[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
single permit malta requirements

Malta Single Permit Requirements (2026): Pre‑departure Course, Health Checks, Renewals & Appeals

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Malta’s Single Permit framework underwent its most significant overhaul in years when reforms rolled out across the first quarter of 2026, reshaping every stage of the application process for third‑country nationals and the employers who sponsor them. Central to the new single permit Malta requirements is a mandatory pre‑departure course that every first‑time applicant must complete before filing, alongside tightened health‑screening protocols and revised renewal procedures. These changes affect HR managers, recruitment agencies, in‑house counsel and individual applicants alike, and non‑compliance now risks outright refusal at the point of submission. This guide consolidates every obligation, deadline and remedy into a single, actionable resource designed to keep employers audit‑ready and applicants on track.

Overview: 2026 Single Permit Malta Requirements, What Changed

The 2026 reforms touch four pillars of the single permit Malta process. Identità (the Expatriates Unit) published an updated checklist in March 2026 that codifies the new documentary requirements, while Jobsplus reinforced complementary employer‑side obligations. The table below maps each reform pillar to its effective date and the parties it affects most.

Reform pillar Effective window Primary impact
Mandatory pre‑departure course for first‑time applicants January – March 2026 (phased roll‑out) Applicants (third‑country nationals) & employers verifying certificates
Enhanced health screening & insurance evidence Applicable to all new and renewal applications from Q1 2026 Applicants, employers and healthcare providers
Revised renewal process & document‑retention rules Ongoing from Q1 2026 Employers and renewal applicants
Clarified refusal, appeal & judicial‑review routes Ongoing Applicants, employers and legal counsel

At a headline level, the key additions to the single permit Malta requirements are:

  • Pre‑departure course certificate. First‑time applicants must enrol in an approved course, obtain a certificate and present it with their application pack.
  • Health screening documentation. A medical fitness certificate, including a tuberculosis (TB) screening where applicable, and proof of adequate health insurance must accompany every new application.
  • Employer verification duty. Employers must confirm the pre‑departure course certificate is genuine and retain a copy on file before Identità will accept the submission.
  • Renewal advance filing. Renewal applications should be lodged well before permit expiry, with updated health and insurance documents, to avoid gaps in lawful employment status.

Identità’s March 2026 checklist PDF remains the single most authoritative document for compliance. Employers should cross‑reference it against Jobsplus guidance for third‑country nationals (TCNs) to capture both immigration and labour‑market obligations.

Mandatory Pre‑Departure Course for First‑Time Single Permit Applicants

The most visible change to single permit Malta requirements in 2026 is the introduction of a compulsory pre‑departure course. Designed to orient first‑time third‑country national workers before they arrive in Malta, the course covers language basics, workplace rights, legal obligations and cultural integration. Its certificate is now a mandatory filing document, without it, Identità will not process a new Single Permit application.

Who must attend

The course requirement applies exclusively to first‑time Single Permit applicants. Individuals who already hold or have previously held a valid Single Permit in Malta are exempt. Industry observers expect that the exemption will also extend to applicants switching from another lawful immigration status (for example, from a student residence permit to a Single Permit), although employers should confirm this with Identità on a case‑by‑case basis where the applicant’s prior status was not employment‑related.

The obligation rests on the applicant, but, critically, the employer carries a parallel duty to verify the certificate before submitting the application pack. Recruitment agencies acting on behalf of employers should build course completion into their candidate‑onboarding workflow and provide the certificate copy to the sponsoring employer in advance of filing.

Course content and the pre‑departure course certificate

The pre‑departure course Malta programme typically covers:

  • Basic Maltese and English language orientation. Functional phrases for the workplace, healthcare and public services.
  • Employment rights and obligations. Minimum wage, working hours, leave entitlements and termination procedures under Maltese employment law.
  • Immigration compliance. Permit conditions, reporting obligations and the consequences of overstaying or working without a valid permit.
  • Cultural integration. Day‑to‑day life in Malta, access to public services and social norms.

