Yes, international students can legally work 20 hours per week in Malta — and if you’re enrolled in an MQRIC-recognised higher-education course, you can start from your very first semester. Students on shorter or non-degree courses must wait 90 days before taking up employment. Part time jobs in Malta for international students pay €6–€12 per hour, so a typical student earns €520–€900 a month — enough to cover most living costs, though rarely all of them.
Here’s the problem: the top articles you’ll find on this topic get the legal rules wrong. Some say “everyone can work from day one.” Others quote the 90-day rule as if it applies to every student. Neither is true, and working on the wrong assumption can cost you your visa.
I’ve spent 15+ years helping Indian students settle into Malta, and the questions are always the same. Can I actually work? How much will I really take home after tax? What happens if I mess this up? This guide answers all of it — with the official Identità and Jobsplus rules, not recycled blog claims.
Can International Students Work in Malta While Studying?
Yes. International students in Malta can work up to 20 hours per week during their studies, provided they hold a valid residence permit and their employer obtains an employment licence from Jobsplus, Malta’s national employment agency.
But here’s the two-track rule almost nobody explains correctly:
| Student Type | When You Can Start Working | Weekly Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Enrolled in an MQRIC-recognised higher-education course (degree, MQF Level 5+) | From the start of your course | 20 hours |
| Non-degree / short courses (including English language courses longer than 90 days) | After completing 90 days (3 months) of your stay | 20 hours |
| Courses shorter than 90 days | Not eligible to work | — |
Source: Identità — Central Visa Unit, Student Visa Employment (official Government of Malta).
So if you’re doing an MBA, a bachelor’s degree, or a postgraduate diploma at an MQRIC-accredited institution, you don’t wait three months — you can apply for work from week one. If you’re on a 6-month English course, you wait 90 days first.
One more detail the other guides skip: Jobsplus approves student work permits more favourably when the job relates to your field of study. A hospitality student applying for a hotel job has a smoother approval than the same student applying for a warehouse role.
What Are the Best Part Time Jobs in Malta for International Students?
The best part time jobs in Malta for international students in 2026 are concentrated in hospitality, retail, iGaming support, and care work — sectors where English is the working language and student-friendly shifts are normal.
Here are the 9 most realistic options, with actual 2026 pay ranges:
| # | Job | Hourly Pay (€) | Monthly at 20 hrs/wk | English Needed | Study-Field Bonus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hotel / restaurant service staff | 6.50–9 | €560–€780 | Moderate | Hospitality students ✔ |
| 2 | Kitchen assistant / commis chef | 7–10 | €600–€865 | Basic | Culinary students ✔ |
| 3 | Retail sales assistant | 6.50–8.50 | €560–€735 | Good | Business students ✔ |
| 4 | Customer support (iGaming/tech) | 8–12 | €690–€1,040 | Fluent | IT/business students ✔ |
| 5 | Care assistant / support worker | 7.50–10 | €650–€865 | Good | Nursing students ✔ |
| 6 | Delivery rider (Wolt, Bolt Food) | 6–9 + tips | €520–€780 | Basic | — |
| 7 | Housekeeping / cleaning | 6–8 | €520–€690 | Basic | — |
| 8 | Office admin / data entry | 7.50–10 | €650–€865 | Good | Management students ✔ |
| 9 | Tutoring / language support | 10–15 | €860–€1,300 (fewer hrs) | Fluent | Education students ✔ |
A note on the wage confusion you’ll see elsewhere: some articles quote €5/hour, others €8. Malta’s national minimum wage in 2026 works out to roughly €5.70–€5.80 per hour for a full-time week — but in practice, student jobs in Valletta, Sliema, and St Julian’s pay above minimum because hospitality and iGaming compete for the same workers. Budget on €6.50–€8 as your realistic floor.
Sector restrictions exist. Jobsplus attaches conditions to student employment licences and does not approve every sector for student workers. Certain licensed or regulated roles are off-limits. Your employer will know — but don’t accept a cash-in-hand job in a “grey” sector assuming it’s fine. It isn’t.
How Do You Get a Student Work Permit in Malta? (Step-by-Step)
To work part-time in Malta as a student, your employer applies for an employment licence from Jobsplus on your behalf. You cannot apply for it yourself. Here’s the full process — the part every competing article skips:
Step 1: Get Your Residence Permit First
You cannot start the work permit process on a visa sticker alone. Complete your Malta student visa and residence permit process with Identità after arrival. Biometrics, proof of enrolment, proof of accommodation — the standard package.
Step 2: Find a Job Offer
Apply through Jobsplus’s own portal (jobsplus.gov.mt), Konnekt, Keepmeposted.com.mt, LinkedIn, or simply walk into hotels and restaurants with a CV. Malta is small; walk-in applications genuinely work here in a way they don’t in bigger countries.
