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Company Formation in Malta Step-by-step Guide for Founders & Advisers

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 2 hours ago

Malta’s strategic position at the crossroads of Europe, Africa and the Middle East combined with its EU membership, English-speaking business environment and progressive regulatory framework makes company formation in Malta one of the most compelling market-entry moves available to international founders and advisers. Whether the objective is a standard trading company, a crypto-asset service provider seeking MiCA authorisation, an IP holding vehicle or an iGaming platform, the jurisdiction offers a mature corporate ecosystem supported by clear statutory foundations.

This guide walks through every practical stage of Malta company incorporation: from name reservation and constitutional documents through Malta Business Registry (MBR) digital filing, bank onboarding, tax and residency considerations, and sector-specific licensing. All procedural steps reflect the mandatory MBR online filing requirement in effect since 1 March 2025, alongside the EU-wide implementation of the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which is reshaping corporate structuring for fintech and digital-asset firms across the single market.

Quick Facts Malta Company Formation at a Glance

  • Time to incorporate (private Ltd): Typically 2–7 business days once documents and bank certificate are ready, via MBR e-filing.
  • Minimum share capital (private Ltd): €1,164.69 authorised; at least 20% must be paid up on incorporation (Companies Act, Cap. 386).
  • Filing method: All incorporations must be submitted digitally via the MBR BAROS / online portal paper filing is no longer accepted for new formations.
  • Non-resident ownership: Permitted. No requirement for a Maltese-resident director for standard private limited companies.
  • EU market access: Full EU/EEA passporting is available where MFSA licensing applies (e.g., MiCA CASP, EMI, investment services).
  • Corporate tax headline rate: 35%, with an imputation/refund system that can reduce the effective rate for shareholders.

How to Set Up a Company in Malta Step-by-Step Process

The Malta company registration process is structured around statutory requirements set out in the Companies Act (Cap. 386) and administered by the MBR. Below is the numbered workflow that applies to the most common vehicle the private limited company (Ltd).

Step 1 Choose Your Vehicle and Reserve a Company Name

Most founders opt for a private limited company (Ltd), which offers limited liability, flexible share structures and straightforward governance. Alternative vehicles include public limited companies (plc), branches of foreign companies, and EU subsidiary structures designed for regulatory passporting. Name availability is checked through the MBR portal; founders should prepare two or three alternatives. The name must not be identical or confusingly similar to an existing registered entity and must end with “Limited” or “Ltd”.

Step 2 Prepare Constitutional Documents (MOA & AOA)

The Memorandum of Association (MOA) and Articles of Association (AOA) form the company’s constitutional backbone. The MOA sets out the company name, registered office address, objects, authorised share capital, subscriber details and the first directors and company secretary. The AOA govern internal management, voting rights, share transfer restrictions and meeting procedures. Documents must be executed in the presence of a Maltese advocate or notary. Where shareholders or directors are non-English-speaking, certified translations and apostilled identification documents may be required. Director and secretary consent forms must accompany the filing.

Step 3 Open a Bank Account and Obtain the Capital Certificate

Before filing with the MBR, the minimum paid-up share capital must be deposited in a Maltese bank account opened in the company’s name (in formation). The bank issues a certificate confirming the deposit, which is a mandatory attachment to the incorporation application. Banks apply customer due diligence (CDD) and KYC procedures aligned with FIAU implementing procedures and Central Bank of Malta AML requirements. Remote account opening is possible but can be more complex for higher-risk sectors such as crypto and gaming. Expect the bank KYC review to take one to four weeks depending on the applicant’s risk profile and the completeness of documentation.

Step 4 File Incorporation with MBR via BAROS / E-Filing

Since 1 March 2025, all company incorporations must be submitted electronically through the MBR’s BAROS platform. The filing package includes:

  • Signed MOA and AOA (digitally or wet-ink scanned, depending on advocate attestation).
  • Bank certificate confirming paid-up capital deposit.
  • Director and secretary consent forms.
  • Certified copies of identification (passport/ID) and proof of address for all directors, shareholders and beneficial owners.
  • Registered office declaration.
  • MBR filing fee payment (payable electronically via the portal).

