Malta Budget Travel: The Complete 2026 UK Guide

Most UK travellers underestimate Malta. They picture somewhere far-flung and pricey, when the reality is a three-hour flight, the euro in your pocket, English on every menu and three-pin plugs in the wall. It’s one of the few Mediterranean islands where a British visitor can step off the plane and feel half at home, then spend the week somewhere that looks nothing like home at all.

This guide covers the practical side of a Malta trip done well on a budget: the cheapest way to fly out, when to go, how to get around, what’s worth your time, where to eat at three price points, and what a week actually costs once you’re on the ground.

Valletta waterfront and historic limestone fortifications, Malta's capital
Valletta’s golden bastions rise straight from the Grand Harbour, ten minutes from the airport by bus.

Malta is small, roughly the size of the Isle of Wight, so nothing is far. It drives on the left, the language is Maltese and English, and the currency is the euro. There’s no time difference worth worrying about either, just one hour ahead of the UK. The practical friction of a foreign holiday is mostly absent, which is a large part of the appeal.

How to get to Malta from the UK

Malta is one of the easiest Mediterranean islands to reach from Britain, with direct flights from around 17 UK airports and a flight time of just over three hours. Fares swing widely with the school calendar, so the airline matters less than the week you pick.

AirlineFlies direct fromFlight timeTypical return
Ryanair
Stansted, Manchester, Edinburgh, Bristol, Leeds Bradford and more
3h 10m
£40–120Cheapest, cabin bag extra
easyJet
Gatwick, Bristol, Birmingham, Manchester
3h 10m
£60–150
Jet2
Manchester, Birmingham, Stansted, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Newcastle, Leeds Bradford, Bristol
3h 15m
£90–20022kg bag included; package deals strong
KM Malta Airlines
Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester
3h 10m
£100–220National carrier, bag included
British Airways
Heathrow, Gatwick
3h 10m
£110–250
Indicative 2026 return fares from London unless stated. Northern and Scottish airports sit at the higher end. Verify before booking.

The two levers that move the price are timing and baggage. Avoid the school holidays and you’ll often halve the fare, and our guide to finding cheap flights from the UK walks through the rest. If you’re flying Ryanair or easyJet, packing light pays: read up on the best carry-on bag for Ryanair before you book a hold bag you may not need.

When to go, and when it’s cheapest

Malta works year-round, but the sweet spot for weather and value is spring and autumn. Summer is hottest, busiest and dearest; winter is mild, quiet and cheap, with the trade-off that the sea is too cold for most and some lidos close.

SeasonWeatherCrowds and feelCost
Spring (Mar–May)
15–25°C, dry, wildflowers
Quiet, ideal for walking and sightseeing
Low to midGood value
Summer (Jun–Aug)
30°C+, hot and dry, warm sea
Busiest and liveliest, beaches packed
HighestPeak
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
18–25°C, sea still 24°C
Calmer, swimming still on, great balance
MidSweet spot
Winter (Nov–Feb)
12–18°C, mild, some rain
Quietest, sightseeing only, sea too cold
LowestCheapest
January and February have the lowest flight and hotel prices of the year.

If your dates are fixed by the school calendar, plan around it rather than against it. Our guides to when to book a holiday for the best price and cheaper school holiday breaks both apply directly to Malta. For shoulder-season warmth, Malta is also one of our picks in where’s hot in September, when the sea is at its warmest and the summer crowds have gone.

The Blue Lagoon on Comino, Malta, with turquoise water and boats
The Blue Lagoon on Comino draws crowds by midday in summer, so arrive on the first boat or visit in the shoulder season.

The sea is the reason many people come. It’s warm enough to swim from June into late October, and the water around Comino and the smaller bays is some of the clearest in Europe. If swimming is the point of your trip, aim for September or early October: the sea holds its summer warmth, but the prices and the crowds have dropped.

Getting around Malta

You don’t need a car in Malta. Buses reach almost everywhere from the Valletta terminal for a couple of euros, and short ferry hops link the main sights cheaply. A car only earns its keep if you want to reach quiet bays under your own steam or you’re staying on Gozo.

OptionCostGood for
Bus single
€2 winter / €2.50 summerValid 2 hours, free transfers
Most day-to-day trips around the island
7-day Explore card
€25Unlimited day and night buses
A week of sightseeing, pays off in three days
Gozo ferry
€4.65 return25 mins, runs every 45 mins
A day trip to the quieter sister island
Bolt or taxi
€8–20 a hopBolt app usually cheapest
Late nights and early airport runs
Car hire
From around £25 a dayDrives on the left, like the UK
Remote bays, dramatic Dingli cliffs, Gozo
Buy bus tickets from the driver with a contactless card, or load an Explore card at the airport. Drivers carry little change.

