[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
malta visa refusal appeal processing time

Malta Visa Refusal Appeal Processing Time, How Long Appeals Take (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Understanding the Malta visa refusal appeal processing time is essential for anyone who has received a negative decision from Malta’s Central Visa Unit or Identità. Under current rules, applicants must file an appeal with the Immigration Appeals Board (IAB) within fifteen days of notification, yet the Board’s practical decision timeline frequently extends well beyond the statutory targets. This guide sets out every deadline, the step-by-step filing process, realistic time ranges based on practitioner observations through 2026, common causes of delay, and the evidence strategies that give appeals the strongest chance of success.

Immediate steps if your visa has been refused:

  • Check the refusal date. Your appeal clock starts from the date you receive written notification, not the date printed on the refusal letter.
  • File within 15 calendar days for visa refusals (or within 3 working days for certain Expatriates Unit decisions).
  • Prepare your Notice of Appeal with clear grounds, a copy of the refusal, and all supporting evidence.
  • Seek legal advice immediately, the tight deadlines leave no room for delay.

Who Can Appeal a Visa Refusal in Malta, and When the Clock Starts

The right to appeal a visa refusal in Malta is established under the Immigration Act (Cap. 217) and subsequent regulations governing the Immigration Appeals Board Malta. Any applicant who has received a written refusal from the Central Visa Unit, the Expatriates Unit, or any other decision-making body under Identità may lodge an appeal, provided they act within the statutory deadline.

The critical point that catches many applicants off guard is that Malta uses two different filing windows, depending on the type of decision being challenged. The Identità Central Visa Unit guidance stipulates a fifteen-day appeal period for visa refusals. By contrast, the Identità Expatriates Unit’s right-of-appeal guidance references a three-working-day deadline for certain categories of Expatriates Unit decisions. Applicants must identify exactly which decision type applies to their case before calculating the deadline.

The clock starts running from the date of notification receipt, the day you are handed the refusal letter in person, or the day you receive it electronically or by post. This is distinct from the date printed at the top of the letter, which may be days or even weeks earlier. Keeping proof of receipt (a delivery confirmation, an email timestamp, or a signed acknowledgement slip) is therefore vital if the deadline is ever disputed.

Decision type Filing deadline Clock starts from
Visa refusal (Central Visa Unit) 15 calendar days Date of notification receipt
Certain Expatriates Unit decisions (e.g., Single Permit refusal, residence permit revocation) 3 working days Date of notification receipt
Deportation / removal order 3 working days (urgent procedure applies) Date of notification receipt

Industry observers note that the three-working-day window for Expatriates Unit and deportation decisions is among the shortest in the EU. Early indications from 2025–2026 regulatory changes suggest that this compressed timeline was introduced to accelerate case throughput, but it places an extreme burden on applicants who may need to obtain legal representation, gather documents, and draft comprehensive grounds within a very narrow timeframe.

How to File a Visa Appeal with the Immigration Appeals Board, Step by Step

Filing a visa appeal in Malta involves a structured submission to the Immigration Appeals Board. Procedural errors at this stage, an incomplete notice, missing documents, or a misdirected filing, can result in the appeal being struck out or returned unfiled. The following steps reflect the process as described in Identità guidance and practitioner commentary.

Step 1, Draft the Notice of Appeal (Minimum Contents)

The Notice of Appeal is the foundational document. It must contain:

  • Full personal details of the appellant (name, passport number, date of birth, contact address, email, phone number).
  • A copy of the refusal decision being appealed, including the date it was received.
  • Clear grounds of appeal, a concise statement explaining why the refusal was wrong in fact or law. Generic statements such as “the decision was unfair” are insufficient. Each ground should respond directly to a specific reason cited in the refusal letter.
  • The remedy sought, typically, that the Board overturn the refusal and grant the visa or permit, or remit the decision for fresh consideration.
  • A list of supporting documents attached to the notice.

Step 2, Assemble Supporting Evidence

The strength of your appeal depends largely on the evidence filed with it. Supporting documents should address each refusal ground directly. Common categories include:

  • Employment and financial documents: employment contracts, recent payslips, bank statements (typically covering three to six months), tax returns, and employer reference letters.
  • Ties to home country: property deeds, family certificates, evidence of ongoing studies, or business registration documents.
  • Travel history: copies of previous visas, entry/exit stamps, and evidence of compliance with prior visa conditions.
  • Single Permit-specific documents: the completed Identità application form, the employer’s supporting declaration, and any correspondence from the Expatriates Unit.
  • Translations: all non-English and non-Maltese documents should be accompanied by certified translations. Untranslated evidence is a common cause of delay, as the Board may refuse to consider it or request translations at a later stage.

