (managers/specialists) |
| Digital Nomad Residence Permit | €2,700/month | No (foreign employer) | 1 year; renewable |
| Fee | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Single Permit application | ~€280.50 | Includes residence card issue fee |
| Pre-Departure Course | €250 | Mandatory for first-time applicants from Jan 2026 |
| Private health insurance (non-EU) | Variable | Min. €100,000 coverage required for permit |
| EU Residence Registration | Free | EU/EEA/Swiss nationals |
Leave Entitlements
Maltese statutory leave entitlements are generous. Most international employers offer enhanced benefits above the statutory floor.
Annual Vacation Leave
| Parameter | Entitlement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory minimum | 192 hrs (24 days) | Based on a 40-hr week; pro-rata for part-time |
| 2026 total entitlement | 216 hrs (27 days) | 192 hrs + 24 hrs in lieu of 3 public holidays falling on weekends |
| Market standard (professional) | 25–28 days | Plus public holidays |
| Vacation pay rate | Normal remuneration | Must include regular allowances |
Parental Leave
| Leave type | Duration | Pay | From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternity | 18 weeks | Full pay (14 weeks) + €213.54/wk (4 weeks) | Day one |
| Paternity | 10 working days | Full pay | Day one |
| Parental Leave | 4 months per parent | 2 months paid (~€20/day); 2 months unpaid | After 12 months service |
| Miscarriage Leave | 7 working days | Full pay | Day one (Jan 2026) |
| Special Parental Bereavement Leave | 7 working days | Full pay | Day one (Jan 2026) |
| Carer’s Leave | 5 working days/yr | Unpaid | Day one |
Sick Leave
| Parameter | Rule |
|---|---|
| Statutory entitlement | 2 working weeks (80 hours) at full pay per year (where no WRO) |
| First 3 days | Paid in full by employer |
| From day 4 onwards | Employer can offset Social Security sickness benefit |
| Medical certificate | Required from day one of absence |
| Sectoral rules | Wages Council Orders (WROs) may grant longer sick leave |
Public Holidays 2026
Malta has 14 public holidays per year — these are in addition to your vacation leave. On these days, businesses close (except essential services). If a public holiday falls on a Saturday or Sunday, an additional day is added to vacation leave entitlement.
| Date | Day | Holiday |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January | Thursday | New Year’s Day |
| 10 February | Tuesday | Feast of St Paul’s Shipwreck |
| 19 March | Thursday | Feast of St Joseph |
| 31 March | Tuesday | Freedom Day |
| 3 April | Friday | Good Friday |
| 1 May | Friday | Workers’ Day |
| 7 June | Sunday | Sette Giugno |
| 29 June | Monday | Feast of St Peter and St Paul |
| 15 August | Saturday | Feast of the Assumption |
| 8 September | Tuesday | Victory Day |
| 21 September | Monday | Independence Day |
| 8 December | Tuesday | Immaculate Conception |
| 13 December | Sunday | Republic Day |
| 25 December | Friday | Christmas Day |
Notice Periods
Malta sets statutory minimum notice periods by length of service for indefinite contracts. Many professional contracts specify longer notice for senior roles.
| Length of service | Notice period |
|---|---|
| 1 month – 6 months | 1 week |
| >6 months – 2 years | 2 weeks |
| >2 – 4 years | 4 weeks |
| >4 – 7 years | 8 weeks |
| >7 – 8 years | 9 weeks |
| >8 – 9 years | 10 weeks |
| >9 – 10 years | 11 weeks |
| Over 10 years | 12 weeks |
Termination & Redundancy
Maltese employment law provides strong protection against unfair dismissal. Dismissals on indefinite contracts must follow fair processes and be supported by valid grounds (good and sufficient cause, redundancy, or reaching retirement age). Unfair dismissal cases are heard by the Industrial Tribunal.
| Item | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory severance | None | No statutory redundancy pay in Malta |
| Unfair dismissal compensation | Up to 6+ months’ wages | Set by Industrial Tribunal; can be higher in certain cases |
| Redundancy rule | Last-in-first-out | Within the same role / department |
| Re-engagement right | 1 year | If position is filled again, the redundant employee must be offered re-engagement |
| Unemployment benefit | ~€500–€600/month | Limited duration; from Department of Social Security |
Termination & Statutory Bonuses
On termination, employees are entitled to all accrued unused vacation, final wages, and pro-rated statutory bonuses (€135.10 in June and December) and weekly allowances (€121.16 in March and September) for 2026. Pregnancy-related dismissal is prohibited until 6 months after maternity leave.
