Member
No results available
The Family Court reform Malta 2026 represents the most significant structural overhaul of family proceedings on the island in over a decade. Enacted as Act VII of 2026 following the passage of Bill No.165 through the Maltese Parliament, the legislation reshapes how custody disputes, access arrangements, care orders and child-protection proceedings are handled from filing to final judgment. The Government of Malta announced in January 2026 that a dedicated implementation team had been appointed to prepare the administrative infrastructure needed to bring the Act into force. This guide explains the changes in practical terms, what parents, guardians, social workers and legal practitioners need to understand, prepare and do differently as the new Family Court provisions take effect.
Act VII of 2026 introduces changes to family law Malta practitioners have awaited since the Ministry of Justice first published its reform booklet outlining the rationale for a specialist Family Court. The headline reforms fall into three categories: court structure and jurisdiction, administrative and case-management improvements, and strengthened safeguards for children.
The Act establishes a dedicated Family Court with clearly delineated jurisdiction over matrimonial causes, custody and access disputes, maintenance applications, care-order proceedings and related enforcement matters. Under the previous framework, family cases were distributed across different sections of the Civil Court, sometimes resulting in fragmented case handling. The 2026 reforms consolidate these proceedings under specialist judges who are expected to receive targeted training in child-development, domestic-violence dynamics and alternative-care pathways.
Industry observers expect this consolidation to reduce the procedural confusion that arose when different aspects of a single family dispute, say, custody and a parallel care-order application, were heard before separate adjudicators. By channelling all related proceedings into a unified court, the Act aims to deliver more coherent, child-centred outcomes.
The Family Court Act VII 2026 introduces structured case-management conferences at an early stage of proceedings. Judges will be empowered to set binding timetables, require disclosure of relevant documents and direct parties toward mediation or other dispute-resolution mechanisms before a contested hearing is scheduled. The legislation also introduces fast-track procedures for urgent applications, particularly those involving allegations of harm to a child or the need for immediate interim relief.
For practitioners, the practical effect will be a shift toward front-loaded preparation. Skeleton arguments, witness lists and disclosure documents will need to be filed at or before the first case-management conference rather than trickling into court over successive sittings. Early indications suggest that the new procedural rules will reward thorough preparation and penalise delay more firmly than the previous system did.
The Act further expands the role of the Children’s Lawyer, a court-appointed advocate whose function is to represent the independent interests of the minor in proceedings. Under the reform, the Children’s Lawyer is expected to be involved earlier in the process, to file independent reports and recommendations, and to have direct access to relevant social-service records. This represents a notable strengthening of the child’s voice in proceedings and aligns Malta more closely with Council of Europe child-participation standards.
One of the most important practical questions surrounding the Family Court reform Malta 2026 is timing. The Act contains ministerial commencement powers, meaning its provisions do not take effect automatically upon enactment. Instead, the responsible Minister will publish one or more commencement notices in the Government Gazette specifying the dates on which particular provisions become operative. This staggered approach allows the Government to phase in reforms as infrastructure, personnel and procedural rules are readied.
| Date | Event | Immediate Implication for Parents and Practitioners |
|---|---|---|
| 13 February 2026 | Bill No.165 introduced in Parliament and subsequently enacted as Act VII of 2026. | Legal framework is set. The Minister may set commencement date(s) at any time. All parties should monitor Government Gazette notices. |
| To be published | Ministerial commencement notice(s) bringing Act VII provisions into force on specified dates. | Once in force, new procedures and Family Court jurisdiction apply to new filings and, per transitional rules, to certain existing cases. |
| January 2026 (announced) | Government confirms an implementation plan and appoints a dedicated implementation team. | Administrative procedures, judge appointments, case-management rules and updated court forms will be published in advance of commencement, practitioners should prepare to adopt new forms and processes. |
Even before the ministerial commencement notice is published, lawyers should begin reviewing the text of Act VII to identify how it will affect pending cases. Consent orders lodged under the current framework may need to be re-filed or confirmed under the new Family Court rules. Transitional provisions within the Act are expected to clarify which pending cases will be transferred to the new court and which will conclude under existing procedures. The likely practical effect will be that newly filed proceedings default to the Family Court once the relevant provisions are in force, while advanced cases remain with their current adjudicator unless a transfer is ordered.