Step 3, Filing Logistics

The appeal must be submitted to the Immigration Appeals Board. Practitioners report that filings can generally be made in person at the IAB offices or by registered post. Some sources indicate that electronic submission by email may also be accepted, applicants should confirm the current submission method with the IAB directly, as procedures have been updated during the 2025–2026 reform period. Retain a stamped copy or email confirmation as proof of filing.

Any applicable fees should be paid at the time of filing. While official IAB fee schedules are not widely published online, practitioner commentary indicates that filing fees for immigration appeals in Malta are modest compared to judicial review proceedings. Applicants should enquire about the exact amount when submitting the notice.

Malta Visa Refusal Appeal Processing Time, Realistic Ranges and Statutory Windows

The question most appellants ask is: how long does an immigration appeal take in Malta? The answer involves two distinct timelines, the statutory targets set out in the regulations, and the practical reality observed by practitioners handling cases before the Board.

Statutory provisions introduced through the 2025 rule changes envisage a streamlined process. According to practitioner analyses of the new immigration appeals rules, the IAB is expected to request the immigration authority’s submissions shortly after receiving the appeal, and the authority is given a short window, some sources reference ten working days, to provide its response. The Board’s own decision-making window is also compressed in the regulations, with some sources referencing a target of concluding the entire procedure within sixty days of the appeal being filed.

The practical picture, however, is significantly different. Practitioner commentary published in early 2025 observed that appeals before the IAB commonly take between nine months and one year to reach a decision, with complex cases extending to eighteen months or longer. The likely practical effect of the 2025–2026 reforms will be to reduce these timelines over time, but early indications suggest that the Board’s existing backlog means most appellants in 2026 should still budget for a wait of six to twelve months.

Stage Statutory / official timeframe Typical practical timing (2024–2026 observed)
Filing the appeal 15 calendar days (visa refusals) / 3 working days (certain Identità decisions) Most applicants file within 1–3 days of receipt
Board receipt → request for authority submissions Prompt notification; authority given approx. 10 working days to respond Authority submissions received within 2–8 weeks (varies)
Hearing and Board decision Target: full procedure concluded within 60 days (per regulatory intent) 6–12 months common; complex cases 18–24 months
Written decision sent to parties Within a short window after the Board’s deliberation Commonly 2–6 weeks after hearing; longer during backlog periods

These timeframes carry important caveats. The sixty-day target reflects statutory intent rather than a guaranteed maximum, and the Board is not currently subject to enforceable sanctions if it exceeds that window. Industry observers expect the gap between statutory targets and practical timelines to narrow as the 2025–2026 reforms bed in, but appellants should plan for the longer ranges cited above when making travel, employment, or residency decisions.

Reasons for Delays and How to Reduce Them

Several factors routinely push the Malta visa refusal appeal processing time beyond the sixty-day statutory target. Understanding these causes, and acting on them proactively, can materially shorten the wait.

  • Incomplete evidence bundles. Appeals filed without full supporting documents trigger additional rounds of correspondence. Fix: file a complete, indexed bundle at the outset, with certified translations of every non-English document.
  • Late authority submissions. The immigration authority does not always respond within the ten-working-day window. Fix: after the deadline passes, write to the Board requesting it proceed to a decision on the evidence available.
  • Board backlog. The IAB handles appeals across all immigration categories, visas, single permits, deportations, and detention reviews. High caseloads cause scheduling delays. Fix: if your case involves urgent circumstances (employment start date, family separation, medical needs), file a written request for expedition with the Board, setting out the urgency clearly.
  • Requests for further information. The Board may ask the appellant or the authority for additional documents or clarifications. Fix: respond within the given timeframe, delays here are entirely within the appellant’s control.
  • Translation delays. Documents submitted in languages other than English or Maltese without certified translations are commonly set aside. Fix: commission translations in advance, ideally before filing the appeal.
  • Complex cross-checks. Cases involving security or fraud concerns may require inter-agency verification, which the Board cannot expedite. Fix: limited scope to accelerate, but cooperating fully with any information requests helps.

