Moving to Malta through the Global Residency Programme (GRP) can allow non‑EU high‑net‑worth individuals to become tax residents while paying a relatively low effective tax rate. The scheme hinges on a combination of a mandatory financial contribution, property requirements, and careful management of tax residency in the applicant’s former country.
How the Maltese tax treatment works
- Flat tax rate: 15 % on the first €100 000 of income that is remitted to Malta, resulting in an effective tax bill of €15 000.
- Minimum remittance: Applicants must remit at least €100 000 to Malta each year; any amount above this is also taxed at 15 %.
- No zero‑tax claim: Malta is not a 0 % tax jurisdiction; the benefit comes from the low flat rate applied to the remitted income.
Key residency requirements
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Property availability
- Applicants must either purchase or rent a dwelling in Malta that is available to them at all times.
- The property cannot be sub‑let or used for short‑term rentals (e.g., Airbnb) while the applicant is abroad.
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Physical presence
- No formal minimum stay is imposed by Maltese authorities.
- Practically, spending as little as one to two weeks per year in Malta can satisfy the programme, provided the applicant does not become tax resident elsewhere.
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Non‑residency in the home country
- Before moving, the applicant must formally cease tax residency in their current country (e.g., Canada, UK, Australia).
- Each jurisdiction has its own criteria—often a 183‑day rule—to determine when a person becomes a non‑resident. Failure to meet these rules can negate the Maltese tax advantage.
Application timeline
- Document collection → in‑person application → property search (purchase or rental) → appointments can take 6–12 months or longer.
- Timing is critical: the departure from the original tax residency should align with the completion of the Maltese application to avoid a gap where the applicant remains taxable in the former country.
Ongoing compliance
- Property holding: The Maltese government monitors the applicant’s property status for at least five years to confirm continuous availability.
- Stay limits elsewhere: The applicant must avoid spending more than six months in any other single country, as exceeding local residency thresholds could trigger tax obligations there.
- Tax payment schedule: The 15 % tax on the €100 000 remittance is payable at the start of each calendar year.
Risks and caveats
- Improper departure from the original country can result in dual tax residency and higher overall tax liability.
- Property restrictions (no sub‑letting) limit the ability to generate rental income from the Maltese dwelling.
- Monitoring period means the applicant must retain the property and maintain the low‑tax status for five years; non‑compliance could lead to revocation of residency benefits.
- Variable rules in other jurisdictions mean the applicant must understand each country’s residency thresholds to avoid accidental tax residency elsewhere.
Overall, Malta’s Global Residency Programme offers a structured path to low‑rate taxation for qualifying non‑EU individuals, provided they meet the financial contribution, property, and compliance requirements and carefully manage their tax status in their country of origin.