Practitioners are strongly advised to subscribe to official Government Gazette alerts, review implementation guidance from the Ministry of Justice as it is published, and update their internal precedent libraries and filing templates in anticipation of the new case-management requirements.
The changes to family law Malta introduced by Act VII will have their most direct impact on the three areas that touch families most acutely: custody, access and care orders. This section examines each in turn.
Under the reformed system, custody Malta 2026 proceedings will follow a reinforced best-interests standard. Judges will be directed to consider a structured set of factors when determining custody and access arrangements, including the child’s wishes (where age-appropriate), the quality of each parent’s relationship with the child, stability of living arrangements, and any history of domestic violence or abuse.
The Act does not impose an automatic presumption of equal shared care. Instead, the court will assess whether shared arrangements serve the child’s best interests on the particular facts of each case. Parents seeking shared care or a specific time-allocation will need to present evidence demonstrating that the proposed arrangement is practically workable and in the child’s interest, including evidence about proximity of homes, schooling logistics, the child’s routine, and each parent’s capacity to cooperate.
Procedurally, custody applications will be subject to the new case-management framework. Early disclosure of evidence, a clear statement of the orders sought, and willingness to engage in mediation will all be relevant to how the court manages the timetable. The reform signals a shift away from protracted, adversarial custody battles toward a more structured, solution-focused approach.
Care orders Malta currently fall under the Minor Protection (Alternative Care) Act (Cap.602), which provides the legal basis for protection orders, emergency removals and alternative-care placements. The scope of Cap.602, as stated in the legislation, is “to safeguard, protect and give priority to the best interest of minors and to ensure, in the least possible time, the permanence of” their living arrangements.
Act VII does not replace Cap.602. Instead, it creates a jurisdictional framework in which care-order proceedings initiated under Cap.602 will be heard within the specialist Family Court rather than being distributed across different court sections. This consolidation means that a judge hearing a custody dispute between separated parents will also be able to consider, within the same proceedings, or at least within the same specialist court, any related care-order application filed by social services.
For families, this should reduce duplication and delay. For social workers and FSWS officers, it means that care-plan updates, referral reports and evidence of harm will need to be prepared in a format compatible with the Family Court’s case-management expectations.
One of the most significant changes to family law Malta under Act VII concerns enforcement. The Act introduces stricter consequences for non-compliance with family-court orders, particularly access orders. Where a parent persistently fails to comply with an access arrangement without reasonable justification, the court will have expanded powers to impose sanctions. These may include variation of the original order, costs penalties, and, in the most serious cases, criminal contraventions.
The practical steps for a parent whose access order has been breached are: document each instance of non-compliance, notify the Children’s Lawyer if one is appointed, and file an enforcement application with the Family Court citing the specific provisions breached. Early legal advice is essential, as enforcement proceedings under the new framework will move faster than under the previous system.
Whether you are initiating family proceedings or responding to an application, the Family Court reform Malta 2026 requires a more structured approach to preparation. The following checklist will help you organise your case effectively.
Judges under the new system will expect comprehensive, organised evidence focused squarely on the child. The following documents and materials should be assembled early:
If you believe a child is at risk of significant harm, you should contact social services (FSWS) immediately. Under Cap.602, mandatory reporting obligations apply to professionals, but any person, including a parent, can make a referral. If a Children’s Lawyer has already been appointed in your case, notify them directly of any new safeguarding concerns.
Parents should also be aware that the Children’s Lawyer is not an advocate for either parent. Their role is to represent the child’s independent interests. Cooperating with the Children’s Lawyer, providing access for interviews, sharing relevant documents, and facilitating contact between the child and the advocate, is in every parent’s interest, as the Children’s Lawyer’s report will carry significant weight with the court.
Legal practitioners must adapt their workflow to the new procedural expectations of the Family Court. The following practice notes address the most significant operational changes.