Digital signatures are accepted where compliant with eIDAS standards. Once the MBR is satisfied that the documentation is complete and the statutory requirements are met, the Registrar issues the Certificate of Incorporation and assigns a unique company registration number. Turnaround is typically 2–7 business days for straightforward private limited company filings.

Step 5 Post-Incorporation: Tax, VAT and Operational Setup

With the Certificate of Incorporation in hand, the company must complete several post-registration steps:

  • Tax registration: Apply for a tax identification number with the Commissioner for Revenue.
  • VAT registration: Required where the company will be making taxable supplies in Malta or intra-EU supplies.
  • Social security: Register as an employer if hiring locally.
  • Operational bank account: Convert or open a live transactional bank account (the blocked capital account is released post-registration).
  • Statutory registers: Establish and maintain the register of members, register of directors and secretary, and minute books at the registered office.

Step 6 Sector-Specific Next Steps

Certain sectors require additional licences or authorisations before commencing business:

  • iGaming: Apply to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) for a gaming licence; comply with FIAU implementing procedures for remote gaming operators.
  • Crypto / MiCA: Engage with the MFSA’s crypto-assets division for CASP authorisation under MiCA. Firms previously licensed under Malta’s VFA framework should assess transitional provisions. MiCA-compliant company structures require demonstrable substance and robust governance.
  • IP holding: Ensure sufficient economic substance in Malta (employees, premises, decision-making) to withstand treaty and anti-avoidance scrutiny.
  • Shipping: Explore Malta’s maritime registry for vessel registration alongside corporate formation.

Process Outcomes Checklist

  • Certificate of Incorporation issued by MBR.
  • Unique MBR company registration number.
  • Bank certificate confirming paid-up share capital.
  • Tax identification number from the Commissioner for Revenue.
  • VAT registration certificate (where applicable).
  • Registered office established in Malta.
  • Statutory registers and minute books opened and maintained.

Comparison Table Common Company Vehicles and Recommended Uses

The table below compares the principal corporate vehicles available for company formation in Malta, including minimum capital requirements and indicative registration timelines.

Vehicle Minimum Capital Typical Registration Time Best For / Notes
Private Limited Company (Ltd) €1,164.69 authorised; 20% paid up on incorporation 2–7 business days (MBR e-filing) Standard trading and holding company; flexible share structure; non-resident owners permitted.
Branch of Foreign Company N/A (parent company capital) 5–15 business days Quick EU footprint for established foreign companies; no separate legal personality in Malta.
Public Limited Company (plc) €46,587.47 authorised (statutory) Several weeks (additional formalities) Listings, IPOs, large capital structures, public fundraising.
EU Subsidiary / Passporting Vehicle Varies by structure Varies Used where EU regulatory passporting via MFSA licence is required (e.g., MiCA CASP, EMI).

Key Requirements and Eligibility

Required Documents

  • Identification: Certified copies of passports or national ID cards for all directors, shareholders and ultimate beneficial owners.
  • Proof of address: Recent utility bills or bank statements (typically not older than three months), certified where required.
  • MOA and AOA: Drafted and executed in the presence of a Maltese advocate.
  • Registered office address: Physical address in Malta (a PO box is not sufficient).
  • Bank certificate: Confirmation of the paid-up capital deposit from a Maltese credit institution.
  • Director and secretary consents: Written acceptance of appointment.
  • Regulated-sector supplements: For MiCA CASPs, MFSA fit-and-proper forms; for iGaming, MGA suitability declarations and FIAU risk assessments.

Eligibility Summary

There is no nationality or residency restriction on shareholders or directors of Maltese private limited companies. A minimum of one director is required. While there is no statutory obligation for a Maltese-resident director in private Ltds, regulated entities particularly those applying for MFSA or MGA licences may be required to appoint locally resident directors and demonstrate genuine management substance. A company secretary must also be appointed and may be an individual or a corporate body.

