Opening a business bank account in Malta is the step that surprises most entrepreneurs. They incorporate their company smoothly, feel the momentum, and then hit banking — and it takes far longer and requires far more than they expected.

This is not a Malta-specific problem. It is a global compliance reality. But Malta has specific characteristics that matter, and understanding them before you apply changes your success rate significantly.

Which Banks Are Available

Malta has several major banks operating for business accounts: Bank of Valletta (BOV), HSBC Malta, APS Bank, MeDirect, and Sparkasse Bank Malta, among others. Each has different risk appetites, onboarding timelines, and operational capabilities.

For international businesses, the choice of bank matters beyond just fees. Some banks are better equipped for multi-currency operations. Some are more experienced with tech companies or holding structures. Choosing the wrong bank — or approaching them in the wrong order — adds months to your timeline.

What Banks Actually Assess

Malta’s banks apply rigorous KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) checks. They are not bureaucratic obstacles — they are real risk assessments that look at:

  • The nature and source of your business income
  • The countries your clients and suppliers are in
  • The background and track record of your directors and UBOs
  • Your transaction profile (volumes, frequencies, currencies)
  • The coherence of your business model

A well-structured business with clear, explainable income is approved. A poorly documented structure with ambiguous revenue sources — even if entirely legitimate — faces rejection or extended delays.

The Documentation Reality

Expect to provide: certified copies of incorporation documents, a business plan, 12 months of bank statements from your existing accounts, source of funds evidence, CVs for all directors and beneficial owners, proof of address, and often a detailed description of each client relationship or transaction type.

The business plan is taken seriously. It should explain what your company does, how it makes money, who your clients are, and what your projected transaction volumes are. A one-page summary will not suffice for most banks.

Timeline Expectations

A realistic timeline for a business banking application in Malta is 4–8 weeks from submission of a complete application. Incomplete submissions, additional queries, or complex structures can extend this to 3–4 months.

This is why banking should be started immediately after — or even in parallel with — company incorporation, not after.

Alternatives and Supplementary Accounts

Many businesses use fintech solutions (Wise Business, Revolut Business) as supplementary accounts while waiting for a local bank account. These work for day-to-day operations but do not replace a Malta bank account for compliance purposes or for building local banking relationships.

The Right Approach

The businesses that get Malta bank accounts quickly are the ones that approach the process as a presentation — they tell a clear, consistent story about their business, supported by complete documentation, before they submit a single form. Preparation, not persistence, is what opens accounts.