Malta tops the EU for healthy life years, care runs in English, and the public system is free at the point of use — for people who are entitled to it. Most American and Canadian retirees aren't, and will live on private insurance. Here's how it actually works.
Last verified: 8 July 2026| Your situation | Public system (Mater Dei, health centres) | What you'll actually use |
|---|---|---|
| Working in Malta, paying social security contributions | Free at point of use, dependants included | Public system, often topped up with cheap private GP visits |
| Retiree on MRP, GRP, or MPRP | No automatic entitlement — private cover is a programme condition | Private insurance + private hospitals/clinics, for life or until entitlement arises |
| Nomad Residence Permit holder | No entitlement | Full-year private policy (a permit requirement; monthly-pay policies rejected) |
| Anyone physically in Malta with an emergency | Emergency care at Mater Dei / Gozo General provided; non-entitled patients can be billed for follow-up | Travel or private insurance to cover the bill |
Mater Dei (Msida, opened 2007) is the main acute teaching hospital; Gozo General serves the smaller island. Private options include St James and DaVinci hospitals.
Malta leads the EU on healthy life years at birth (women 71.1, men 71.7 — Eurostat 2023 data). Life expectancy: 83.2 years (2024).
English is an official language and the working language of medicine in Malta. No interpreter needed for a specialist appointment — a real differentiator from most of Europe.
Private GP visits commonly €15–30; specialist consultations roughly €50–100 (indicative market rates, 2025). Insurance in your 60s is the bigger line item — get quotes before you commit to the move.
What Maltese and international policies cost at 60, 65, and 70 — and the exclusions that matter.
How the public system is organised, entitlement paperwork, and pharmacy (POYC) basics.
Bringing US/Canadian prescriptions, Maltese equivalents, and costs without coverage.
Most visas require proof of cover before you apply. We'll match you with an expat health insurance specialist we've independently vetted for Malta. Free, no obligation.