Corporate Substance and Tax Residency Considerations

Holding, IP and financial services companies face increasing scrutiny on economic substance. The MFSA expects MiCA applicants to maintain key personnel, operational infrastructure and decision-making capacity in Malta. For tax purposes, a company managed and controlled from Malta is resident there see the tax and residency section below for the individual 183-day test and its implications for founders.

Costs and Timelines for Malta Company Incorporation

Cost Breakdown (Typical Ranges as of July 2026)

Cost Item Low Estimate Typical High / Complex
MBR registration fee (private Ltd) €245 €350 €500+
Notary / advocate attestation €150 €300 €600
Bank account opening & certificate €100 €200 €500
Professional formation fees (corporate services) €1,500 €2,500 €5,000+
VAT / tax registration assistance Included €200 €500
Sector-specific (MiCA / MGA pre-engagement) N/A €3,000 €15,000+

MBR fees are set by statutory fee schedules and vary by authorised share capital. Professional fee ranges reflect typical market conditions and vary based on complexity, urgency and sector.

Timeline Summary

Stage Best Case Typical Case
Name reservation 1 day 1–2 days
Document preparation (MOA/AOA, KYC pack) 3 days 1–2 weeks
Bank account & capital certificate 1 week 2–4 weeks
MBR e-filing to Certificate of Incorporation 2 days 3–7 business days
Post-incorporation (tax, VAT, operational account) 1 week 2–4 weeks
Sector licence (MiCA / MGA) if applicable 3 months 6–12 months

The introduction of mandatory MBR e-filing has shortened the registration stage itself, but bank CDD and sectoral clearances remain the principal variables in overall go-live timelines.

Banking and Onboarding KYC, Timelines and Practical Tips

Bank Onboarding Overview

Opening a corporate bank account in Malta is an integral part of the incorporation process (for the capital certificate) and a critical operational step post-registration. Maltese banks operate under stringent AML/CFT frameworks supervised by the FIAU and the Central Bank of Malta. Applicants in higher-risk sectors crypto-asset service providers, iGaming operators and companies with complex multi-jurisdictional ownership structures can expect enhanced due diligence (EDD) and longer onboarding timelines. Remote onboarding is available at some institutions but may be restricted for certain risk categories.

Practical Step-by-Step for Bank Onboarding

  1. Pre-pack the compliance file: Prepare certified MOA/AOA, directors’ and shareholders’ passports with proof of address, a detailed business plan (including projected turnover and transaction volumes), an AML/CFT risk self-assessment, a corporate structure diagram showing beneficial ownership down to the natural person level, and source-of-funds and source-of-wealth documentation.
  2. Select your bank early: Approach two or three banks simultaneously. Maltese banks have different appetite for sectors some are more receptive to fintech and iGaming than others.
  3. Submit and respond promptly: The initial KYC review typically takes 1–2 weeks. Banks will issue follow-up queries fast turnaround on responses significantly reduces overall elapsed time.
  4. Enhanced due diligence window: For regulated or higher-risk sectors, expect an additional 2–4 weeks of EDD review before a bank decision is issued.
  5. Account activation: Once approved, the bank opens the account, issues the capital certificate (for pre-incorporation) or activates transactional banking facilities (post-incorporation).

Bank-Friendly Formation Checklist for Higher-Risk Sectors

For crypto and iGaming applicants, banks routinely request additional documentation beyond the standard pack:

  • Regulatory engagement evidence: Proof of MFSA pre-engagement (for MiCA CASPs) or MGA application status.
  • Local compliance officer details: Name, CV and appointment letter of the Malta-based MLRO (Money Laundering Reporting Officer).
  • Third-party compliance reports: Independent AML/CFT audits or risk assessments, where available.
  • Technology and custody arrangements: For crypto firms, details of wallet infrastructure, custodian arrangements and blockchain analytics tools in use.