In exceptional cases, for example, where an applicant faces imminent removal, loss of employment, or a risk to personal safety, the appellant may apply to the Board for interim relief, requesting an urgent stay of the refusal decision until the appeal is determined. Practitioners also note that, where the Board’s delay is itself unreasonable, judicial review before the Civil Court (First Hall) may be available as a remedy of last resort.

Fees, Forms, and Emergency Relief

Official fee guidance for Malta immigration appeals is not comprehensively published online, and the exact amount may vary depending on the type of decision being appealed. Practitioner sources indicate that IAB filing fees remain relatively low, significantly less than the costs associated with a judicial review application before the Civil Court. Appellants should confirm the current fee by contacting the IAB directly before filing.

The primary form required is the Notice of Appeal, which has no mandatory template but must contain the minimum contents outlined above. Some practitioners prepare appeals using their own firm templates; applicants representing themselves should follow the structure described in this guide.

For emergency relief, the appellant should include a separate written request within or alongside the Notice of Appeal, asking the Board to grant an interim stay of the refusal decision. The request should clearly set out the urgency: for example, that the applicant will be removed from Malta before the appeal is heard, or that an employment contract will lapse. The Board has discretion to grant or refuse interim stays, and early indications suggest it does so on a case-by-case basis.

Evidence and Persuasion, What Wins Malta Visa Appeals

There is no publicly available central statistic for the Malta visa appeal success rate, and the IAB does not publish annual outcome data in the way that, for example, the UK’s immigration tribunals do. However, practitioner commentary consistently identifies several factors that correlate with successful outcomes.

The most important principle is straightforward: address every reason cited in the refusal letter, and provide documentary proof to rebut each one. Common refusal grounds and the evidence that effectively counters them include:

  • Insufficient ties to home country. Provide property ownership documents, ongoing employment contracts, evidence of dependent family members remaining in the home country, and university enrolment letters.
  • Inadequate financial means. Supply three to six months of bank statements showing consistent income, tax returns, and, for sponsored visits, a sponsor’s financial declaration with supporting bank evidence.
  • Incomplete Single Permit documentation. Resubmit the full employer declaration, a signed employment contract specifying salary and role, and evidence that the employer has complied with any labour market test requirements.
  • Previous immigration non-compliance. Where the refusal cites overstays or breaches of prior visa conditions, provide a credible explanation (medical emergency, airline cancellation, administrative error) with documentary support.

Anonymised practitioner examples illustrate the point: an applicant whose visa was refused for insufficient financial means successfully overturned the decision by submitting six months of payslips, a letter from their employer confirming continued employment, and a detailed travel itinerary showing pre-booked return flights. In another case, a Single Permit refusal was reversed after the employer submitted a corrected declaration addressing a minor error in the original application form. These examples underscore that precision and completeness in the evidence bundle are the single most important determinant of appeal outcomes.

Sample Appeal Letter Structure and Filing Checklist

Below is an annotated structure for a Malta visa refusal appeal letter sample. This is not a legal template and should be adapted to the facts of each case. Applicants are strongly encouraged to seek professional legal advice before filing.

Suggested appeal letter structure:

  • Header: Appellant’s full name, passport number, address, email, and phone number. Date of filing.
  • Addressee: The Immigration Appeals Board, with the correct filing address.
  • Subject line: “Notice of Appeal, Refusal of [Visa type / Single Permit / Residence Permit], Decision dated [date], received [date].”
  • Introduction: A one-paragraph statement identifying the decision being appealed and confirming the appeal is filed within the statutory deadline.
  • Grounds of appeal: Numbered paragraphs, each addressing a specific refusal reason, setting out why the reason is wrong in fact or law, and referencing the supporting document by exhibit number.
  • Remedy sought: A clear statement requesting the Board overturn the refusal and grant the visa or permit, or remit the decision for reconsideration.
  • List of exhibits: A numbered schedule of all supporting documents attached.
  • Signature: The appellant’s signature (and, if represented, the representative’s details and authority).

Filing checklist, copy and use:

  • ☐ Notice of Appeal drafted and signed
  • ☐ Copy of the refusal decision attached
  • ☐ Proof of date of receipt of refusal (delivery slip, email timestamp)
  • ☐ All supporting documents indexed and numbered
  • ☐ Certified translations of all non-English / non-Maltese documents
  • ☐ Applicable filing fee confirmed and ready for payment
  • ☐ Interim relief request included (if applicable)
  • ☐ Copy retained for your records, with proof of submission (stamp or email confirmation)

What Happens After the Immigration Appeals Board Decides

Once the IAB reaches its decision, the written determination is communicated to both the appellant and the immigration authority. The Board may:

  • Allow the appeal, directing the authority to grant the visa, permit, or other entitlement.
  • Dismiss the appeal, upholding the original refusal.
  • Remit the decision, sending the case back to the authority for fresh consideration, often with specific directions (e.g., to reassess financial evidence).
  • Allow in part, accepting some grounds while rejecting others, which may result in a modified decision.

