[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
company formation malta

Talk with Our Expert

Jonathon Richards

Global Law Experts

Lead Enquiries Qualification
Delete Article

Company Formation in Malta Incorporate an Eu‑ready Company for Igaming, Crypto, Holdings and IP

By Jonathon Richards
– posted 1 hour ago

Introduction: Your Roadmap to Starting a Business in Malta

Whether you are launching an iGaming platform, structuring a crypto venture under EU rules, or establishing a holding or IP entity, company formation in Malta offers a direct pathway into the European single market. This page gives founders, in‑house counsel and non‑resident entrepreneurs everything needed to incorporate with confidence: a clear step‑by‑step process, realistic cost and timeline estimates, banking and payment‑provider onboarding intelligence, and guidance on MiCA, MGA and AML compliance. Download the free Malta Company Incorporation Checklist (PDF) for a consolidated document list, MBR filing checklist, bank onboarding packet and MGA/MiCA pre‑check list.

Why Choose Malta for Company Formation

EU Market Access and Passporting

Malta is a full EU and eurozone member state. A Maltese company can passport financial services, payment licences and under MiCA crypto‑asset authorisations across the entire European Economic Area. For businesses targeting continental customers, a Malta‑registered entity removes the need for multiple national incorporations and provides immediate credibility with European counterparties, banks and regulators.

iGaming Ecosystem and Skilled Local Services

Malta is the world’s leading iGaming jurisdiction. The Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) has licensed hundreds of operators and service providers since its founding, creating a mature ecosystem of specialised lawyers, compliance officers, payment processors and technology providers. Incorporating in Malta positions iGaming ventures at the centre of this talent pool and regulatory know‑how.

Crypto and MiCA Positioning

Malta was among the first EU states to legislate for blockchain and virtual financial assets. With the Markets in Crypto‑Assets Regulation (MiCA) now fully applicable, the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) is actively processing authorisation applications. Industry observers expect Malta’s head start in digital‑asset supervision to give locally incorporated crypto firms a smoother authorisation experience compared with jurisdictions still building out their supervisory capacity.

IP, Shipping and Holding Advantages

Malta’s imputation tax system and refundable tax‑credit mechanism administered by the Commissioner for Revenue can reduce the effective tax rate on distributed profits for qualifying shareholders. Combined with an extensive double‑taxation treaty network, this makes Malta attractive for holding, IP‑licensing and shipping structures. Substance requirements are real and growing, so professional structuring advice is essential.

Through the Global Law Experts network spanning 140+ jurisdictions businesses gain coordinated access to Maltese counsel and cross‑border structuring specialists, ensuring that the chosen vehicle fits both local and international compliance requirements.

MiCA and Regulatory Snapshot

What MiCA Means for Crypto Companies Incorporated in Malta

Regulation (EU) 2023/1114 commonly known as MiCA establishes a harmonised framework for crypto‑asset issuers and service providers across the EU. Any entity wishing to offer exchange, custody, portfolio‑management or transfer services involving crypto‑assets must obtain authorisation from the competent authority of its home member state. For Malta‑incorporated firms, that authority is the MFSA.

MFSA Role and Malta’s Implementation Posture

The MFSA has published guidance notes and application templates for MiCA authorisations, building on its experience with the earlier Virtual Financial Assets Act framework. Applicants should expect detailed scrutiny of governance arrangements, fit‑and‑proper assessments, ICT security and AML/CFT controls all informed by the standards of the Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit (FIAU).

When to Choose a Malta Entity vs Other EU Domiciles

Malta is strongest for firms that need combined crypto and iGaming capability, an established supervisor, and access to English‑speaking professional services. Firms focused purely on e‑residency‑driven tech or banking‑first strategies may also evaluate Estonia or Lithuania. The optimal choice depends on the specific licence type, banking needs and operational substance model. A MiCA compliance deep‑dive is covered in the dedicated cluster page on MiCA compliance.

Step‑by‑Step Incorporation Process: How to Register a Company in Malta

Malta company registration is handled through the Malta Business Registry (MBR). A local corporate‑services provider or legal adviser typically manages the filing on behalf of non‑resident founders. The key steps are outlined below.