Step 3: Employer Applies to Jobsplus
Your employer submits the employment licence application. The fee is €230 per year (or part thereof) — and it’s the employer who pays and files it, not you. If a company asks you to pay this fee yourself, treat it as a red flag.
Documents typically needed:
- Copy of your residence permit / e-Residence card
- Proof of enrolment in your course
- Passport copy
- The employer’s engagement form and job description
Step 4: Wait for Approval
Processing usually takes 2–6 weeks. You cannot legally start working while the application is pending — this is where most students get into trouble.
Step 5: Register for a TIN and Social Security Number
Once approved, register with the Commissioner for Revenue for a Tax Identification Number (TIN) and get your social security (NI) number. Your employer needs both to put you on payroll legally.
What If the Application Is Rejected?
Rejections usually happen because the sector isn’t approved for students, the hours exceed 20/week, or your course type doesn’t qualify yet (the 90-day rule). You can reapply with a different employer or role — a rejection isn’t a black mark on your record, but working anyway after a rejection absolutely is.
How Much Tax Do Students Pay on Part Time Work in Malta?
Most international students working 20 hours per week in Malta pay little to no income tax, because annual earnings of roughly €9,100 or below fall in Malta’s 0% tax band (single rates, 2026).
Here’s how the maths works:
| Annual Income | Tax Rate (Single) |
|---|---|
| €0 – ~€12,000 | 0% |
| ~€12,001 – €16,000 | 15% |
| €16,001 – €60,000 | 25% |
| Above €60,000 | 35% |
A student earning €7.50/hour × 20 hours × 48 weeks = €7,200/year — comfortably inside the 0% band. Even at €10/hour you’d earn €9,600 and pay almost nothing in income tax.
What you will pay:
- Social security (Class 1 NI) contributions — 10% of your basic weekly wage, deducted automatically by your employer. On €150/week, that’s €15.
- Students under 18 or on very low earnings pay reduced rates.
Two admin tasks you must do: register for your TIN (free, done online or at the Commissioner for Revenue), and check your first payslip to confirm NI is actually being deducted. If it isn’t, you’re not on the books — and that’s your visa at risk, not just the employer’s fine.
Can Part Time Work Cover Your Living Costs in Malta? (Honest Math)
Almost — but not entirely. A realistic part-time income covers about 70–90% of a frugal student’s monthly expenses in Malta. Here’s the budget nobody else publishes:
Monthly Income (Realistic)
- 20 hrs/week × €7.50/hr × 4.33 weeks = €650
- Minus ~10% NI = ~€585 take-home
Monthly Expenses (Shared Living, 2026)
| Expense | Cost (€) | Cost (₹ approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Room in shared apartment (Msida/Gzira) | 350–450 | ₹31,500–40,500 |
| Groceries (cooking at home) | 150–200 | ₹13,500–18,000 |
| Tallinja bus card (student) | 21–26 | ₹1,900–2,350 |
| Phone + internet share | 20–30 | ₹1,800–2,700 |
| Miscellaneous | 50–80 | ₹4,500–7,200 |
| Total | €590–€790 | ₹53,000–71,000 |
The honest verdict: part-time earnings of €585 against expenses of €590–€790 means you’ll cover rent, food, and transport in a good month — but you should still arrive with a buffer of €2,000–€3,000 for the first three months and for lean months. Anyone telling you part-time work fully funds your Malta education is selling you something.
During summer (June–September), tourism hiring peaks and many students pick up extra legal hours through university breaks — that’s when most students actually save money rather than just break even.
The India Angle: Banking and Sending Money Home
Open a Maltese bank account (BOV or HSBC Malta) or use Revolut/Wise with your e-Residence card — most student employers pay only into SEPA accounts. For sending money to India, Wise and Remitly consistently beat bank transfer rates. Realistically, though, most students send money home only after graduating into full-time work under Malta’s 2026 work rules — during studies, your earnings stay in Malta.
What Happens If You Work Illegally in Malta?
This is the section that should scare you a little, because the consequences are real and none of the top-ranking guides mention them:
- Working without a Jobsplus licence → your residence permit can be revoked, and you face removal from Malta.
- Exceeding 20 hours/week → treated as a breach of your permit conditions; renewal applications are routinely refused on this basis.
- Cash-in-hand work → no NI record means no legal protection if your employer underpays or doesn’t pay at all — and it still counts as illegal employment if discovered.
- A refused renewal follows you — Malta is in Schengen, and with the EES (Entry/Exit System) now digitally logging every entry, exit, and overstay across the zone since its 2025 rollout, a Malta violation is visible to every Schengen country you apply to next.
The rule of thumb I give every student: if there’s no payslip, there’s no job — walk away. A €600/month cash job is not worth a cancelled visa and a Schengen record.
