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posted 6 hours ago
Last reviewed: 5 July 2026
The Malta Permanent Residence Programme (MPRP) gives non‑EU nationals and their families an indefinite right to reside in Malta and visa‑free travel throughout the Schengen Area. Understanding how to apply for Malta permanent residency in 2026 is critical because administrative changes introduced through Subsidiary Legislation 217.26, and updated onboarding and KYC requirements that took effect in late 2025, have materially altered the documentation, timing and pre‑submission screening stages of the MPRP application process. This guide sets out every eligibility requirement, procedural step, document, cost and deadline that applicants need to navigate before, during and after filing with the Residency Malta Agency.
The MPRP is governed by the Malta Permanent Residence Programme Regulations (S.L. 217.26), published on the official Maltese legislation portal. The programme is administered by the Residency Malta Agency, the government body responsible for receiving, processing and deciding applications. It is designed primarily for third‑country nationals, individuals who are not citizens of an EU, EEA or Swiss state, who wish to establish a permanent base in Malta through a combination of property commitment, financial contribution and successful due‑diligence screening.
EU and EEA citizens follow a separate pathway. They may apply for a permanent residence document through the Expatriates Unit at Identità Malta after demonstrating at least six months’ residence in Malta in each of the preceding five twelve‑month periods. That route does not require an investment contribution and operates under different regulations entirely.
The MPRP offers two principal benefits that drive applicant interest:
Applicants considering Malta permanent residency in 2026 should be aware that enhanced KYC and anti‑money‑laundering (AML) checks now apply at the onboarding stage, and Residency Malta conducts a pre‑submission screening before an application is formally accepted. These changes, discussed in detail below, can add several weeks to the preparation timeline.
Before beginning the MPRP application process, applicants must confirm they meet each eligibility criterion set out in S.L. 217.26. Failure to satisfy any single requirement will result in the application being rejected at screening, so a preliminary eligibility assessment is an essential first step.
The Malta residency by investment requirements applicable to the main applicant include: holding a valid passport; demonstrating stable and regular financial resources sufficient to maintain the applicant and any dependants without recourse to Malta’s social assistance system; possessing qualifying property in Malta (either purchased or leased for the minimum term prescribed in the regulations); holding comprehensive health insurance covering the applicant and all dependants for risks in Malta; and passing criminal‑record and international‑sanctions checks. The applicant must also satisfy source‑of‑funds requirements under Malta’s AML framework, supervised by the Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit (FIAU).
The MPRP allows the main applicant to include several categories of family member on a single application. These typically include a spouse or partner in a stable relationship recognised under Maltese law, minor children of the main applicant or spouse, and adult children who are unmarried and financially dependent on the main applicant. Dependent parents and grandparents of the main applicant or spouse may also be included, provided they can demonstrate genuine financial dependency. Each dependant must supply individual identity, civil‑status and insurance documentation.
Any applicant, whether the main applicant or a dependant over the age of criminal responsibility, who has a criminal conviction for a serious offence, or who appears on international sanctions lists, will be refused. Residency Malta cross‑checks applicant data against Maltese, EU and international sanctions databases. Applicants must provide recent police conduct certificates from every country of residence, issued no more than six months before submission.
Under FIAU guidance, the authorised agent or licensed adviser handling the application is an obliged entity for AML purposes. This means the agent must carry out customer due diligence (CDD) on the applicant before the file is submitted. The CDD process covers identity verification, source‑of‑wealth analysis, screening against politically‑exposed‑person (PEP) databases, and, for complex structures, enhanced due diligence (EDD). Applicants whose funds originate from corporate holdings, trusts or multi‑jurisdictional arrangements should expect the EDD process to take significantly longer than standard onboarding.
The following numbered steps describe the full MPRP application process from initial instruction through to the issuance of the residence card. The timeline table beneath the steps summarises who is responsible and the typical duration of each stage.
The applicant engages an authorised agent licensed by Residency Malta. At this stage, the adviser confirms which investment route the applicant will follow (property purchase, property lease, or a combination involving a fund contribution), reviews the applicant’s family composition and flags any documentation gaps. The output is a tailored project plan and a personalised document checklist.
Applicants should provide preliminary copies of passports, bank statements and any existing property documents at this stage so the adviser can conduct a rapid eligibility screen before committing resources.