Upon completion, the course provider issues a Pre‑Departure Course Certificate. The certificate must be presented in its original form (or a certified copy, depending on Identità instructions at the time of filing) and included in the Single Permit application document pack. Employers should retain a scanned copy on the employee’s personnel file for a minimum of five years to satisfy any subsequent audit by Identità or Jobsplus.

Employer verification and recordkeeping

Employers are expected to confirm that the certificate is genuine and corresponds to the named applicant. The practical steps are straightforward:

  1. Request the original or certified copy of the pre‑departure course certificate from the applicant or recruitment agency.
  2. Check that the certificate names the applicant, states the date of completion and bears the issuing provider’s stamp or verification code.
  3. Retain a copy (digital or physical) on the employee’s file.
  4. Include the certificate in the application pack submitted to Identità.

Industry observers expect that failure to include a valid certificate will result in an automatic desk rejection by the Expatriates Unit, adding weeks to the process if the applicant must then enrol in and complete the course retrospectively.

Exceptions and transitional rules

Applications filed during the transitional window (early January to late March 2026, as the requirement phased in) may have been subject to discretionary acceptance without the certificate. From the full implementation date onward, no discretion is exercised, the certificate is mandatory. Applicants in the pipeline who were caught by the cut‑over should have been contacted by Identità to supply the certificate before a decision was issued.

Health Screening and Insurance Requirements for Work Permits in Malta

Health screening for work permit Malta applicants is not entirely new, but the 2026 reforms tighten what is required and when. The objective is to ensure that every third‑country national arriving for employment holds a current medical fitness certificate and adequate health insurance coverage from day one.

Required health checks

The following checks are typically required under the updated single permit Malta requirements:

  • General medical fitness certificate. Issued by a registered medical practitioner, confirming the applicant is fit for the type of employment specified in the Single Permit application.
  • Tuberculosis (TB) screening. Applicants from countries with high TB prevalence (as defined by the World Health Organization) must present a chest X‑ray or an IGRA test result confirming that they are free from active TB.
  • Additional communicable‑disease screening. Where Identità or Malta’s public health authorities require it, further tests (for example, for hepatitis B in food‑handling roles) may be specified.

All medical certificates must be recent, generally issued within three months of the application filing date, and translated into English or Maltese by a certified translator if the original is in another language.

Acceptable certificates and submission format

Identità accepts certificates issued by registered medical practitioners in the applicant’s country of origin or in Malta (if the applicant is already present on a different visa). The certificate must include the practitioner’s registration number, the date of examination, and an unequivocal statement of fitness. Employers filing online through the Identità portal should upload high‑resolution scans; those filing by paper submission should include certified copies and present originals at the biometrics appointment.

Employer obligations on health insurance

Under Malta labour migration policy, the sponsoring employer must ensure the applicant holds adequate health insurance for the duration of the permit. Employers may either:

  • Provide employer‑sponsored private health insurance that meets Identità’s minimum coverage thresholds.
  • Confirm that the applicant has obtained their own qualifying policy and supply the policy document with the application.

The likely practical effect of the 2026 changes is that Identità will scrutinise insurance evidence more closely at both the initial application and renewal stages, rejecting submissions where insurance coverage has gaps or falls below the required minimums.

Employer Responsibilities and Recruitment Process Changes

The 2026 reforms place employers at the centre of the compliance chain. Meeting the updated single permit Malta requirements demands changes to recruitment workflows, document collection, payroll registration and ongoing reporting.

Recruitment checklist

Before filing a Single Permit application, employers should work through the following checklist:

  1. Confirm that the position has been advertised through Jobsplus and that any applicable labour‑market assessment has been completed.
  2. Issue a signed employment contract that specifies the job title, salary, working hours and any probationary period, the contract must meet Maltese minimum‑wage and employment‑law standards.
  3. Verify that the applicant has completed the mandatory pre‑departure course (first‑time applicants) and obtain the certificate.
  4. Collect the applicant’s medical fitness certificate, TB screening (if applicable) and health insurance policy documentation.
  5. Prepare the full application pack per the Identità March 2026 checklist, including passport copies, passport‑sized photographs, proof of accommodation and any other supporting documents.

