Malta has overhauled its flagship residency-by-investment route for non-EU nationals, introducing a one-year Temporary Residence Permit and cutting costs for families under reforms that took effect in 2025. The measures, set out in Legal Notice 146/25 and implemented by the Residency Malta Agency, aim to keep the Malta Permanent Residence Programme (MPRP) competitive while preserving strict checks.
New applicants who pass initial screening can receive a temporary residence card soon after filing, paying a €15,000 administrative fee, rather than waiting for full approval before moving to the island. Officials say the shift gives families a faster, lawful way to settle in Malta while the agency completes full due diligence.

Key policy highlights
- Temporary Residence Permit: one-year card available after initial checks, allowing families to relocate earlier while full approval is pending.
- Administrative fee: €15,000 (non-refundable if the agency refuses the file).
- Reduced adult dependent fee: lowered by 25% to €7,500 per person aged 18 and over.
- Property flexibility: buyers of qualifying real estate can rent it out immediately; renters can sublet after five years with landlord consent.
- Agent licensing: will move under the Residency Malta Agency by the end of 2025, centralizing oversight.
- According to VisaVerge.com analysis, the updates make the MPRP one of the most flexible options for multi-generational families seeking EU residence with Schengen access.
Eligibility and family composition
Under the 2025 framework, the MPRP remains open to non-EU nationals over 18 who meet financial and background standards. The programme continues to allow up to five generations on one application, including:
- spouse or partner
- dependent children (including ages 18–29 if unmarried and financially dependent)
- dependent parents and grandparents
- spouses of dependent children
Each adult dependent requires an extra €7,500 fee. Siblings are not eligible.
Financial thresholds and requirements
Applicants must meet one of the following net worth tests and maintain the level for at least five years:
- Net worth of €500,000, with €150,000 in financial assets; or
- Net worth of €650,000, with €75,000 in financial assets.
Other mandatory requirements:
- Health insurance covering all risks in Malta and across the EU for the main applicant and all dependents.
- Clean criminal record for every adult on the application.
Investment options (unchanged, with added flexibility)
- Property purchase: minimum €375,000 in Malta’s south or €400,000 in the north; held for at least five years.
- Long-term rental: minimum €14,000 per year for at least five years.
- Government contribution: non-refundable €37,000 (whether buying or renting).
- Philanthropic donation: €2,000 to a local NGO.
The major change: qualifying property purchased can be rented out immediately; rental agreements can be sublet after five years if the landlord agrees.
Process and timeline (2025)
- Applicants begin with due diligence by licensed agents (source-of-funds, identity, AML/CFT checks).
- Ensure all documents are in English or have certified translations.
- Main applicant must provide an affidavit confirming financial support for any dependent over 18 (except spouse/partner).
- Signatures from both parents or legal guardians are required for minor dependents.
- Agent files with the Residency Malta Agency and pays the €15,000 non-refundable administrative fee.
- After initial checks, the agency may issue the one-year Temporary Residence Permit.
- If approved-in-principle, the applicant completes required investments: property purchase or rental, €37,000 government contribution, and €2,000 NGO donation.
- All family members travel to Malta for biometrics.
- The agency issues the permanent residence certificate and card after confirming all steps are complete.
Additional process notes:
- The biometric card must be renewed every five years; current card fee is €100 per year.
- Despite marketing claims, typical timeline is 6–8 months from submission to final approval for well-prepared files.
- The Temporary Residence Permit allows earlier relocation but does not shorten due diligence or final compliance checks.
- Delays commonly stem from incomplete documents, missing translations, or extended background queries.
Country/Type | Visa Category | Processing Time |
---|---|---|
Malta | Temporary Residence Permit (MPRP) | 1 year |
Malta | Submission to final approval (typical, well-prepared files) | 6–8 months |
Malta | Hold qualifying property (purchase) requirement | At least five years |
Malta | Long-term rental requirement | At least five years |
Malta | Subletting allowed for renters | 5 years |
Malta | Maintain required net worth | At least five years |
Important: The €15,000 administrative fee is non-refundable if the agency refuses the file. Review contracts and commitments carefully before major financial steps.
Impact on applicants and families
- For investors, the 2025 changes reduce the cost for larger families and allow earlier residence with rental income potential.
- Renting/subletting flexibility makes the required real estate a more liquid asset for families keeping a home in their country of origin.
- For Malta, the update aims to keep the MPRP competitive while centralizing oversight and maintaining strict checks.
- Multi-generational inclusion remains a hallmark: grandparents and dependent adult children up to 29 (unmarried and financially dependent) can be included.
- The route provides lifetime residence rights in Malta, visa-free travel across the Schengen Area, and no minimum stay requirement.
Critics continue to caution that residency-by-investment schemes can be abused if checks are weak. Malta has strengthened standards since 2021; the 2025 update retains stronger front-end screening while allowing faster family entry for those who pass initial checks.
Costs — realistic expectations
Industry experts note total costs for a family often exceed €100,000 when accounting for:
- property purchase or rental
- €37,000 government contribution
- €2,000 NGO donation
- €15,000 administrative fee
- dependent fees (€7,500 per adult)
- other professional and transaction costs
This places the route mainly within reach for high-net-worth applicants.
Practical and compliance points
- EU nationals cannot use the MPRP; they follow separate residence routes based on lawful residence through Identità’s Expatriates Unit.
- For potential rejections: the €15,000 fee is non-refundable. Other costs may be recoverable depending on timing and contractual terms.
- Compliance obligations:
- Keep health insurance current.
- Maintain required net worth for at least five years.
- Hold qualifying property contract (purchase or rental) for the five-year period.
- Renew the permanent residence card every five years and keep biometrics/contact details up to date.
- The Residency Malta Agency encourages working with licensed agents and relying on official guidance rather than marketing claims.
- The agency plans to centralize agent licensing by late 2025, which may reduce errors that cause delays.
Buying vs renting — considerations
- Buying: €375,000 (south) or €400,000 (north) — meets the rule but ties up capital. Buyers can rent out immediately to offset costs.
- Renting: €14,000 per year for five years — better for newcomers who want to test Malta. Subletting allowed after five years with landlord consent, providing a later cost-recovery option.
Official information and next steps
Applicants can find official programme details, updates, and licensed agent information on the Residency Malta Agency website at https://residencymalta.gov.mt.
In short, the 2025 update makes the MPRP faster to access and more flexible on property use, but the core test remains the same: strong due diligence, clear source of wealth, and steady compliance over the first five years.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
Malta’s 2025 overhaul of the Malta Permanent Residence Programme (MPRP), set out in Legal Notice 146/25 and managed by the Residency Malta Agency, introduces a one-year Temporary Residence Permit allowing applicants who pass initial screening to relocate earlier. Applicants pay a €15,000 administrative fee at filing (non-refundable if refused). The reforms reduce adult dependent fees to €7,500 and permit immediate rental of qualifying purchased property; renters may sublet after five years with landlord consent. Applicants must meet net worth tests (€500k/€650k options), maintain health insurance, and provide clean criminal records. Agents will be centralized under the agency by late 2025. Typical timelines remain 6–8 months; total family costs often exceed €100,000. The update aims to balance faster family access with continued strict due diligence and centralized oversight.