  1. Pre‑formation advisory structure, tax and regulatory assessment. Before any paperwork is filed, determine the optimal corporate vehicle (private limited company is most common, governed by Chapter 386 of the Companies Act). Screen for licence requirements: an iGaming venture will need MGA pre‑clearance, while a crypto firm should assess MiCA service categories with the MFSA. A holding or IP entity should model tax‑refund eligibility and substance needs.
  2. Name reservation and director/shareholder decisions. Reserve the proposed company name with the MBR. Confirm the initial directors (minimum one), company secretary (if appointing one) and shareholders. Non‑residents may act as directors and shareholders, though banks and regulators may require at least one locally resident director for certain regulated activities.
  3. Prepare constitutional documents. Draft the Memorandum and Articles of Association, specifying the company’s objects, authorised share capital (minimum paid‑up capital of €1,164.69 for a private company under the Companies Act) and governance rules. The share structure should reflect future funding rounds, IP assignments or holding arrangements.
  4. Appoint local service providers registered office and company secretary. Every Maltese company must have a registered office address in Malta. A company secretary is not legally mandatory for private companies but is strongly advisable. Corporate‑services firms provide both on an annual retainer basis.
  5. Submit incorporation application to the MBR. The MBR reviews the constitutional documents, confirms name availability, verifies statutory capital requirements and checks directors’ declarations. Online filing through the MBR portal accelerates processing. Turnaround is typically 3–7 business days if documents are complete.
  6. Register for tax and social security. Once incorporated, the company must obtain a Tax Registration Number (TRN) from the Commissioner for Revenue and register for VAT if turnover thresholds are met. Employers must also register with the social‑security authorities if hiring locally.
  7. AML/KYC onboarding FIAU considerations. Malta’s FIAU requires all subject persons including company‑service providers to conduct customer due diligence. Founders should prepare comprehensive beneficial‑ownership declarations, source‑of‑funds evidence and risk assessments early to avoid bottlenecks.
  8. Open a bank account and onboard payment providers. Bank onboarding is often the longest step, particularly for iGaming and crypto companies. Prepare a detailed business plan, AML policy and transaction‑flow diagrams. Engage your legal adviser’s banking relationships to secure introductions. See the banking section below for practical tips.
  9. Post‑incorporation compliance tax registrations, VAT and substance. File annual returns with the MBR, submit audited financial statements and maintain proper board minutes. Ensure genuine decision‑making occurs in Malta (local board meetings, documented resolutions) to support tax residence and satisfy regulators.

Required Documents and Due Diligence for Malta Company Formation

The documents below are required for MBR filing and, in parallel, for bank KYC and AML compliance:

  • Identification: Certified passport copies and proof of residential address for all directors, shareholders and ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs).
  • Constitutional documents: Signed Memorandum and Articles of Association.
  • Board minutes: Resolution approving incorporation and appointment of officers.
  • Beneficial‑ownership declaration: Identifying all natural persons with 25 %+ ownership or control.
  • Professional references: Banker’s and/or professional reference letters for directors and UBOs.
  • Source‑of‑funds documentation: Evidence of the origin of share capital and initial funding (bank statements, audited accounts, sale contracts).
  • Certified translations: Where originals are not in English or Maltese, certified translations may be required.
  • Apostille or legalisation: Documents issued outside the EU may need an apostille or consular legalisation.

Enhanced Due Diligence for iGaming and Crypto

For regulated activities, expect additional requirements: detailed shareholder‑background questionnaires, product whitepapers or platform descriptions, tokenomics documentation (for crypto‑asset issuers), AML/CFT control frameworks, and for iGaming the MGA’s own personal‑declaration forms for key individuals. Regulatory bodies and banks will conduct independent verification, so consistency and accuracy across all documents is critical.

Timelines for Malta Company Registration

The table below summarises typical timelines as of July 2026 actual durations vary by case complexity and document readiness.

Action Typical Timeline (Business Days) Notes
Name reservation → MBR clearance 1–3 Faster with agent pre‑checks
Company incorporation (MBR entry) 3–7 Depends on document completeness
Tax registration (TRN / VAT) 3–10 VAT registration takes longer if threshold triggered
Bank account opening and onboarding 10–40 (2–8 weeks) High variance for iGaming and crypto
iGaming licence application (MGA) 60–180+ (3–9 months) Includes local entity and substance checks
MiCA authorisation / passporting steps Variable Depends on service classification and MFSA timelines

Typical Costs and Fee Ranges for Company Formation in Malta

Below are realistic commercial ranges as of July 2026. All figures are estimates actuals vary by case, provider and complexity.