Documents employers must collect

Employers should compile and retain copies of the following documents:

  • Applicant’s valid passport (all relevant pages).
  • Pre‑departure course certificate (first‑time applicants).
  • Medical fitness certificate and TB screening result.
  • Health insurance policy (meeting minimum thresholds).
  • Signed employment contract.
  • Proof of accommodation in Malta.
  • Jobsplus job‑advertisement reference / labour‑market assessment documentation.
  • Any academic or professional‑qualification certificates relevant to the role.

Payroll and social‑security registration

Once the Single Permit is approved, the employer must register the employee with Malta’s tax and social‑security authorities. Third‑country nationals Malta employs are subject to the same payroll‑tax and National Insurance (NI) contribution obligations as EU nationals. Employers should ensure registration is completed before the employee’s first day of work to avoid penalties.

Reporting obligations and penalties

Employers must notify Identità and Jobsplus of any material change in the employment relationship, including early termination, change of role or significant change in working conditions, within the timeframe prescribed by regulation. Failure to report can lead to fines, permit revocation and, in serious cases, a bar on the employer sponsoring future Single Permit applications.

Comparison table, obligations by entity type

Obligation Employer Third‑party recruiter / agency Employee (applicant)
Pre‑departure course (certificate) Verify certificate before filing; retain copy on file Ensure candidate enrols and completes course; supply certificate copy to employer Enrol in and complete course; upload or bring certificate
Health screening Ensure employee holds valid medical certificate; verify and pay/arrange insurance Advise candidate; arrange medical appointments if contracted to do so Attend medical checks; submit original certificate
Application filing Submit Single Permit application to Identità; schedule biometrics appointment May prepare application pack; employer must be named sponsor Provide original documents; attend biometrics in person
Biometrics Facilitate time off for biometrics attendance Coordinate appointment logistics if instructed Attend Identità offices for fingerprinting and photograph
Renewals & notifications File renewals in advance of expiry; report changes in employment Support employer with expiry tracking and reminders Supply updated documents; attend renewal biometrics
Appeals Instruct legal counsel; prepare supporting evidence and lodge appeals Assist with evidence collation as needed Attend hearings; provide witness statements

Renewal, Extensions and Visa Stamping

The renewal process under the 2026 single permit Malta requirements has been recalibrated to reduce gaps in permit validity and address the backlog issues that historically affected processing times.

Renewal checklist

Employers and applicants preparing a renewal should ensure the following are in order:

  • Timing. Lodge the renewal application well before the current permit expires. Early indications suggest that applications submitted at least two months in advance are processed with fewer delays.
  • Updated health and insurance documents. A new medical fitness certificate and proof of continuing health insurance coverage must accompany the renewal application.
  • Current employment contract. If the contract has changed since the original application (new role, revised salary, different employer), a new signed contract must be filed.
  • Passport validity. The applicant’s passport must remain valid for the duration of the renewed permit.
  • Proof of continued accommodation. Updated rental agreement or utility bill confirming the applicant’s current address in Malta.

Common rejection reasons and how to fix them

The most frequent causes of renewal rejections, and the remedies, include:

  • Expired medical certificate. Ensure the certificate is dated within the acceptable window at the time of filing, not at the time of the original application.
  • Lapsed health insurance. Even a single day’s gap in coverage can trigger a rejection. Set calendar reminders to renew insurance policies before they lapse.
  • Late filing. Applications submitted after the current permit has expired are treated as new applications, potentially triggering the pre‑departure course requirement again for the applicant.
  • Incomplete documentation. Cross‑reference every item against the Identità checklist. A missing passport‑size photograph has been known to delay renewals by weeks.

Application tracking and document retention

Identità’s online portal allows applicants and employers to track the status of a Single Permit application. Employers should record the application reference number and check the portal regularly. For document retention, best practice is to keep copies of all filed documents, including the submission receipt and any correspondence from Identità, for at least five years following the end of the employment relationship.

