Table of Contents What is the Digital Nomad Visa for Malta? Digital Nomad Visa Malta: Requirements You Need to Meet The Application Process Step by Step Costs and Fees: What the Malta Remote Work Visa Costs Tax Implications for Digital Nomads My Experiences and Practical Tips Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Frequently Asked Questions What is the Digital Nomad Visa for Malta and who is it designed for? The Digital Nomad Visa for Malta – officially Nomad Residence Permit – is Maltas response to the remote work boom. Since 2021, both EU and non-EU citizens can live and work legally on the island for up to a year, without needing a Maltese work permit. The catch: you continue working for your foreign employer or your own clients, but – under certain circumstances – you pay significantly less tax than in Germany. Ive gone through the process myself and I promise you one thing: its less complicated than a German tax return but definitely more bureaucratic than booking a holiday flight. Malta created this visa to attract highly qualified remote workers who are willing to spend at least €2,700 per month on the island. Who can apply for the Malta Digital Nomad Visa? The visa is targeted at three main groups: Remote Employees: You work remotely full-time for a company outside Malta Self-employed & Freelancers: You have clients outside Malta and can work location-independently Entrepreneurs: You run a business that is not registered in Malta Important: You may not take on work for Maltese companies or serve Maltese clients during your visa period. That would be a violation of the visa conditions. EU vs. Non-EU: The Differences As an EU citizen, you could theoretically just move to Malta and work there – but the Digital Nomad Visa offers you tax advantages. For non-EU citizens, it is often the only legal way to stay for longer than the standard tourist visa allows. Status Without Visa With Digital Nomad Visa EU citizen Unlimited stay, full tax liability Tax advantages, 15% flat tax possible Non-EU citizen 90 days tourist visa 365 days stay + work permit Digital Nomad Visa Malta: Requirements You Need to Meet Malta doesn’t make it difficult for you, but there are a few hurdles. Here’s a complete list of requirements – and some practical advice about which ones tend to be the most difficult in practice. Minimum Salary and Proof of Income You must prove a gross annual income of at least €32,400. That comes out to €2,700 gross per month. Sounds fair, but proving this can be a bit tricky: Employees: Work contract plus payslips for the past three months Self-employed: Previous year’s tax return or profit and loss statement Entrepreneurs: Dividend distributions or director’s salary My tip: If you’re a freelancer and your income fluctuates, prepare a detailed breakdown of your projects. The Maltese authorities want to see that you consistently earn above the threshold. Health Insurance: EU vs. Private Insurance You’ll need health insurance valid in Malta. Here’s what matters: EU citizens: European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) theoretically sufficient Non-EU citizens: Private international health insurance with minimum €30,000 coverage Everyone: Private supplementary insurance recommended (the Maltese health system is… well, an acquired taste) Clean Police Record and Other Documents Malta wants to know who they’re dealing with. You’ll need: Police clearance certificate from your home country (not older than three months) Passport (valid for at least 12 months) Rental contract or hotel confirmation for the entire duration of stay Flight tickets or proof of intention to depart the country The police clearance was the most time-consuming part for me. In Germany, the online process takes about a week, but play it safe and allow at least two weeks for this step. The Accommodation Issue This is where it gets practical: at the time you apply, you must already prove you have accommodation for the whole period. This can be a rental contract, a hotel booking, or even an Airbnb confirmation. Reality check: most people apply with a hotel reservation for the first month and then search for a long-term place once on site. That’s perfectly legal – as long as you can always show an official address. Technical Requirements for Remote Work Malta requires that you can actually work remotely. This means: Laptop or computer Stable internet connection (Malta’s internet is, by the way, quite good) Communication tools for your team Sounds obvious, but I actually had to list my technical equipment in the application. The Application Process Step by Step: How to Get the Malta Remote Work Visa Now it gets concrete. Here’s a step-by-step guide – from the initial preparation to the moment when you finally have the visa in your hands. Phase 1: Preparation and Document Collection (2-4 weeks) Before you even think about starting the online application, you need all documents ready. My checklist: Apply for police clearance certificate (Germany: €13 online, 1-2 weeks waiting time) Compile and translate proof of income Check or take out new health insurance Get passport photos to EU standard Research and reserve accommodation Pro-tip: Any documents not in English must be translated. Certified translations in Germany cost roughly €25-35 per page. Phase 2: Online Application (1-2 hours) The application is submitted via the Residency Malta Agency portal. The website looks like it’s from 2015 but actually works surprisingly well. You’ll need to: Enter personal details Upload all documents as PDFs Write a statement of purpose (why Malta, how long, what’s your plan) Pay the fees online The statement of purpose should be convincing but not exaggerated. I wrote that I wanted to use Malta as an EU hub for my clients and experience the island’s cultural diversity. Cheesy? Maybe. Successful? Definitely. Phase 3: Processing and Follow-Up (4-8 weeks) Now you wait. The official processing time is 30 working days, but in reality it may take up to eight weeks. Especially in spring, when all the digital nomads head for the Mediterranean. Be prepared for the authorities to ask further questions or require additional documents. Typical follow-ups: More detailed proof of income Confirmation of health insurance Clarification of your employment relationship with your employer Phase 4: Approval and Visa Collection If everything goes smoothly, you’ll receive approval by email. You then need to collect the actual visa in person in Malta – within 30 days of arrival. Visa collection is in Valletta, in an unassuming office building that you’d never find without GPS. Bring with you: All original documents Biometric photos Proof of your Maltese address Cash for possible extra fees Processing Times in Practice Season Processing Time Special Notes January – March 6-8 weeks Peak application season April – June 4-6 weeks Stable, but many follow-ups July – September 4-5 weeks Officer vacation time October – December 3-4 weeks Best time to apply Costs and Fees: What the Digital Nomad Visa Malta Really Costs Time to talk numbers. Malta isn’t exactly known for cheap bureaucracy, and the Digital Nomad Visa is no exception. Official Visa Fees The basic fee is €300 – that’s actually the cheapest part of the whole process. Additionally: Application fee: €300 Processing fee: €27 Visa card (physical document): €27.50 Express processing (optional): €150 extra That’s €354.50 for the standard process, or €504.50 if you want it fast. In my experience, the express processing only saves about a week and isn’t really worth the extra cost. Hidden Costs in Preparation The real costs are in gathering the required documents. Here’s what I spent in practice: Item Cost Germany Cost Switzerland/Austria Police clearance certificate €13 €20-35 Certified translations (3 documents) €75-105 €90-150 Passport photos (biometric) €15-20 €20-25 Apostille (if required) €25 €30-50 Document postage €10-15 €15-25 Ongoing Costs in Malta The visa isn’t the end of your spending. Youll also have to prove you’re spending the required €2,700 per month. In Malta, that’s not so hard: Rent (1-bedroom apartment): €800-1,400/month Living expenses: €600-900/month Utilities (electricity, internet, etc.): €150-250/month Transport: €26/month (bus pass) or €300-500/month (car rental) You see: you almost reach the €2,700 minimum spending automatically, unless you’re living in a hostel dorm and surviving on pastizzi. Total One-Year Calculation Let’s add up what your first year as a digital nomad in Malta will really cost: Cost Item One-off Monthly Annual Total Visa fees €500 – €500 Document procurement €200 – €200 Accommodation – €1,100 €13,200 Living expenses – €750 €9,000 Utilities – €200 €2,400 Transport – €400 €4,800 Total €700 €2,450 €30,100 That’s slightly below the required minimum of €32,400 – so you’ve got €200 per month as buffer for restaurants, trips and unexpected costs. Tax Implications: How You’ll Be Taxed as a Digital Nomad in Malta This is where it gets really interesting – and complex. Taxes are often the main reason many choose Malta. But be careful: make one wrong step and you could end up paying tax in two countries. The 183-Day Rule: When Are You a Maltese Tax Resident? Malta, like most countries, applies the 183-day rule. If you spend more than 183 days per calendar year in Malta, you automatically become tax-resident there. With the Digital Nomad Visa for a full year, you’ll almost certainly be a Maltese tax resident. That doesn’t automatically mean you stop paying taxes in Germany or Switzerland. The double taxation agreements (DTA) come into play. In simple terms: you pay tax where your “centre of vital interests” is located. The 15% Flat Tax System for Non-Domiciled Individuals Malta has a tax system especially tailor-made for foreign residents. As a digital nomad, you benefit from the so-called Non-Dom Status: Income from Malta: Standard Maltese tax rates (15-35%) Foreign income not remitted to Malta: 0% Malta tax Foreign income remitted to Malta: 15% flat tax Here’s the trick: you only pay tax on the money you actually bring into Malta. If you leave your salary in your German account and only transfer what you need for living, you pay 15% tax only on that amount. Practical Example: Anna, the Remote Project Manager Anna earns €60,000 gross as a remote project manager for a Berlin-based firm. She has the