The applicant completes the onboarding questionnaires required by the authorised agent under FIAU rules. Notarised identification documents, certified police certificates, bank references and evidence of source of funds are collected. Industry observers expect that the enhanced pre‑submission screening introduced in late 2025 adds one to three weeks to this stage for applicants with multi‑jurisdictional business interests or complex corporate structures.
Source‑of‑fund evidence typically includes six to twelve months of bank statements, share‑sale agreements, audited company accounts, employment contracts and tax returns. All documents not in English must be accompanied by certified translations.
The applicant must demonstrate qualifying accommodation in Malta, either through the purchase of immovable property or a registered lease for the minimum term set out in the MPRP Regulations. If purchasing, the applicant instructs a Maltese notary to handle the transfer. If leasing, the lease must be duly registered with the relevant Maltese authority and meet the minimum rental value thresholds specified in S.L. 217.26.
Property searches, contract negotiations and notarial completion can take two to six weeks depending on market conditions. Applicants choosing the purchase route should allow additional time for title searches and the signing of the final deed of sale.
Once the property is secured and KYC is substantially complete, the applicant makes the required government contribution and pays the processing fee to Residency Malta. The authorised agent compiles the full application file, attaching all certified documents, completed forms, payment receipts and the agent’s own CDD report.
Applicants should retain original receipts for every payment. The MPRP costs and fees table below sets out the indicative amounts for each payment component.
The authorised agent submits the application to Residency Malta, either through the agency’s online portal or in hard copy where required. Residency Malta conducts a pre‑submission screening, a procedural step that was strengthened in 2025, to verify completeness and flag any documentation deficiencies before the file enters formal processing. If queries arise, the applicant and agent must respond within the timeframe stipulated by the agency.
Once Residency Malta is satisfied that all requirements are met and all background checks are clear, it issues a letter of approval. The applicant then pays the residence card issuance fee, attends identity verification (biometrics) and collects the permanent residence card. Industry observers report that the majority of straightforward applications are decided within six to eight months of submission, although complex cases involving multiple dependants or EDD can extend the timeline.
After receiving the card, the holder must maintain qualifying property and health insurance for the duration of their residence and comply with the 90/180‑day Schengen travel rule when visiting other member states.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary eligibility and instructions | Applicant + lawyer/adviser | 1 week |
| Onboarding, KYC and source‑of‑fund collection | Applicant + authorised agent | 1–3 weeks (longer for complex structures) |
| Secure qualifying accommodation (purchase or lease) | Applicant + real‑estate lawyer/notary | 2–6 weeks (purchase takes longer) |
| Payments and compile application | Applicant + authorised agent | 1–2 weeks |
| Submit application and pre‑submission screening | Residency Malta + agent | 4–12 weeks (agency queries add time) |
| Decision and residence card issuance | Residency Malta | 6–32 weeks (most cases 6–8 months total) |
The table below is the core MPRP documents checklist. Every document listed must be current, correctly legalised and, where applicable, accompanied by a certified English translation. Missing or expired documents are the single most common cause of delays at the pre‑submission screening stage.
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity) |
|---|---|
| Valid passport (main applicant and all dependants) | Clear colour copy plus notarised copy; minimum 12 months’ validity recommended at date of submission |
| Birth certificate(s) | Long‑form; notarised and apostilled if issued outside Malta; certified English translation required |
| Marriage certificate or proof of civil partnership | Notarised and apostilled where applicable; certified translation if not in English |
| Police / criminal record certificate | From current country of residence and each previous country of residence; must be issued within six months of submission; notarised |
| Proof of accommodation (title deed or registered lease) | Notarised title deed or registered lease for the minimum term prescribed under S.L. 217.26; certified copy showing registration |
| Evidence of funds and source of funds | Bank statements (6–12 months), sale agreements, audited accounts, tax returns; certified translations where needed |
| Health insurance certificate | Private comprehensive international health insurance covering all risks in Malta for applicant and every dependant |
| Medical certificate (if requested by agency) | Issued by an authorised medical practitioner; limited validity, obtain close to submission date |
| Proof of payment of government contribution and fees | Original receipts from Residency Malta or the authorised body processing the payment |
| Corporate documents (if source of funds is a company) | Certificate of incorporation, shareholder register, audited accounts, accountant’s letters; certified copies |
| Power of Attorney / engagement letter | If applying through an authorised agent; notarised and apostilled where required |
| KYC questionnaires and client onboarding forms | Completed onboarding forms and identification checks as required by the authorised agent under FIAU rules |
Understanding the Malta permanent residency timeline is essential for coordinating document collection, property transactions and payment schedules. The table in the step‑by‑step section above provides stage‑by‑stage durations; the key deadlines and validity windows below supplement those estimates.