Item Typical Cost Range (EUR) Notes
Company incorporation (government fees + filing) 200 – 700 MBR fees and registration costs
Professional set‑up (legal + corporate services) 1,500 – 6,000 Depends on complexity and nominee usage
Registered office and company secretary (annual) 500 – 2,500 p.a. Varies by provider
Bank account set‑up (adviser and admin fees) 1,000 – 5,000 Some banks charge onboarding fees; additional costs for crypto/iGaming
MGA iGaming licence application 15,000 – 60,000+ Plus ongoing compliance and local substance costs
Ongoing annual compliance (audit, tax filing) 3,000 – 20,000 Larger groups higher

Malta vs Typical EU Alternatives High‑Level Comparison

The following comparison is a high‑level guide only; individual outcomes vary by business model, licence requirements and banking relationships.

Feature Malta Cyprus Estonia
EU membership and passporting Yes Yes Yes
Strength for iGaming Market leader established MGA Growing Limited
MiCA / regulatory clarity for crypto Clear MFSA engagement Developing Strong e‑residency fintech angle
Banking and PSP access Improving but stricter KYC Competitive Fast onboarding for tech firms
Typical time to incorporate 3–7 business days 7–14 business days 3–10 business days

Banking and Payment Provider Onboarding

Opening a business bank account in Malta is frequently cited as the most time‑consuming part of company formation in Malta especially for iGaming and crypto operators. The following practical tips help reduce friction:

  • Start early: Begin bank and PSP conversations before incorporation wherever possible. Banks often require draft constitutional documents, a business plan and projected turnover to start their assessment.
  • Prepare a robust compliance pack: Include a detailed business plan, AML/CFT policy, KYC procedures manual, source‑of‑funds evidence and transaction‑monitoring plan. The FIAU’s guidance on customer due diligence is the benchmark.
  • Expect enhanced scrutiny: iGaming and crypto businesses should prepare product walkthroughs, flow diagrams showing fund movements and a clear explanation of revenue streams. Banks conducting enhanced due diligence may request multiple rounds of information.
  • Leverage introductions: Law firms and corporate‑services providers with established banking relationships can significantly shorten onboarding timelines. This is one of the most valuable services a formation adviser provides.
  • Consider alternative payment rails: For high‑risk verticals, EU‑licensed electronic money institutions (EMIs) and payment service providers (PSPs) can serve as initial banking solutions while traditional bank accounts are being opened.

A detailed bank onboarding playbook is available on the dedicated page on banking for Malta companies.

Local Substance and Tax Considerations for Holding and IP Companies

Malta’s tax system operates on an imputation basis. Companies pay a standard 35 % corporate tax rate, but upon distribution of dividends, shareholders may claim refunds typically reducing the effective rate to between 5 % and 10 % for qualifying structures. Full details and applicable rates are published by the Commissioner for Revenue.

For holding and IP companies, substance is not optional it is both a legal requirement and a practical necessity for bank confidence and treaty‑benefit claims. Substance expectations include:

  • Local board meetings: Regular, documented board meetings held in Malta with a quorum of locally present directors.
  • Local director presence: At least one director who is resident in Malta and demonstrably involved in decision‑making.
  • Local employees or contracted service providers: Staff or outsourced resources operating from Malta, proportionate to the company’s activities.
  • Physical premises: A genuine office or serviced‑office arrangement not merely a mailbox.

Substance matters because anti‑abuse provisions in EU directives, transfer‑pricing rules and treaty‑shopping scrutiny all target entities that lack genuine economic presence. Banks, too, are increasingly reluctant to onboard companies without demonstrable local operations. Detailed guidance on structuring holding and IP vehicles is addressed in the page on Malta holding and IP structures.

iGaming and Crypto‑Specific Guidance: Licences and MiCA

Which Maltese regulator covers iGaming? The Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) is the sole regulator. It issues B2C and B2B licences and enforces player‑protection and AML standards. Applicants must demonstrate local substance, a fit‑and‑proper management team and robust responsible‑gaming controls.

What licences are needed for crypto services under MiCA? Under MiCA, the licence type depends on the service: crypto‑asset service providers (CASPs) offering exchange, custody, transfer or portfolio management must obtain MFSA authorisation. Issuers of asset‑referenced tokens or e‑money tokens face additional requirements. The applicable categories and notification flows are set out in Regulation (EU) 2023/1114.

