Malta has become one of Europe’s most practical jurisdictions for international business — not because of a single tax advantage, but because the full package works. A real legal system in English, EU market access, a functioning banking sector, and a government that has consistently worked to attract legitimate business.
But company formation in Malta is not a process you should approach with generic information. The structure you choose, the directors you appoint, the registered address you use, and the bank you approach — all of these decisions compound into either a solid foundation or years of friction.
Types of Companies in Malta
The most common structure for foreign entrepreneurs is the Private Limited Liability Company (Ltd). It requires a minimum share capital of €1,165, at least 20% paid up on incorporation. You need at least one shareholder (can be a legal entity), one director, and a registered address in Malta.
For regulated industries — gaming, financial services, insurance — you will need additional licences from the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) or the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA), and your structure will need to reflect those requirements from day one.
The Formation Timeline
A standard Malta Ltd can be incorporated in 5–10 working days once all documents are in order. The Registry of Companies is efficient by European standards. What takes longer is everything around the company: bank account setup (4–8 weeks typically), nominee arrangements if required, and any regulatory filings.
The biggest mistake founders make is treating incorporation and banking as two separate steps. They are not. Your corporate structure, the nature of your business, and your background documentation all affect how banks assess your application. Build for both at the same time.
Share Capital and Directors
Malta does not require resident directors for a standard Ltd, but banks strongly prefer to see at least one person connected to the business who has genuine ties to Malta. This is a practical reality, not a legal requirement — and it matters far more for banking than for the registry.
If you are relocating to Malta, your personal residency will satisfy this naturally. If you are not, you may need a nominee director arrangement, which adds both cost and governance considerations that need to be handled properly.
Registered Address and Company Secretary
Every Malta company needs a registered address and a company secretary who is ordinarily resident in Malta. These are typically provided together by a corporate services provider. The quality of this provider matters — they will handle your statutory filings, and a missed deadline creates compliance issues that compound over time.
What Happens After Incorporation
Your certificate of incorporation is not the finish line. After incorporation you need to: open your bank account, register for VAT (if applicable), register for income tax, set up payroll if you have employees, and file an annual return and audited accounts each year.
Malta requires audited financial statements for all companies, even small ones. Build the cost of annual audit and accounting into your budget from the start — typically €1,500–€4,000 per year depending on transaction volume and complexity.
Getting It Right from Day One
The companies that operate smoothly in Malta are the ones that were structured correctly at the start. That means choosing the right company type, appointing the right directors, and approaching the right banks with the right documentation. It is not more complicated than other jurisdictions — but it is specific, and the details matter.