How long does Malta residency take overall? From first instruction to residence card in hand, applicants should budget approximately eight to twelve months for the entire process, including document preparation. Applicants comparing the MPRP with the EU/EEA permanent residence route administered by Identità Malta should note that the latter requires five years of continuous lawful residence before an application can be made.
The table below sets out the main cost components of an MPRP application. All euro amounts are indicative and should be verified directly with Residency Malta before payment, as fees are subject to periodic revision under S.L. 217.26.
| Item | Indicative Amount (2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Government contribution | €28,000 – €58,000 (varies by route) | Amount depends on whether the applicant purchases or leases property; confirm the exact amount applicable to the chosen route on the Residency Malta website |
| Donation to registered philanthropic organisation | €2,000 (indicative) | A non‑refundable donation is required; verify the current minimum with Residency Malta |
| Administrative / processing fee | €40,000 (indicative) | Paid at or around the time of submission; verify the current schedule on the Residency Malta fee page |
| Residence card issuance fee | Varies | Payable on positive decision; check current rates with the agency |
| Real estate (purchase or lease) | Market price / annual rent | Minimum property value or annual lease amount is prescribed in S.L. 217.26; verify current thresholds |
| Legal and agent fees | €10,000+ (market dependent) | Varies by firm and case complexity; includes KYC/verification services and notarial work |
| Translation, apostille and notarisation | €50 – €500 per document | Depends on issuing country and number of documents |
Tax considerations. Obtaining MPRP status does not automatically make the holder tax‑resident in Malta. Tax residence is determined by actual physical presence and centre of vital interests under Maltese tax law. Applicants who intend to relocate should obtain independent tax advice before or alongside the MPRP process. Those interested in Malta’s broader retirement and relocation programmes may also wish to compare the tax treatment of alternative residence schemes.
Malta permanent residency in 2026 operates under an enhanced administrative framework compared with earlier years. The key procedural updates affecting current applicants are as follows.
Strengthened pre‑submission screening. Residency Malta now conducts a formal completeness and compliance review before an application enters the processing queue. Files that are incomplete or that raise preliminary KYC concerns are returned to the authorised agent for rectification. The likely practical effect is that applicants must have all documents finalised and all payments confirmed before the agent submits, reducing the scope for provisional or “subject to” filings that were occasionally accepted under earlier practice.
Enhanced KYC and source‑of‑fund requirements. Authorised agents must now conduct more detailed source‑of‑wealth analysis at the onboarding stage, consistent with updated FIAU guidance. For applicants whose funds flow through corporate structures, trusts or multi‑jurisdictional arrangements, this means providing additional layers of documentary proof, audited accounts, trust deeds, board resolutions, and allowing additional verification time. Industry observers report that this adds two to six weeks to the onboarding stage for complex cases.
Updated regulatory framework. The MPRP Regulations (S.L. 217.26) were amended by Legal Notice in 2025, introducing practical updates to qualifying conditions while retaining the programme’s core structure. Applicants should ensure their advisers are working from the current consolidated text of S.L. 217.26, available on the official Maltese legislation portal.
These changes reflect Malta’s broader commitment to EU compliance standards for residency‑by‑investment programmes and bring the MPRP’s due‑diligence framework into closer alignment with recommendations from the European Commission.
What to do if the application is refused. Applicants who receive a negative decision should obtain written reasons from Residency Malta and seek legal advice promptly. Remedies may include administrative review, submission of supplementary evidence or, in appropriate cases, judicial review before the Maltese courts. Engaging experienced immigration counsel at the earliest stage significantly improves the prospects of a successful outcome. To find a Malta immigration lawyer, consult the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ryan Ellul at Ryan Ellul Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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