Under the reformed system, expert evidence, particularly from child psychologists, family therapists and social workers, will be subject to clearer admissibility standards. Practitioners commissioning reports should ensure the following:
Family Court hearings under Act VII will continue to be held in closed session to protect the privacy of children and families. Practitioners should remind clients and witnesses of strict confidentiality obligations, publication of proceedings or identification of minors will remain prohibited and subject to sanction.
Child participation is a core principle of the reform. Where a child is of sufficient age and maturity, the court may hear the child’s views directly or through the Children’s Lawyer. Practitioners should be prepared for this and ensure that their submissions address the child’s expressed wishes alongside the broader best-interests analysis.
| Entity | What to Report or File | Timing and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Social services / FSWS | Child-protection referrals, care-plan updates and risk assessments | As required by Cap.602; coordinate with the court case manager and file updates at each case-management stage |
| Lawyers for the parties | Case skeletons, witness lists, disclosure documents and position statements | At or before the first case-management conference; follow Family Court procedural rules once published |
| Children’s Lawyer | Independent child-representation reports and recommendations to the court | Filed early in proceedings; strict confidentiality rules apply to the child’s disclosures |
| Psychologists / therapists | Expert reports on the child’s welfare, attachment and developmental needs | Per the case-management timetable; must comply with admissibility and methodology standards |
The Minor Protection Act Cap.602 remains the primary legislative framework for alternative care and child-protection orders in Malta. Its stated purpose is to substitute the earlier Child Protection (Alternative Care) Act (Cap.569) and to provide for protection orders, alternative care and suitable protection for minors deprived of, or at risk of being deprived of, parental care.
Act VII does not amend the substantive provisions of Cap.602. Instead, it creates a procedural bridge: care-order applications and protection-order proceedings initiated under Cap.602 will fall within the jurisdiction of the newly established Family Court. This means that the Director responsible for child protection, when exercising investigative and referral powers under Cap.602, will file applications in the Family Court rather than in the general Civil Court.
Once the relevant provisions of Act VII are commenced, any new application for a care order, emergency protection order or variation of an existing care arrangement under Cap.602 will be heard within the Family Court. Existing care orders that are subject to review or variation may also be transferred, depending on the transitional provisions. For foster carers, residential-care providers and social workers, this consolidation means preparing documentation that meets the Family Court’s case-management standards, including structured care plans, regular progress reports and evidence of the child’s wishes.
The expanded role of the Children’s Lawyer is particularly important in Cap.602 proceedings. In cases involving potential removal of a child from parental care, the Children’s Lawyer will provide independent representation to ensure the child’s voice is heard and that any care order genuinely reflects the child’s best interests rather than administrative convenience.
The following anonymised scenarios illustrate how the Family Court reform Malta 2026 will operate in practice.
No reform is without challenges. Academic commentary has raised concerns about whether the court system has sufficient resources, particularly specialist judges and trained support staff, to handle the expanded caseload that a dedicated Family Court will attract. There are also questions about access to justice: if procedural requirements become more demanding, unrepresented litigants may find it harder to navigate the system without legal assistance.
Media analysis has highlighted the risk of implementation delays if the ministerial commencement notices are not published promptly, creating a period of uncertainty for families with pending cases. Industry observers expect these concerns to be partially addressed by the Government’s published implementation plan, but ongoing monitoring, and, if necessary, further legislative refinement, will be essential to ensure the reform delivers on its child-centred promises.
The Family Court reform Malta 2026 demands preparation from every stakeholder in the family-justice system. Parents and guardians facing or anticipating proceedings should begin assembling the evidence outlined in this guide and seek legal advice early. Practitioners should review the text of Act VII, update precedent libraries and prepare for front-loaded case management. Social workers and public bodies should align their reporting templates and care-plan formats with the Family Court’s procedural expectations.
For expert legal guidance tailored to your circumstances, consult an experienced family-law practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory. Early advice is the single most effective step toward protecting your interests, and your child’s.
This article is general information current as at 28 April 2026 and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified lawyer for guidance specific to your case. Ministerial commencement dates and procedural rules may change, always verify the latest position through official Government Gazette notices.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr Sandra Sladden at Sladden & Sladden Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
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.
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 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.
Send welcome message