Buses can be slow and crowded in peak summer, so build in buffer time rather than packing your day too tight. For most visitors, a 7-day Explore card plus the odd Bolt covers everything without the cost or stress of parking in Valletta, where cars aren’t allowed inside the gates anyway.

Colourful traditional luzzu fishing boats in Marsaxlokk harbour, Malta
The painted luzzu boats at Marsaxlokk are easy to reach by bus, and Sunday is market day.

Some of Malta’s best half-days cost nothing but a bus fare. Marsaxlokk, the fishing village in the south, fills with colourful luzzu boats and a Sunday market, and it’s one of the best places on the island for cheap, fresh seafood straight off the quay. From Valletta it’s a single bus and well under an hour.

The best things to do in Malta

Malta packs three thousand years of history and some of the clearest water in Europe into an island smaller than the Isle of Wight. Most of the headline sights cost little or nothing, and the few that charge are worth the entry.

PlaceWhat it isCost
Valletta
UNESCO capital, St John’s Co-Cathedral, Upper Barrakka Gardens
Free to wanderCathedral €15
Mdina
The Silent City, walled medieval former capital
FreeNo charge
Blue Lagoon
Comino’s sheltered cove, Malta’s clearest swimming
Free to swimBoat from around €20
Gozo
Quieter sister island, hilltop Cittadella in Victoria
Citadel €5Most of it free to walk
Marsaxlokk
Fishing village, Sunday market, seafront seafood
FreeNo charge
Three Cities
Vittoriosa, Senglea and Cospicua across the Grand Harbour
FreeFerry from Valletta €2.80
Hypogeum
5,000-year-old underground temple, one of Europe’s oldest
€35Book weeks ahead
Entry prices current for 2026. The Hypogeum caps daily visitors, so book online well before you fly.

Give Valletta a full day. It’s tiny and walkable, but the cathedral alone, home to Caravaggio’s Beheading of Saint John the Baptist, rewards an unhurried visit, and the harbour views from the Upper Barrakka Gardens cost nothing. The Three Cities across the water are quieter and just as handsome, reached by a short, cheap ferry rather than the tourist coaches.

The honey-coloured bastion walls of Mdina, Malta's ancient walled capital
Mdina’s walls and silent lanes are free to explore, and the bus from Valletta takes about half an hour.

Inland, Mdina is the other essential. The old walled capital is car-free, almost silent after the day-trippers leave, and free to wander. Pair it with neighbouring Rabat, where the best pastizzi on the island are sold from a hole-in-the-wall counter for about fifty cents each.

Where to eat

Maltese food is cheap, generous and worth seeking out. The island’s cooking sits somewhere between Sicily and North Africa: rabbit stew, fresh fish, ftira flatbread and those flaky pastizzi. You can eat well for a few euros or treat yourself in a Valletta palazzo, and here’s a pick at each price point.

Budget (under £13): Ta’ Nenu on St Dominic Street in Valletta bakes its ftira in a stone oven, with a generous one costing around €10.50 and a sharing platter of Maltese cheese, bigilla bean dip and sausage not much more. For an even cheaper lunch, do as the locals do and buy pastizzi by the counter in Rabat.

Mid (£18–28): Rubino has been going on Old Bakery Street since 1906 and holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for good cooking at fair prices. The menu changes daily and is read off a blackboard, and the rabbit is the thing to order.

Worth the spend (£35–55): Guzé Bistro, in a 400-year-old Valletta palazzo, plates Maltese land and sea dishes for around €50 a head and features in the Michelin Guide. Book ahead; it’s small and it fills.

Grilled octopus served on a plate, a typical Maltese seafood dish
Grilled octopus and fresh fish are at their cheapest and best in the seafront villages like Marsaxlokk.

For fish, skip the tourist strips in Sliema and St Julian’s and head to a harbour village. The seafood at Marsaxlokk comes off the boats that morning, and a plate of grilled fish or octopus with a glass of local wine costs a fraction of what you’d pay on the promenade. A bottle of Cisk lager runs about €3 in a neighbourhood bar.

Where to stay

Sliema and St Julian’s are the best bases for first-timers, with buses and ferries to everywhere and plenty of cheap beds. Valletta is for atmosphere, Bugibba for the lowest prices, and Gozo for quiet. Wherever you pick, prices climb steeply in July and August, so book early for summer.

