A founder I was speaking with last year asked a question that comes up more than people expect: “Is Malta non-dom some kind of special application, like Portugal’s old Non-Habitual Resident (NHR) regime?” The answer is no. Malta non-dom tax status is not a programme you apply to join. It is the natural tax consequence of two facts running in parallel: you are tax resident in Malta, and your domicile of origin is outside Malta. If both are true, you fall onto the remittance basis of taxation automatically. No filing for admission, no approval letter, no five-year cap.
That simplicity is appealing on its surface, but the details matter. The remittance basis sounds straightforward until you realize that “domicile” under Maltese law is a common-law concept with no hard statutory definition, and that acquiring a domicile of choice in Malta can happen gradually without you noticing. The mechanics that matter are less obvious than the headline. Tax residence is established on facts rather than a day count, the remittance basis treats income categories differently, and a compliance floor applies once foreign income passes a set threshold.
What is Malta non-dom tax status?
Malta non-dom tax status rests on the intersection of two legal concepts that operate independently of each other.

The first is tax residence. The second is domicile. Tax residence determines whether Malta has jurisdiction to tax you at all. Domicile determines which basis of taxation applies.
An ordinary Malta tax resident (domiciled in Malta) is taxed on worldwide income. A non-domiciled Malta tax resident is taxed only on Malta-source income and on foreign-source income that is remitted to Malta. Foreign-source income left offshore escapes the Maltese tax net entirely. That is the remittance basis.
The regime is not a carve-out or a concession granted by application. The Maltese Income Tax Act does not have a chapter titled “Non-Dom Programme.” The outcome follows directly from the statutory definitions of residence and domicile, which is why non-dom status can also be lost without any formal step.
Establishing tax residency and Malta domicile status
How tax residency is determined
Malta does not use a rigid 183-day bright-line test for individual tax residency. The determination is facts-based, drawing on criteria including your settled place of abode, your intention to reside, the location of your center of vital interests, and where you maintain your habitual residence. This is worth pausing on: a founder who maintains an apartment in Malta, keeps family there, and runs their affairs from there is likely tax resident even if they spend stretches of the year elsewhere. The absence of a statutory day count cuts both ways.

Ordinary tax residence outside special programmes is determined on a factual basis and reflected through registrations and annual tax returns. However, Malta also operates formal residence programmes, including the Global Residence Programme (GRP), the Tax Residence Programme (TRP), and the Residence Programme Rules (RPR), each of which requires a formal application, approval by the Maltese authorities, and ongoing compliance with specific conditions. Maltese resident status is assessed by the Malta Tax and Customs Administration on a holistic view of circumstances.
Protecting non-dom status over time
This is where founders underestimate the risk. Non-dom status continues as long as you have not acquired a domicile of choice in Malta. A domicile of choice is not a legal form you sign. The local specialists I defer to on Maltese private client law are clear that it accumulates from a pattern of intent: prolonged residence (in practice, sustained presence over a decade raises the question), purchasing property with a settled intent to remain indefinitely, relocating your whole family to Malta with no maintained ties elsewhere.
The table below summarizes the main residency and domicile indicators.
| Indicator | Relevance to tax residency | Relevance to domicile of choice | Entrepreneur action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Settled place of abode in Malta | High | Moderate | Document lease or ownership |
| Center of vital interests | High | High | Maintain professional ties abroad |
| Family presence in Malta | Moderate | High | Document cross-border family ties |
| Property purchase with intent to remain | Moderate | Very high | Maintain domicile-of-origin evidence |
| Prolonged unbroken residence (10+ years) | Low (already resident) | Very high | Periodic review with local counsel |
Founders building a broader tax residency strategy should weigh Malta against other jurisdictions in the context of their specific income profile. A tax residency decision framework that models income type and source can clarify whether the remittance basis delivers material savings in your situation.
Income taxation: remittance basis and exempt foreign income
What is taxable
Malta-source income is always taxable for a resident, non-dom or not. This covers Malta-sourced business profits, rental income from Maltese property, and employment income earned in Malta. Progressive personal rates apply, reaching a top rate of 35%.