When is a Malta company required to have local directors or substance for an MGA licence? The MGA expects genuine local management, a local compliance officer and operational premises. While the exact composition depends on licence class and scale, shell arrangements without substantive decision‑making will not satisfy the Authority. Detailed MGA licensing roadmaps are covered in the page on Malta iGaming licensing.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Underestimating bank KYC timelines: For crypto and iGaming, bank onboarding can take two months or longer. Mitigation: start bank engagement before incorporation and prepare a complete compliance pack upfront.
  • Superficial nominee‑director arrangements: Using nominee directors without substantive local decision‑making creates regulatory risk and undermines tax‑residence claims. Mitigation: appoint genuinely active local directors and maintain documented board governance.
  • Incomplete source‑of‑funds documentation: Gaps in SOF evidence are the single most common cause of bank‑onboarding delays. Mitigation: compile audited accounts, bank statements and contractual evidence before filing.
  • Weak AML policies: A generic, off‑the‑shelf AML policy will not satisfy FIAU standards or banking compliance teams. Mitigation: engage experienced AML counsel to draft bespoke policies aligned with FIAU guidance.
  • Forgetting VAT, payroll and annual filings: Missing tax or MBR deadlines triggers penalties and can affect good‑standing certificates. Mitigation: engage local accountants and set automated compliance calendars from day one.

Downloadable Incorporation Checklist

The free Malta Company Incorporation Checklist (PDF) consolidates everything covered on this page into a single actionable reference:

  • Document list: Every identification, constitutional and compliance document required for MBR filing.
  • MBR filing checklist: Step‑by‑step confirmation tracker aligned with the incorporation process.
  • Bank onboarding packet: Template contents list for business plan, AML policy and source‑of‑funds bundle.
  • MGA / MiCA pre‑check list: Regulatory readiness items for iGaming and crypto applicants.

Access the checklist via the download form on this page the platform will provide immediate delivery after a short registration.

Closing Summary: Company Formation in Malta with Global Law Experts

Malta offers a unique combination of EU market access, world‑leading iGaming infrastructure, early‑mover MiCA supervisory experience and a commercially efficient corporate framework. Getting it right from entity structuring through banking and licence application requires coordinated legal, tax and compliance advice. Through the Global Law Experts network, spanning 140+ jurisdictions, businesses access cross‑border regulatory specialists with a proven track record in company formation in Malta for iGaming, crypto, holding and IP structures. All regulatory and procedural sources cited on this page are drawn from official Maltese and EU authorities, and the downloadable incorporation checklist provides a ready‑to‑use framework for your next steps.

Sources

FAQs

How do I register a company in Malta?
You submit a Memorandum and Articles of Association, along with director and shareholder identification, to the Malta Business Registry (MBR). The process includes name reservation, document filing, MBR review and issuance of a certificate of incorporation — typically completed in 3–7 business days. See the step‑by‑step section above for full details.
Core documents include certified passport copies, proof of address, the Memorandum and Articles of Association, a beneficial‑ownership declaration, source‑of‑funds evidence and professional references. Regulated activities require additional materials such as AML policies and product descriptions.
Government filing fees range from approximately €200 to €700. Professional set‑up costs (legal and corporate services) typically fall between €1,500 and €6,000. Bank onboarding, registered‑office fees and licensing costs are additional. See the full cost table above for item‑by‑item estimates as of July 2026.
Standard MBR incorporation takes 3–7 business days once all documents are correctly filed. Tax registration adds 3–10 days. Bank account opening takes 2–8 weeks, with significant variance for iGaming and crypto businesses.
Yes. Non‑residents may serve as directors and shareholders of a Maltese company. However, tax residence, banking access and regulatory substance requirements may necessitate at least one locally resident director and genuine Malta‑based operations, depending on the nature of the business.
A registered office in Malta is legally mandatory under the Companies Act (Chapter 386). A local director is not a strict statutory requirement for all company types, but it is strongly advisable — and often effectively required — for regulated activities (iGaming, financial services, crypto) and for bank‑onboarding purposes.
Industry observers consider Malta well positioned under MiCA due to the MFSA’s early supervisory experience with virtual financial assets. MiCA authorisation obtained in Malta can be passported across the EU, making the jurisdiction a practical home for crypto‑asset service providers seeking pan‑European market access.
Holding companies must demonstrate genuine local management: board meetings in Malta, at least one resident director actively involved in decisions, local staff or service providers, and physical premises. Inadequate substance risks denial of tax‑treaty benefits and increased regulatory scrutiny.

Our Expert

Jonathon Richards

Global Law Experts

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

Company Formation in Malta Incorporate an Eu‑ready Company for Igaming, Crypto, Holdings and IP

Send welcome message

Custom Message