Refusals, Single Permit Appeal Malta Routes and Urgent Interventions

When a Single Permit application is refused, both the applicant and the sponsoring employer have the right to challenge the decision. The 2026 reforms have not fundamentally changed the appeal architecture, but they do reinforce the importance of acting quickly, particularly where the applicant faces deportation risk or loss of lawful status.

Administrative appeal flow

The standard route for challenging a refusal follows a structured progression:

  1. Internal review. Request a reconsideration by the Expatriates Unit (Identità) itself. This is the fastest route and may resolve issues caused by missing documents or administrative error.
  2. Administrative appeal. If the internal review upholds the refusal, the applicant or employer may lodge a formal appeal with the Immigration Appeals Board. The appeal must be filed within the prescribed deadline set out in the refusal notice.
  3. Judicial review. Where the Appeals Board’s decision is unsatisfactory, the matter may be escalated to the Maltese courts by way of judicial review. This is a more complex and costly process, but it is the appropriate remedy where there has been a procedural irregularity or a breach of fundamental rights.

Judicial review and remedies

In judicial review proceedings, the court assesses whether the administrative decision was lawful, procedurally fair and proportionate. Remedies may include an order quashing the refusal and directing Identità to reconsider the application. In urgent cases, for instance, where an applicant faces imminent deportation or where an employer will suffer irreparable harm from the loss of a key worker, it is possible to apply for interim measures (a temporary stay of the refusal decision) pending the full hearing.

Practical tips for single permit appeal Malta proceedings

  • Act immediately. Appeal deadlines are strict. Begin preparing the appeal on the day the refusal notice is received.
  • Gather fresh evidence. If the refusal was based on a missing document, obtain it and submit it with the appeal to demonstrate that the deficiency has been cured.
  • Engage specialist counsel. Immigration appeals involve administrative‑law principles that require specialist knowledge. A lawyer experienced in Maltese immigration litigation can identify procedural errors, draft effective submissions and, where necessary, seek urgent injunctive relief.
  • Document workplace impact. If the employer is co‑appealing, evidence of the business disruption caused by the refusal (e.g., unfilled critical role, contractual obligations at risk) strengthens the urgency argument.

Practical Checklists, Templates and Timelines

The following checklists distil the single permit Malta requirements into ready‑to‑use reference tools. Employers and applicants should adapt them to their specific circumstances and verify all items against the current Identità checklist before submission.

Employer pre‑filing checklist (new applications)

  • Position advertised via Jobsplus, reference number recorded.
  • Employment contract signed and compliant with Maltese law.
  • Pre‑departure course certificate obtained and verified (first‑time applicants).
  • Medical fitness certificate collected (dated within acceptable window).
  • TB screening result collected (if required for applicant’s country of origin).
  • Health insurance policy confirmed and copy obtained.
  • Passport copies (all relevant pages) collected.
  • Proof of accommodation in Malta obtained.
  • Application pack assembled per Identità March 2026 checklist.
  • Biometrics appointment scheduled.

Applicant document pack

  • Valid passport (original + copies).
  • Pre‑departure course certificate (original or certified copy).
  • Medical fitness certificate.
  • TB screening result (if applicable).
  • Health insurance policy document.
  • Signed employment contract.
  • Passport‑sized photographs (per Identità specifications).
  • Proof of qualifications (academic or professional, if required for the role).
  • Proof of accommodation.

Renewal reminder template

  • Two months before expiry: begin assembling renewal documents; schedule medical examination.
  • Six weeks before expiry: confirm health insurance renewal; obtain updated accommodation proof.
  • One month before expiry: file renewal application through Identità portal; record reference number.
  • Upon receipt of biometrics appointment: attend Identità offices with original documents.

Appeal checklist

  • Record date of refusal notice and calculate appeal deadline.
  • Identify grounds for appeal (missing document, procedural error, disproportionate decision).
  • Obtain fresh evidence to cure any documentary deficiency.
  • Instruct immigration counsel immediately.
  • Draft and file appeal within the prescribed deadline.
  • If deportation risk exists, apply for interim stay/injunction concurrently.