Tax and Residency The 183-Day Rule and Corporate Tax Notes

Individual Tax Residence: The 183-Day Threshold

For individuals, the Commissioner for Revenue’s guidance on tax residence establishes that physical presence in Malta for more than 183 days in a calendar year generally results in tax residence for that year. Additional criteria such as habitual abode, centre of vital interests, and domicile may also determine residence status even where the 183-day threshold is not met. Founders considering relocation to Malta in connection with their company formation should obtain personalised tax advice, particularly where dual residence or treaty interactions may arise. The remittance basis of taxation may apply to individuals who are resident but not domiciled in Malta, meaning foreign-source income is taxed only to the extent it is remitted to Malta.

Corporate Tax: Headline Rate and Refund Mechanics

Maltese companies are subject to a headline corporate tax rate of 35%. However, Malta operates a full imputation system under which shareholders (particularly non-resident shareholders of Maltese trading companies) may claim refunds of part of the tax paid by the company upon distribution of dividends, potentially reducing the effective combined rate significantly. This refund mechanism is a key part of Malta’s competitiveness for holding and trading structures. For detailed tax structuring advice, founders should engage a specialist tax adviser.

When Substance and Local Management Matter

Companies claiming Malta tax residence must demonstrate that management and control are exercised from Malta evidenced by board meetings held locally, local payroll, office premises and substantive decision-making by Malta-based directors.

Sector-Specific Notes

iGaming

Malta remains one of Europe’s leading iGaming jurisdictions. Companies offering gaming services must obtain an MGA licence and comply with the FIAU’s implementing procedures for the remote gaming sector. AML/CFT obligations are rigorous: operators must appoint a local MLRO, conduct ongoing customer monitoring and file suspicious transaction reports. The company formation process should be coordinated with MGA pre-engagement to avoid structural mismatches.

Crypto and MiCA

The EU Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) is now fully applicable across the EU, including Malta. Crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) must obtain authorisation from the MFSA to operate in or passport services from Malta. The MFSA’s crypto-assets supervisory function oversees applications, fitness and propriety assessments, and ongoing compliance. Firms previously authorised under Malta’s Virtual Financial Assets (VFA) Act should assess transitional provisions to migrate to MiCA status. MiCA-compliant company structures require robust governance arrangements, minimum own-funds requirements, and genuine operational substance in Malta. Industry observers expect Malta to remain a leading EU domicile for CASPs given the regulator’s early-mover familiarity with digital-asset supervision.

IP Holding

Malta’s participation in an extensive double tax treaty network and its patent box regime make it an attractive location for intellectual property holding structures. However, substance requirements must be met particularly local employees with relevant technical expertise and genuine decision-making in Malta.

Shipping

Malta operates one of the EU’s largest ship registries. Maritime companies often combine vessel registration with Maltese corporate formation to benefit from tonnage tax and flag-state advantages.

Ongoing Compliance and Common Pitfalls

Once incorporated, Maltese companies are subject to continuous statutory obligations:

  • Annual returns: Must be filed with the MBR within 42 days of the anniversary of incorporation.
  • Financial statements: Must be prepared in accordance with applicable accounting standards and filed with the MBR.
  • Audit: All Maltese companies are subject to statutory audit unless they qualify for the small-company exemption.
  • Tax returns: Annual corporate tax returns must be filed with the Commissioner for Revenue.
  • Beneficial ownership reporting: Companies must maintain and update the register of beneficial owners at the MBR.

Common friction points include:

  • Incomplete KYC packs: The single most common cause of bank onboarding delays invest time upfront in a comprehensive compliance file.
  • Underestimating bank timelines: Founders who plan for a two-week bank process frequently encounter four to six weeks of CDD for complex structures.
  • Misunderstanding MiCA scope: Assuming that a Maltese company can provide crypto-asset services without MFSA authorisation under MiCA is a critical error.
  • Failing substance expectations: Nominee structures with no genuine local management will not satisfy the MFSA, tax authorities or increasingly, banks.

