VAT and Eco Contribution on Malta Short-Lets: Complete 2026 Guide

VAT on Malta Short-Let Rentals: Who Actually Needs to Register?

Malta's VAT rules for short-let accommodation confuse many property owners — and the confusion is costly. The 15% flat income tax is widely understood, but VAT and the Eco-Contribution sit in a separate regulatory layer that applies regardless of how your income tax is handled.

Is Short-Let Income Subject to VAT?

Yes. Under Maltese VAT law, short-term accommodation (stays under 30 days) constitutes a taxable supply. This means the accommodation service you provide to guests carries VAT implications — entirely distinct from long-term residential rental, which is VAT-exempt.

The VAT Registration Threshold

You are required to register for VAT in Malta once your annual taxable turnover exceeds €35,000. This threshold applies to gross short-let income — not the net amount after platform fees or management fees.

If you have other VAT-taxable business income, this is aggregated with your short-let income when calculating whether you've crossed the threshold.

What Happens Once You Cross the Threshold?

After registering:

  • You must charge 7% VAT on accommodation services provided to guests
  • You must issue a fiscal receipt for every booking
  • You must file periodic VAT returns (quarterly or monthly depending on turnover)
  • You can reclaim input VAT on allowable business expenses — furniture, professional services, renovations

Does Airbnb Handle VAT for Me?

Partially. Since 2022, Airbnb collects and remits VAT on its own service fee directly. However, the accommodation element — the actual nightly charge going to the host — remains the owner's responsibility for VAT compliance. The platform collecting money on your behalf does not discharge your own VAT registration obligation once you exceed the €35,000 threshold.

The Eco-Contribution: A Separate Obligation

The Malta Eco-Contribution is entirely separate from VAT and income tax. Under the Eco-Contribution Act, all tourist accommodation providers must collect €0.50 per adult per night from guests and remit this to the Malta Tourism Authority.

Key Eco-Contribution facts:

  • Applies to every booking, regardless of platform
  • Must be collected from the guest — it cannot be absorbed by the host as an operating cost
  • Remittance is typically quarterly — confirm current MTA schedules
  • Failure to collect and remit is a separate compliance violation from MTA licensing failures

How the Numbers Stack Up

On a typical week's booking — 2 adults, 7 nights, at €120/night:

  • Gross booking value: €840
  • Eco-Contribution collected from guests: €7.00 (2 × 7 × €0.50)
  • If VAT-registered: 7% VAT on accommodation = €58.80 remitted to tax authority

What If You're Below the €35,000 VAT Threshold?

If your annual short-let income is below €35,000, you are not required to register for VAT or charge guests VAT. You may still voluntarily register if you have significant reclaimable input VAT — for example, following a major property renovation or fit-out. The Eco-Contribution applies regardless of your VAT status; there is no minimum threshold for the eco-tax.

How Eleva Handles This for Managed Properties

Eleva collects the Eco-Contribution automatically from guests on every booking and remits it to the MTA on behalf of all managed properties. For properties where VAT registration is required, we provide full gross income statements to your accountant and advise on the registration process. No Eleva-managed property has ever faced a compliance action on either Eco-Contribution or VAT grounds.

Get in touch if you're unsure about your VAT or Eco-Contribution position.