Conclusion

The 2026 overhaul of single permit Malta requirements demands immediate operational adjustments from employers, recruitment agencies and third‑country national applicants. Three actions should be prioritised now:

  1. Audit your document‑collection workflow against the Identità March 2026 checklist, ensure pre‑departure course certificates and updated health‑screening evidence are built into every new hire process.
  2. Implement renewal tracking so that no permit lapses without a timely renewal filing, preventing applicants from being forced back into the new‑application stream.
  3. Know your appeal rights. If a Single Permit is refused, act on the day the notice arrives, deadlines are unforgiving and specialist legal counsel can make the difference between a successful challenge and a lost permit.

For employers and applicants navigating these reforms, consulting a Malta‑based immigration lawyer is the most reliable way to stay compliant and protect your position.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ryan Ellul at Ryan Ellul Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Identità (Expatriates Unit), Single Permit
  2. Identità, Single Permit Checklist (PDF, March 2026)
  3. Jobsplus, Non‑EU Nationals (TCNs) Guidance
  4. EU Immigration Portal, Employed Worker / Malta
  5. Sea & Stone, Malta Single Permit Guide
  6. NM Group Malta, Key Requirements for Employing TCNs
  7. A2CO, Work Permit in Malta

FAQs

What are the new Single Permit requirements in Malta for 2026?
The 2026 reforms introduce a mandatory pre‑departure course for first‑time applicants, enhanced health‑screening and insurance documentation, revised renewal procedures and clearer appeal routes. The full list of required documents is set out in Identità’s March 2026 checklist.
First‑time Single Permit applicants, meaning third‑country nationals who have never previously held a Single Permit in Malta, must complete the course before filing. An approved course provider issues a Pre‑Departure Course Certificate, which the employer must verify and include in the application pack.
Applicants must submit a general medical fitness certificate issued by a registered practitioner. A tuberculosis screening (chest X‑ray or IGRA test) is required for applicants from high‑prevalence countries. Additional communicable‑disease tests may be mandated depending on the role. Proof of adequate health insurance must also be provided.
Processing times vary depending on application volume and completeness. Applicants and employers can monitor progress through Identità’s online portal using the reference number issued at filing. Submitting a complete application pack, with no missing documents, is the single most effective way to minimise delays.
The applicant or employer may request an internal review by Identità, lodge an appeal with the Immigration Appeals Board within the deadline stated in the refusal notice, or escalate to the Maltese courts via judicial review. In urgent cases involving deportation risk, an application for interim measures (temporary stay) can be filed concurrently.
Application fees are set by Identità and are subject to periodic revision. Applicants should consult the Identità website or the current checklist PDF for the latest fee schedule before submitting payment. Fees are generally non‑refundable regardless of the application outcome.
The legal obligation to complete the course rests on the applicant. However, many employers choose to cover or subsidise the course cost as part of their recruitment package, particularly for roles that are difficult to fill. The cost allocation should be agreed in writing, ideally within the employment contract, before the applicant enrols.
A recruitment agency may prepare the application pack and assist with logistics, but the employer must be named as the sponsor on the application. The employer retains ultimate legal responsibility for the accuracy of the submission and compliance with all permit conditions.
A late renewal filing is generally treated as a new application, which may trigger the pre‑departure course requirement for the applicant and reset processing timelines. Employers should file renewals at least two months before permit expiry to avoid this outcome.
how to bid for a public tender in Turkey
By Global Law Experts

posted 3 minutes ago

Athens vs London arbitration seat Greece 2026
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

how to appoint a data protection officer in uganda online
By Global Law Experts

posted 5 hours ago

how to take legal action for unpaid invoices
By Global Law Experts

posted 5 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Malta Single Permit Requirements (2026): Pre‑departure Course, Health Checks, Renewals & Appeals

Send welcome message

Custom Message