Income Tax
The Malta tax year runs from 1 January to 31 December. Employees are taxed via the Final Settlement System (FSS), with tax withheld at source through monthly payroll. Tax rates differ by status — Single, Married, or Parent — with new Parental Tax Bands introduced from January 2026.
Income Tax Bands 2026 — Single
| Band | Annual Income | Rate | Subtract |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | €0 – €12,000 | 0% | — |
| 15% | €12,001 – €16,000 | 15% | €1,800 |
| 25% | €16,001 – €60,000 | 25% | €3,400 |
| 35% | Above €60,000 | 35% | €9,400 |
Income Tax Bands 2026 — Married (Joint)
| Band | Annual Income | Rate | Subtract |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | €0 – €15,000 | 0% | — |
| 15% | €15,001 – €23,000 | 15% | €2,250 |
| 25% | €23,001 – €60,000 | 25% | €4,550 |
| 35% | Above €60,000 | 35% | €10,550 |
Income Tax Bands 2026 — Parent
| Band | Annual Income | Rate | Subtract |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | €0 – €13,000 | 0% | — |
| 15% | €13,001 – €17,500 | 15% | €1,950 |
| 25% | €17,501 – €60,000 | 25% | €3,700 |
| 35% | Above €60,000 | 35% | €9,700 |
Highly Skilled Individuals Rules (LN 20 of 2026) — 15% Flat Rate
From January 2026, the HQP and related sectoral schemes are consolidated under the new Highly Skilled Individuals Rules. Minimum salary is €65,000 (rising by €10,000 every 5 years), the 15% flat rate applies up to €7 million of qualifying employment income, and the benefit lasts 5 years (renewable twice). Applicants must not have been tax resident in Malta in the previous 3 years.
VAT
| Rate | % | Applies to |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 18% | Most goods and services |
| Reduced | 12% | Short-term yacht charters, certain financial services, some private healthcare |
| Reduced | 7% | Hotel accommodation, licensed tourist services, sporting facilities |
| Reduced | 5% | Electricity, certain foods, books, newspapers, medical equipment |
| Zero | 0% | Basic food, medicines, exports |
| Registration threshold | €35,000 (services) / €30,000 (small enterprise) | Annual turnover |
Benefits
Malta’s statutory benefits package is comprehensive and EU-aligned. Competitive employers layer supplemental benefits to attract and retain professional talent.
Mandatory Statutory Benefits
| Benefit | Rate / Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory Bonus | €135.10 × 2/yr | Paid in June and December (2026 rates) |
| Statutory Weekly Allowance | €121.16 × 2/yr | Paid in March and September (2026 rates) |
| Maternity Benefit | €213.54/wk | Last 4 weeks of 18-week maternity (state-paid) |
| Sick Leave | 80 hrs/yr | Full pay; sectoral WROs may be more generous |
| Annual Leave | 216 hrs (27 days) | 2026 entitlement (incl. weekend-falling holidays) |
| Public Healthcare | Free | At Mater Dei and polyclinics, funded by SSC |
| Free Childcare (0–3) | Free | For working parents at registered centres |
| Free Public Transport | Free | For all residents with personalised Tallinja card |
Market-Standard Supplemental Benefits
| Benefit | Prevalence | Typical provision |
|---|---|---|
| Private Medical Insurance | Very common (iGaming, finance, tech) | Bupa / AXA / Mapfre MSV |
| Health insurance tax credit | Statutory | Up to €65 (single) / €125 (family) tax credit |
| Life Assurance | Common (large employers) | 2–3× annual salary |
| Voluntary Pension | Growing | 25% tax credit on contributions up to €3,000/yr (max €750 credit) |
| Relocation Allowance | Common for expat hires | Lump sum or expense reimbursement |
| Remote / Hybrid Working | Standard post-2021 | Hybrid 2–3 days; day-one right to request |
Pension System
Malta operates a three-pillar pension system: State Pension (SSC-funded), occupational schemes (voluntary), and personal private pensions (tax-incentivised). From 2026, all retirement pension income is fully exempt from income tax for individuals aged 61 and over.