AreaBest forFeel
Sliema
First-timers, shopping, the ferry to Valletta
Busy seafront town
St Julian’s
Restaurants and nightlife
Lively, younger crowd
Valletta
Culture and atmosphere on the doorstep
Historic and characterful
Bugibba
The cheapest beds, families
Cheerful package resort
Gozo
A quiet, slow base away from the crowds
Rural and relaxed
Sliema and St Julian’s run into each other along one walkable seafront, so either works as a first base.

Budget (from around £70/night): The Londoner Hotel Sliema has modern, comfortable rooms, an outdoor pool and a pub downstairs, a short walk from the seafront and the buses. It’s the kind of well-run base that does the job without eating into the rest of your budget.

Mid (from around £110/night): AX The Victoria Hotel in Sliema is a proper four-star with a rooftop infinity pool, a spa and the Valletta ferry close by. Good value for the standard, especially outside high summer.

Worth the spend (from around £230/night): The Phoenicia Malta is a 1930s grande dame on Valletta’s doorstep, with gardens running down towards the harbour and a pool below the bastions. It’s a member of the Leading Hotels of the World and the most characterful splurge on the island.

How much does a Malta holiday cost?

A week in Malta costs less than most UK travellers expect. Flights and your hotel are the big numbers; once you’re on the ground, daily spending is modest, because the sights are cheap and the food doesn’t have to be expensive.

TravellerDaily, on the groundWhat it covers
Budget
£45–55
Hostel or cheap hotel, buses, pastizzi and self-catering, free sights
Midrange
£80–110
Three-star hotel, restaurant meals, a boat trip or two
Comfortable
£150+
Four or five-star, taxis, fine dining, guided tours
On-the-ground spend per person, excluding flights and accommodation. 2026 estimates.

Add it up and a careful week in spring or autumn, flights and a modest hotel included, comes in well under what the same week would cost in much of mainland Europe. That gap, between what people assume Malta costs and what it actually costs, is the whole argument for going. For more island and city ideas at this kind of value, browse our destination guides.

Know before you go

Malta makes life easy for British visitors. Here are the essentials at a glance.

DetailWhat to know
Currency
Euro (€)
Language
Maltese and English, both official and widely spoken
Plugs
Type G, the same three-pin sockets as the UKNo adapter needed
Driving
On the left, like the UK
Time
Central European Time, one hour ahead of the UK
Tipping
5 to 10% in restaurants, round up elsewhere
Malta has been independent since 1964 but kept the plugs, the left-hand driving and the English.

On entry, your passport needs to have been issued within the last 10 years and stay valid for at least three months after you leave. There’s no visa for stays under 90 days, but the EU’s Entry/Exit System is now rolling out at Schengen borders, so expect to give fingerprints and a photo rather than a passport stamp. A separate €20 online permit, ETIAS, is expected to follow later in 2026. Check the GOV.UK Malta entry requirements page before you book.

Gozo's hilltop church and harbour, Malta's quieter sister island
Gozo, a 25-minute ferry from Malta, rewards a day or even an overnight stay for its slower pace.

Malta budget travel: your questions answered

Is Malta expensive to visit?

No, Malta is one of the cheaper Mediterranean destinations for UK travellers. Expect roughly £45 to £55 a day on the ground for a budget trip, before flights and your hotel.

How many days do you need in Malta?

Four to five days covers Valletta, Mdina, Marsaxlokk and a day on Gozo or Comino. A week lets you add the beaches and slow the pace down.

Do they speak English in Malta?

Yes. English is an official language alongside Maltese and is spoken almost everywhere, so there’s no language barrier for British visitors.

What is the cheapest time to fly to Malta?

Late autumn to early spring, roughly November to March, has the lowest fares outside the school holidays. January and February are cheapest of all.

Do I need a visa or ETIAS for Malta?

No visa is needed for stays under 90 days in any 180-day period. A €20 online ETIAS permit is expected to launch later in 2026, so check GOV.UK before you travel.

Is Malta good for a beach holiday?

Malta’s beaches are small and mostly rocky, with the best sand at Mellieļa Bay and Golden Bay. For the clearest swimming, head to the Blue Lagoon on Comino.

Can you get around Malta without a car?

Yes. Buses reach almost everywhere from Valletta for €2 to €2.50 a journey, and a 7-day Explore card costs just €25.

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