If the appeal is dismissed, the appellant may, depending on the legal basis of the decision, apply for judicial review before the Civil Court (First Hall). Judicial review does not re-examine the merits of the immigration decision but can challenge procedural unfairness, errors of law, or unreasonableness. The deadline for filing judicial review proceedings is short, so immediate legal advice is essential. If the appeal is allowed or remitted, the authority is generally expected to implement the Board’s direction within a reasonable period, though practitioners note that processing the resulting visa or permit may itself take several additional weeks.

Conclusion, Key Deadlines and Next Steps for Malta Visa Refusal Appeal Processing Time

The Malta visa refusal appeal processing time depends on both statutory targets and the practical realities of the IAB’s caseload. Appellants should file within the fifteen-day window (or three working days for Expatriates Unit decisions), submit a complete evidence bundle, and prepare for a realistic wait of six to twelve months, though the 2025–2026 reforms aim to compress this towards sixty days over time. Acting quickly, filing thoroughly, and seeking experienced legal advice are the three steps most likely to influence both the speed and the outcome of an appeal. Applicants seeking assistance can consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to find qualified immigration practitioners in Malta.

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, Central Visa Unit: Visa Appeals Procedure
  2. Identità, Expatriates Unit: Right of Appeal
  3. EU Migration & Home Affairs, International Service Provider Malta
  4. Sciberras Advocates, Malta Immigration Appeals Board (IAB) Information
  5. Lexology, New Rules on Immigration Appeals in Malta
  6. WH Partners, New Rules on Immigration Appeals in Malta
  7. SMM Group, Visa & Single Permit Refusals in Malta
  8. Belgravia Advisory, Appeals (Single Permit vs Visa Appeals)
  9. AE Legal, Immigration Appeal Procedure in Malta

FAQs

Can I appeal if my visa is refused in Malta?
Yes. Under the Immigration Act and Identità guidance, any applicant who receives a visa refusal has the right to lodge an appeal with the Immigration Appeals Board. The appeal must be filed within fifteen calendar days of receiving the refusal notification, as specified by the Central Visa Unit’s visa appeals procedure.
For visa refusals issued by the Central Visa Unit, the deadline is fifteen calendar days from notification. For certain Expatriates Unit decisions, including some Single Permit refusals and residence permit revocations, the deadline is three working days from notification. The clock starts when you receive the decision, not when it was issued.
Statutory targets envisage the procedure being concluded within approximately sixty days. In practice, however, practitioner observations through 2025–2026 indicate that most appeals take between six and twelve months, with complex cases extending to eighteen months or longer. The Board’s backlog is the primary cause of the gap between statutory targets and practical timelines.
Missing the deadline generally means losing the right to appeal to the IAB. In limited circumstances, an applicant may seek judicial review before the Civil Court if there was a procedural irregularity in the notification process. Alternatively, a fresh visa application may be submitted, though this does not guarantee a different outcome. Immediate legal advice is critical if the deadline has passed.
Your Notice of Appeal should include your personal details, a copy of the refusal decision, the date you received it, numbered grounds of appeal addressing each refusal reason, supporting evidence indexed by exhibit number, and a clear statement of the remedy you seek. Certified translations must accompany any documents not in English or Maltese.
The IAB does not publish aggregate success-rate data, so no definitive percentage is available. Practitioner commentary suggests that appeals which systematically address each refusal ground with strong documentary evidence have the best prospects. Appeals that merely restate disagreement without new evidence or legal argument are significantly less likely to succeed.
You may include a written request for interim relief within your Notice of Appeal, asking the Board to stay the refusal decision or removal order until the appeal is determined. The request should clearly explain the urgency, for example, imminent removal, loss of employment, or risk of harm. The Board considers such requests on a case-by-case basis and may grant or refuse them at its discretion.
Finnish law vs Italian law for contracts
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

By Dr. Hassan Elhais

posted 8 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 Visa Refusal Appeal Processing Time, How Long Appeals Take (2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message