Digital Nomad Visa and spends 10 months in Malta. Her tax scenario: Scenario Tax Germany Tax Malta Total Burden Without Malta (full German tax) €18,500 €0 €18,500 Malta Non-Dom, €30k remitted €0 €4,500 €4,500 Malta Non-Dom, €50k remitted €0 €7,500 €7,500 The savings are significant – but only if everything is done correctly. Social Security: The Hidden Issue Taxes are only half the story. Social security is often overlooked but can become a real cost: German employees: Continue with German social insurance through your employer German self-employed: Voluntary health insurance in Germany or Maltese social security Non-EU citizens: Private health insurance required My advice: Have this checked by a tax advisor familiar with international tax law. The few hundred euros for professional advice can save you a five-figure tax back-payment down the line. Exit Tax Considerations Germany has a peculiarity: the exit tax. If you hold more than 25% in a corporation and leave Germany, you may have to pay taxes on any gain in value – even if you haven’t actually sold your shares. This mainly concerns entrepreneurs and startup founders. If that applies to you: Definitely get tax advice before making any moves! Avoiding Tax Pitfalls From my experience, the most common mistakes are: No proper deregistration in Germany: You remain fully liable to German tax Centre of vital interests misjudged: Family, property, main bank accounts in Germany = German tax liability Forgetting social insurance: Can become very expensive retroactively Neglecting documentation: You’ll have to be able to prove everything in a tax audit My Experiences and Practical Tips for Applying After one year with the Malta Digital Nomad Visa and countless chats with other remote workers, I’ve learned a lot. Here are the tips that really make the difference. Best Time to Apply Timing is everything. My recommendation: October to December: Best processing times, little competition January to March: Avoid – everyone wants to escape the German winter Arrival in Malta: September to November or February to May I arrived in March and had the perfect weather: 22 degrees, few tourists, but the island was already waking up. July and August I wouldn’t recommend – 35°C and crowded beaches aren’t everyone’s thing. Finding a Place to Live: What Really Works Accommodation search is the most stressful part. Here’s my proven strategy: First two weeks: Airbnb or hotel in Sliema/St. Julian’s Search on location: Facebook groups “Malta Property Rent”, “Digital Nomads Malta” Viewing tours: Plan 4-5 viewings per day Decide immediately: Good apartments disappear within 24 hours The best areas for digital nomads: Area Advantages Disadvantages Price 1-bedroom Sliema Central, good infrastructure Touristy, noisy €900-1,300 St. Julian’s Nightlife, expat community Party noise, overpriced €1,000-1,500 Gzira Quieter, more affordable Less action €700-1,000 Valletta Historic, cultural Few modern apartments €800-1,200 Msida University, young Student shared flats €600-900 Workspaces and Coworking Malta has a surprisingly good coworking scene. My top picks: SOHO, Sliema: €150-200/month, professional, great networking events Esplora, Kalkara: €180-220/month, modern, a bit outside The Office Hub, Gzira: €120-160/month, budget, basic Library Café, Valletta: Free, ideal for a day, can get noisy Internet is generally good on Malta. I had a 500 Mbit/s connection with Melita for €35 per month – more than enough for video calls and cloud work. Banking: The Ongoing Topic Opening a Maltese bank account is… well, an experience. Despite the Digital Nomad Visa formally granting you access, banks do not make it easy: HSBC Malta: Fairly expat-friendly, but high minimum deposit (€2,500) Bank of Valletta: Local bank, complicated process Revolut/N26: Works perfectly as a transition solution My tip: A German online bank account will do perfectly well for the first few months. You can sort out a Maltese account later when things have settled. Finding Community Malta is small, but the expat community is big and welcoming. Where to start: Facebook groups: “Expats in Malta”, “Digital Nomads Malta”, “Germans in Malta” Meetups: Malta Digital Nomads Meetup (every first Wednesday of the month) Coworking events: Networking events in the spaces WhatsApp groups: Usually formed via the Facebook groups The Maltese mentality takes some getting used to – relaxed, but sometimes inefficient. “Mela, tomorrow” is a phrase you’ll hear more often than you’d like. Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them During my year in Malta I met many digital nomads – and kept seeing the same old mistakes. Here are the main pitfalls and how to get around them. Mistake 1: Poor Document Preparation The most common reason for rejections or delays is incomplete or incorrect documents. I watched someone have to submit their application three times because: The police certificate was one day out of date The translation was not certified The income proof was too vaguely worded How to do it right: Check all your documents three times and have them double-checked by someone who has already applied for a visa. The €50 for professional review can save you months of waiting. Mistake 2: Unrealistic Budget Planning Malta is more expensive than many think. Germans in particular underestimate the cost of living. A one-bedroom apartment in a reasonable location is at least €800 – often more. Plus: Electricity (can be €150+ in summer due to AC) Groceries (20-30% more expensive than Germany) Transport (without car, very limited) Going out (restaurant prices on a par with London) How to do it right: Plan on at least €3,000 a month if you want to live comfortably. The legal €2,700 is only enough for a very basic lifestyle. Mistake 3: Naïveté about Taxes The biggest mistake is thinking you’ll automatically save on taxes just by being in Malta. I know a freelancer who thought he was smart – and ended up liable in both Germany and Malta. Double taxation at its finest. Most common tax misconceptions: Incomplete deregistration in Germany Centre of vital interests wrongly assessed Non-Dom status not applied for correctly Completely forgetting social security How to do it right: Invest in proper tax advice. €1,000-2,000 for an expert can save you five-figure back-payments later on. Mistake 4: Underestimating Island Life Malta is 316 square kilometres – smaller than Bremen. After three months, you know every corner. This can feel confining, especially in winter when the weather is bad and ferries to Sicily aren’t running. Symptoms of “island fever”: You keep going to the same restaurants You know every expat by name You’re excited when friends come from the mainland You plan a trip off-island every two months How to do it right: Plan regular trips to Sicily, Italy or elsewhere in Europe from the start. Ryanair and Malta Air offer cheap flights. Mistake 5: Wrong Expectations of Infrastructure Malta is an EU member, but some things run… Mediterranean. Power outages on Gozo, buses that never arrive, offices that close at 11:30am – it’s all part of the package. The most frustrating: Public transport: Unreliable, especially on weekends Handymen: “Tomorrow” can mean next week Bureaucracy: Everything takes twice as long as stated Online services: Often outdated or non-existent How to do it right: Always allow extra time, and develop a healthy dose of Maltese chill. It’ll work out – mela. Mistake 6: Isolating from Local Culture Many digital nomads stay in their expat bubble. It’s comfortable, but you miss the real Malta. The locals are incredibly welcoming – if you make the effort. How to break out of the bubble: Learn some Maltese – it’s highly appreciated Take part in local festivals and celebrations Shop at local markets Avoid expat hotspots like Sliema and St. Julian’s Mistake 7: Poor Time Management for Renewal The Digital Nomad Visa expires after exactly one year. If you want to extend it or apply for a different residency, you need to do so in good time. You should get started at least three months in advance. Your options after one year: Extension of the Digital Nomad Visa: Possible, but not guaranteed EU Residence Permit: If you’re an EU citizen and want to register fully Global Residence Programme: For high-net-worth individuals Leave and reapply: Possible again after a six-month break Frequently Asked Questions about the Malta Digital Nomad Visa Can I extend the Digital Nomad Visa? Yes, an extension for another 12 months is possible, but not automatic. You have to meet all the requirements again and submit a new application. Most people get the extension, but there’s no guarantee. Can I work for Maltese clients on this visa? No, that’s specifically prohibited. You may only work for foreign employers or clients. If you violate this rule, you risk losing the visa and being banned from Malta. Do I really need to spend €2,700 every month? Yes, you must be able to prove that you spend at least this amount in Malta. It’s not controlled daily – you just need to provide evidence in case of an official review. Does the visa work for freelancers without fixed income? Yes, but you still have to prove average annual income of €32,400. Best with tax returns from recent years or detailed project breakdowns. Can I bring my family? Yes, spouses and minor children can apply for family reunification. Each person needs their own application, with additional fees. What if I want to stay longer than a year? You can apply for an extension or a different residency status. As an EU citizen you can also register normally and use your right of free movement. Do I need a Maltese bank account? Not strictly for the visa, but it’s handy if you’re staying longer. German online banks work fine in Malta; a local account just makes some things easier. What about health insurance? EU citizens can use the European Health Insurance Card, but a private top-up policy is recommended. Non-EU citizens need private health insurance with coverage of at least €30,000. Do I need to learn Maltese? No, English is an official language and understood everywhere. But a few words of Maltese help when dealing with locals and are always appreciated. What happens if I get sick or lose my job? The visa is tied to you continuing to work remotely and maintaining the minimum income. If you’re unemployed for a longer period, the visa can be withdrawn.