Actionable Checklist Launch Day to Year One

  • Launch day: Certificate of Incorporation received; MBR company number confirmed; bank certificate on file.
  • Within 30 days: Tax registration obtained; VAT registration submitted (where applicable); operational bank account activated; statutory registers opened at registered office.
  • Within 90 days: Sector-specific licence applications filed (MiCA CASP, MGA, etc.); first board meeting held in Malta (where substance is required); payroll and social security registration completed (if employing locally).
  • Within 365 days: First annual return filed with MBR; financial statements prepared and audited; corporate tax return filed; beneficial ownership register updated; review and refresh KYC documentation with the company’s bank.

Appendix Downloadable Checklists

To support a smooth and efficient incorporation process, the following resources are available for download:

  • Redacted sample MOA/AOA checklist: A template outlining the key clauses and statutory requirements for drafting your constitutional documents.
  • Bank pack checklist: A comprehensive list of documents typically required by Maltese banks for corporate account opening, including enhanced items for crypto and iGaming applicants.
  • Sector-specific document checklists: Tailored checklists for MiCA CASP applications, MGA gaming licence pre-engagement, and IP holding company formations.

These checklists are designed to reduce the back-and-forth with banks, the MBR and regulators, and to accelerate the overall company formation in Malta timeline.

Sources

FAQs

How much does it cost to set up a company in Malta?
Total costs depend on complexity and sector. For a standard private Ltd, expect MBR registration fees of approximately €245–€500, notary/advocate fees of €150–€600, bank fees of €100–€500, and professional formation service fees of €1,500–€5,000+. Regulated sectors (MiCA, iGaming) incur additional licensing and advisory costs. MBR fees are published on the MBR formation and registration page.
Prepare your MOA/AOA with a Maltese advocate, gather certified identification for all directors and shareholders, open a bank account for the paid-up capital deposit and obtain a bank certificate, then file the incorporation documents electronically via the MBR BAROS platform. After registration, complete tax and VAT registrations and set up your operational bank account. See the step-by-step process section above for full details.
When all documentation and the bank certificate are ready, a private limited company typically registers within 2–7 business days via MBR e-filing. However, the overall timeline from initial engagement to operational readiness — including bank KYC, document preparation and any sector-specific licensing — can range from four weeks to several months.
Yes. Non-residents may serve as both shareholders and directors of Maltese companies under the Companies Act (Cap. 386). There is no statutory requirement for a Maltese-resident director for private limited companies. However, regulated entities (MiCA CASPs, licensed gaming operators) may need local directors and demonstrable substance in Malta.
Under the Commissioner for Revenue’s guidance, an individual who is physically present in Malta for more than 183 days in a calendar year is generally considered tax resident in Malta for that year. Additional factors such as habitual abode and centre of vital interests may also determine residence status. Founders near the threshold should seek personalised tax advice.
For a standard private limited company, no Maltese-resident director is required by statute. However, if the company applies for an MFSA licence (e.g., MiCA CASP authorisation) or an MGA gaming licence, the regulator will typically require locally resident directors and key function holders to ensure adequate governance and substance.
Maltese companies must file annual returns and audited financial statements with the MBR, submit annual corporate tax returns to the Commissioner for Revenue, maintain and update the beneficial ownership register, and comply with any sector-specific reporting obligations imposed by the MFSA, MGA or FIAU.
MiCA requires any entity providing crypto-asset services in the EU to hold authorisation from a competent authority — in Malta, that is the MFSA. This means that the corporate vehicle must be structured to meet MiCA’s governance, capital and substance requirements from the outset. Firms transitioning from VFA authorisation should verify their eligibility under MiCA transitional provisions with the MFSA.

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Company Formation in Malta Step-by-step Guide for Founders & Advisers

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