Foreign-source income remitted to Malta is taxable in the year of remittance. The year matters: if you transfer offshore funds to a Maltese account in December, that remittance falls into the current year’s tax return. Planning the timing of transfers is one of the few levers available under this regime.
What remains outside the Maltese tax net
Foreign-source income that stays offshore is not subject to Maltese tax. That covers investment returns held in foreign brokerage accounts, dividends from non-Maltese companies paid into a foreign account, and rental income from foreign property collected in a foreign jurisdiction and left there.
Foreign-source capital gains occupy an important position: they are exempt from tax in Malta even if you remit them. This is the structural advantage that practitioners focus on when comparing Malta to the UAE’s territorial system for high-net-worth founders with significant portfolio disposals.
The definition of “remittance” extends beyond a simple bank transfer. As I understand the current framework (this is a point where I would confirm the detail with Maltese counsel on each client’s specific facts), a remittance can include a beneficial ownership transfer that effectively brings the value of assets into Malta, not only the direct movement of cash. The practical implication: do not assume that routing funds through an intermediate account offshore automatically avoids a remittance characterization.
Minimum tax and annual compliance obligations
The €5,000 floor
Non-domiciled residents whose foreign-source income exceeds €35,000 annually are subject to a minimum tax of €5,000. This is not a flat tax on all income; it is a floor that applies if your tax liability calculated in the ordinary way would otherwise fall below that figure. For married couples, the threshold is calculated on combined household foreign-source income.
Below €35,000 in foreign-source income, no minimum applies. For a founder with a structurally lean offshore setup who remits only what they need for living costs in Malta, the actual tax liability may be low.
Annual compliance
Non-domiciled residents file annual personal income tax returns with the Malta Tax and Customs Administration, declaring Malta-source income and any remitted foreign-source income. For Maltese income tax purposes, foreign-source income and foreign capital gains that are not remitted to Malta are neither taxable nor required to be reported in the Maltese income tax return for resident non-domiciled individuals. However, this income tax treatment does not override other regulatory obligations. Reporting requirements under the Common Reporting Standard (CRS), anti-money laundering (AML) regulations, and Know Your Customer (KYC) procedures imposed by financial institutions may still apply to offshore assets and accounts.
Malta has no wealth tax and no inheritance tax. For founders with significant accumulated capital or complex estate structures, the absence of both is a planning advantage that sits outside the income tax system entirely.
Founders who combine Malta personal residence with a corporate structure elsewhere should be attentive to the substance requirements their operating company carries. The substance requirements that matter for internationally mobile founders differ significantly between Singapore, Hong Kong, and Dubai, and Malta personal residency does not automatically resolve corporate substance questions in those jurisdictions.
For founders operating through a Singapore or Hong Kong entity while personally resident in Malta, the corporate structure comparison covered in the Singapore vs Dubai incorporation framework is a useful companion analysis, since personal remittance planning and corporate profit extraction interact in ways that affect the overall tax picture.
Malta’s Double Taxation Agreement (DTA) network also plays a role in non-dom planning. Malta has concluded DTAs with a broad range of jurisdictions, and the interaction between a DTA’s tie-breaker rules and Malta’s facts-based residency test is an area where local Maltese counsel should confirm the position, particularly if you maintain a residence permit or property in a second jurisdiction simultaneously.
The the 183-day rule and tax residency provides additional context on how different countries approach residence tests, which matters when you are trying to exit an existing tax residence while establishing Maltese residence.
FAQ
What exactly is “remittance” under Malta non-dom tax status?
A remittance broadly covers any transfer of foreign-source income or its proceeds into Malta, whether by direct bank transfer, credit card charge against a foreign account for Malta expenses, or a payment made by a third party in Malta on your behalf from offshore funds. The precise legal perimeter is defined in Maltese case law and administrative practice rather than a single statutory article. For significant transactions, confirm the characterization with local Maltese counsel before executing the transfer. The capital gains exemption on remittance makes this less pressing for disposal proceeds, but it matters for regular income flows.
Can I hold Malta non-dom tax status while living outside Malta for extended periods?
Residency in Malta requires a settled place of abode or clear intent to reside there. Occasional travel abroad does not break residency. Extended relocation to another country, combined with reduced ties to Malta (closing a residence, relocating family, establishing habitual abode elsewhere), risks breaking Maltese tax residence and with it the non-dom basis of taxation. There is no statutory absence limit. The assessment is factual, so the pattern of your life over the whole year matters more than a single day count.
Does the €5,000 minimum tax apply if my foreign-source income is €40,000 annually?
Yes. The exemption from the minimum tax applies only where total foreign-source income is below €35,000. At €40,000, the threshold is exceeded, and the €5,000 minimum tax applies. Whether you owe €5,000 depends on your calculated liability: if your combined Malta-source income and remitted income already generates a tax charge above €5,000, the minimum does not add to that figure. It operates as a floor, not an additional charge on top of normal liability.