Visas & Residency · Malta

The Malta Retirement Programme: 15% tax on the pension you bring in.

Last verified: 8 July 2026

Malta will tax a qualifying retiree's remitted foreign income at a flat 15% — with a €7,500-a-year floor. In exchange you buy or rent a home above a set threshold, keep a pension as the core of your income, and actually spend time on the island. Here is the whole deal, condition by condition.

The key numbers
  • 15% flat tax on foreign income remitted to Malta (other income taxed at 35%)
  • €7,500/yr minimum tax, +€500 per dependant or special carer
  • Pension must be ≥75% of your Malta-taxable income, and received in Malta
  • Property: buy ≥€275,000 (Malta) / ≥€220,000 (Gozo or south Malta), or rent ≥€9,600/yr / ≥€8,750/yr
  • €2,500 non-refundable application fee, filed through an Authorised Registered Mandatory
  • Stay >90 days/yr in Malta (averaged over 5 years) and <183 days/yr in any other single country

Who the MRP is for

The Malta Retirement Programme (Subsidiary Legislation 123.134) is a special tax status for people living mainly on a pension. Since a 2020 rule change it is open to non-EU nationals — that includes Americans and Canadians. Qualifying pension income includes periodic pensions such as US Social Security, CPP, OAS, occupational and personal pensions, and lifetime annuities.

The defining test: your pension must make up at least 75% of your chargeable income in Malta, and it must be received in (remitted to) Malta. If most of your income is dividends, rents, or IRA drawdowns structured as lump sums, the MRP is the wrong fit — look at the Global Residence Programme instead, which has no pension test but a €15,000 minimum tax.

You cannot be in employment while on the programme. Holding a non-executive board seat in a Maltese company is allowed, as is activity in a public institution connected with philanthropy, education, or research.

The tax deal, precisely

The US catch. A 15% Maltese rate does not cap your total tax if you're American. The US taxes citizens wherever they live, and under the US–Malta treaty (signed 2008, in force since November 2010, effective for most taxes from 2011), US Social Security and US government pensions remain taxable only in the US. Other US-source pensions of a Malta resident are generally taxable only in Malta. The interaction decides whether the MRP actually saves you money — model it with a cross-border accountant before applying, not after.

The qualifying property

OptionMalta (main island)Gozo or south Malta
Buy≥ €275,000≥ €220,000
Rent≥ €9,600/year (€800/mo)≥ €8,750/year (€729/mo)

The property must be your principal place of residence worldwide. You cannot let or sublet it, and nobody outside your household (dependants and registered household staff) may live there. Rental agreements must run at least 12 months. Note that as a non-EU buyer you'll usually also need an AIP permit — covered in the Housing guide.

The other conditions

How to apply, from the US or Canada

  1. Model the tax first. Compare MRP (15%, €7,500 floor, 75% pension test) against the GRP (15%, €15,000 floor, no pension test) and plain non-dom taxation (progressive rates, €5,000 minimum in some cases — see the remittance guide).
  2. Engage an Authorised Registered Mandatory (ARM). You cannot file an MRP application yourself — only an ARM registered with the Malta Tax and Customs Administration can submit it, with the €2,500 fee.
  3. Secure the qualifying property — purchase or 12-month-plus lease at the thresholds above.
  4. Assemble evidence: pension documentation showing the 75% test, health insurance, police conduct certificates, passport documents.
  5. On approval, complete residence formalities and biometrics; Identità issues your residence documentation. Then meet the day-count and filing conditions every year.

MRP vs the alternatives

Want permanent residence from day one and no annual tax-status conditions? That's the MPRP — roughly €100,000 in fees plus a €375,000 property, but no tax deal. Not a pensioner? The GRP gives the same 15% remittance rate with a €15,000 floor. Still working remotely? The Nomad Residence Permit (€42,000/yr income) taxes remote-work income at 10% after the first exempt year, but caps out at four years. Compare all four →

Sources

  1. Malta Tax and Customs Administration — Malta Retirement Programme Guidelines v4.0: mtca.gov.mt
  2. Malta Retirement Programme Rules, S.L. 123.134: legislation.mt
  3. MTCA — special schemes for individuals: mtca.gov.mt
  4. US–Malta income tax treaty (signed 2008, in force Nov 2010, effective 2011): irs.gov
  5. Identità — healthcare insurance requirements for residence permits: identita.gov.mt
  6. Programme figures corroborated against KPMG Malta and Trident Trust MRP summaries (2024–25 editions).
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Programme conditions change and individual circumstances vary; confirm with the MTCA, an Authorised Registered Mandatory, or a cross-border tax professional before applying.