| Parameter | 2026 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum State Pension (cap) | ~€19,389/yr | 2/3 of maximum pensionable income (€29,084) |
| Qualifying years (full) | 41 years SSC | Rising to 42 for younger cohorts under reform |
| State Pension age | 65 | For those born on/after 1962 |
| Vesting | 10 years minimum | To receive any state pension |
| Pension income tax | 0% | Fully exempt from age 61 (from Jan 2026) |
| Personal pension contribution cap | €3,000/yr | 25% tax credit (max €750/yr) |
| Occupational pension | Voluntary | From 2025, employers must offer enrolment |
| EU pension portability | Yes | Totalisation under EU Regulation 883/2004 |
Insurances
Mandatory and recommended insurances for employers, employees, and contractors in Malta.
| Insurance | Min. Cover | Required by |
|---|---|---|
| Private Health Insurance (non-EU) | €100,000 | Mandatory for Single Permit applicants |
| Motor Insurance | Third party | Motor Vehicles Insurance (Third-Party Risks) Ordinance |
| Employer’s Liability Insurance | Recommended | Not mandatory by statute; standard best practice |
Professional Indemnity Insurance — Contractors
Often contractually required by end-clients. Mandatory in regulated professions (doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers). Common in iGaming, IT, and financial services contracting. Minimum €1M standard; higher cover often required for senior consulting and financial services. AF can advise on appropriate cover for your sector.
Private Health Insurance
| Provider | Typical monthly cost | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Bupa Global | €60–€180 (individual) | International / comprehensive |
| Mapfre MSV Life | €40–€120 (individual) | Local comprehensive |
| Laferla | €35–€100 (individual) | Local; cash plans available |
| AXA / Allianz Care | €70–€180 (individual) | International expat plans |
AF Solutions
Access Financial has operated in Malta for many years, supporting end-clients, recruitment agencies, and contractors with AOR engagements.
For End-Clients
Managing a contingent workforce in Malta can be complex. Our solutions streamline workforce management, making it simple, compliant, and cost-effective.
For Recruiters
We offer a complete suite of services, allowing you to simply, compliantly, and efficiently place your candidates in Malta, with minimum fuss.
For Contractors
Focus on what you do best and let us take care of your self-employment registration, tax compliance, social security, and immigration needs.

Free Consultation
FAQ
Find answers to our most frequently asked questions below.
What solutions do you offer in Malta?
In Malta, Access Financial provides one compliant engagement model:
Self-employment: Where an engagement genuinely meets the criteria for self-employed status, we register the contractor compliantly, manage their filing obligations throughout the contract term, and deregister them at the end of the assignment.
Is contractor misclassification a high risk under an AOR engagement?
Misclassification typically occurs when contractors are treated as employees in practice — fixed hours, integration into the team, no right of substitution, direct supervision, and so on. Prevention requires clear engagement frameworks, standardised processes, documented evidence of independence, and recurring audits. Accountability and the right technology are key to staying compliant at scale, particularly as tax authorities increasingly use data analytics and algorithmic checks to flag suspect arrangements.
At Access Financial, we help our clients minimise this risk by designing tailored classification frameworks, onboarding checklists, contractual safeguards, and recurring compliance audits.
What is your pricing model?
Our standard management fee is 5% of the contract value, with a minimum of €550. We also offer volume discounts on bulk engagements. To discuss pricing for your specific scenario, please get in touch with our team here: https://accessfinancial.com/#get-started.
Social Insurance
Social Security Contributions (locally called “national insurance”) fund pensions, healthcare, unemployment, and other benefits. Both employer and employee contribute equally.
January 2026 Change — SSC Thresholds Updated
SSC thresholds rose by approximately 3% from 1 January 2026. Maximum weekly contribution for employees born on or after 1 January 1962 is now €55.93/week (up from €54.43 in 2025). Annual cap on contributory wages: €29,084.
Employer Contributions
Employee Contributions