Corporate & Banking
Malta Company Formation
Malta’s Companies Act of 1995 established one of Europe’s most flexible corporate frameworks, and three decades of refinement have turned the island into a serious hub for international business. EU membership, Eurozone access, and over 70 double taxation treaties make it a jurisdiction where corporate structures carry weight well beyond the Mediterranean.
What sets Malta apart from other EU formation options is the combination of tax efficiency and regulatory depth. The headline corporate rate is 35%, but the imputation system brings the effective rate to 5% through shareholder refunds — lower than Cyprus at 15% and with a broader treaty network than either Ireland or Luxembourg for mid-market structures. We have been incorporating companies here for nearly 30 years, and for clients who need an EU-domiciled entity with substance, it remains one of the strongest options available.
Benefits of a Malta Company
EU Treaty Network and Market Access
Malta is a full EU member state, Eurozone participant, and Schengen member — a combination that eliminates barriers other offshore jurisdictions cannot overcome. BVI and Belize offer lower costs but no EU treaty access. Cyprus offers EU membership at 12.5% tax but without Malta’s depth in regulated industries. With 70+ double taxation treaties and no exchange controls, a Malta entity can receive dividends, royalties, and interest payments across borders with minimal withholding — which matters substantially for holding structures and IP licensing arrangements.
Tax Efficiency Through the Imputation System
The effective 5% rate is not a special incentive or a temporary scheme — it is built into Malta’s tax code through the full imputation system. When a company distributes dividends, shareholders claim refunds of up to six-sevenths of the tax paid. No withholding tax applies to dividends paid to non-resident shareholders. Panama offers 0% on foreign-source income but with a narrower treaty network; BVI offers 0% with no treaties at all. Malta’s structure delivers low effective taxation with the legal infrastructure to support it across jurisdictions.
Regulated Multi-Vertical Platform
Malta is one of very few jurisdictions where a single corporate domicile supports iGaming licensing (MGA), crypto and blockchain regulation (VFA Act), and traditional financial services — all under established frameworks. For groups operating across verticals, this avoids the overhead of maintaining entities in multiple jurisdictions — though the regulatory complexity is real. iGaming alone contributes over 12% of Malta’s GDP; the supporting ecosystem of payment processors, compliance firms, and legal advisors is mature and accessible.
Requirements
Fast Offshore handles the full incorporation process. The Malta Business Registry requires standard identity verification and documentation of the entity’s intended purpose.
Personal Documentation
All directors, shareholders, and beneficial owners must provide:
- Certified passport copy (not older than 90 days)
- Proof of address (utility bill or bank statement, within 90 days)
- Bank reference letter (2+ year relationship)
- Professional reference from an accountant or lawyer (2+ year relationship)
- Police clearance certificate
- CV or professional background summary
Business Documentation
You will also need to provide:
- Proposed company name (two alternatives in case of conflicts)
- Description of intended business activity
- Geographical location of customers and operations
- Source of funds documentation
- Proposed share capital structure (minimum €1,164.69 authorised, 20% paid up)
All documents must be in English. Fast Offshore will confirm exact requirements based on your specific structure, review everything before filing, and handle submission to the Malta Business Registry.
Malta Company Formation Cost
The cost reflects Malta’s position as an EU-regulated jurisdiction with full treaty access and auditing requirements. There are no hidden charges — what you see below is the complete first-year cost through Fast Offshore.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Company formation | €5,750 |
| Annual corporate maintenance | €5,500 |
| Estimated Year 1 Total | ~€5,750 |
The formation package includes the Certificate of Incorporation, Memorandum and Articles of Association, registered address and registered agent, share certificates, director and shareholder resolutions, and a dedicated account manager for the first year.
Ongoing Maintenance
Malta-incorporated companies have more ongoing obligations than most offshore jurisdictions — annual audits, tax filings, and registry returns are mandatory. Fast Offshore manages all of this through a single annual maintenance package.
| Obligation | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Annual renewal fee | Annual (€5,500) |
| Registered agent and address | Included in renewal |
| Audited financial statements | Annual (required by law) |
| Annual return to Registry of Companies | Annual |
| Tax return filing | Annual |
The annual maintenance covers all government fees, registered agent services, statutory audit coordination, and corporate housekeeping. We handle renewal reminders, compliance filings, and keep your company in good standing with the Malta authorities. Audit fees are additional and depend on the complexity of the entity’s accounts.
When Malta Is the Right Choice
Malta works best when your structure needs to be taken seriously by institutional counterparties. Holding companies that receive cross-border dividends or royalties, IP licensing vehicles that depend on treaty relief, and parent entities for regulated subsidiaries — these are the use cases where Malta’s higher cost delivers a measurable return. Banks open accounts more readily for Malta entities, and the EU passport means your company can operate across 27 member states without additional registration.
It is not the right fit if cost efficiency is the primary driver and you have no specific need for EU access. Belize delivers a clean IBC at €1,250 in Year 1. BVI offers stronger institutional recognition than most offshore jurisdictions at €2,200. If your structure does not depend on treaty benefits or EU market access, those jurisdictions offer better value.
The local director requirement adds cost and administrative complexity — you will need either a Maltese resident or a corporate director service. Annual audits are mandatory even for dormant entities, which means ongoing professional fees beyond the maintenance package. These are not dealbreakers, but they make Malta meaningfully more expensive to maintain than jurisdictions without substance requirements.
We’d recommend Malta for clients building a structure that interfaces with European institutions, regulated industries, or investors who expect an EU-domiciled entity. If that describes your situation, the premium is justified. If your needs are simpler, we can help you find the right jurisdiction and build Malta into the structure later if circumstances change.