Part Time Work in Malta: Pros vs Cons
| Pros ✔ | Cons ✘ |
|---|---|
| 20 hrs/week legal work — degree students from day one | €230 licence needed; 2–6 week wait before starting |
| Earnings under ~€9,100/year are effectively tax-free | Part-time alone won’t cover 100% of expenses |
| English-speaking workplace (rare in EU) | Wages lower than Germany/Netherlands/Ireland |
| Tiny island — commutes of 15–30 minutes | Rent in student areas rising ~5–8% yearly |
| Field-related jobs boost permit approval AND your CV | Sector restrictions limit some job choices |
| Summer tourism season = abundant hiring | Winter months have fewer hospitality shifts |
If you’re still comparing destinations, our guide on admission in Malta for Indian students covers how Malta stacks up on total cost — and if a hospitality career is your goal, hotel management courses in Malta pair naturally with paid hotel work from your first semester.
Real Student Success Stories
Ritika Sharma, 22 — Jaipur → MBA, Malta
“I landed in the February intake with €2,500 and honestly panicked about money in week two. My counsellor explained that as a degree student I didn’t need to wait 90 days — my employer at a Sliema café applied to Jobsplus in March, and I was on payroll by mid-April. €7.50 an hour, 20 hours a week. It pays my rent share and groceries. My parents now only send money for tuition.”
Arjun Nair, 24 — Kochi → Postgraduate Diploma in Management
“My first job offer was cash-in-hand at €8/hour, no contract. It was tempting. A senior from my college told me about a student whose renewal got refused for exactly that. I turned it down, waited three more weeks, and got a legal customer-support role at €9/hour. The payslip mattered more than the euro difference — my permit renewal went through in 2026 without a single question.”
Priyanka Deshmukh, 21 — Nagpur → BSc Nursing
“Everyone told me nursing students can’t work because of clinical hours. Not true — I do weekend care-assistant shifts at €8.50/hour, and because the job matches my field, the Jobsplus approval took barely three weeks. The experience went straight onto my CV, and my clinical supervisor actually recommended me for the role.”
Mohammed Faiz, 26 — Hyderabad → English course, then degree
“I came on a 9-month English course first, so the 90-day rule applied to me. Those first three months were tight — I wish someone had told me to budget for zero income until month four. Once I switched into a degree program, the restriction disappeared. Plan your money around the rule that applies to YOUR course type, not what a YouTube video says.”
FAQs: Part Time Jobs in Malta for International Students
How many hours can international students work in Malta?
A maximum of 20 hours per week during studies. Degree-level (MQRIC-recognised) students can work from the start of their course; other students must first complete 90 days in Malta.
Can Indian students work in Malta while studying?
Yes. Indian students follow the same rules as all non-EU students: valid residence permit, employer-obtained Jobsplus licence, and the 20-hour weekly cap. Thousands of Indian students in Malta work part-time legally in hospitality, retail, and support roles.
What is the salary for part time jobs in Malta for students?
Typically €6.50–€12 per hour in 2026. At 20 hours a week, that’s roughly €560–€1,040 per month before a 10% social security deduction. iGaming customer support and tutoring pay at the top of that range.
Do students pay tax on part time income in Malta?
Rarely. Annual income up to about €12,000 falls in Malta’s 0% band, and a 20-hour student job usually earns €7,000–€9,500 a year. You will pay ~10% social security contributions, deducted by your employer.
Who pays the Jobsplus employment licence fee?
The employer — €230 per year or part thereof. The employer also files the application. You cannot apply for your own student work permit in Malta.
Can students on English language courses work in Malta?
Only if the course lasts longer than 90 days, and only after completing the first 3 months of stay. Students on courses shorter than 90 days cannot work at all.
What happens if I work more than 20 hours a week?
You breach your residence permit conditions. Consequences range from a refused permit renewal to revocation of your permit and removal — and under the EES system, the violation is visible across the whole Schengen zone.
Is it easy to find a part time job in Malta?
Easier than most EU countries, honestly. Malta’s unemployment sits under 3%, tourism runs on seasonal staff, and English is an official language. Students who apply in person to hotels and restaurants in Sliema/St Julian’s typically find work within 2–4 weeks — see our full breakdown of jobs in Malta in 2026 for which sectors are hiring hardest.
Final Word: Work Smart, Stay Legal, Graduate Ahead
Part time jobs in Malta for international students are one of the most underrated advantages of studying on the island: legal 20-hour work rights, effectively tax-free student earnings, an English-speaking job market, and — if you pick a job in your field — Jobsplus approval that’s faster and a CV that’s stronger at graduation.
The trade-off is discipline. Wait for the licence. Keep the payslips. Respect the 20-hour cap. Students who follow those three rules graduate with work experience and savings; students who don’t sometimes graduate with a Schengen record instead.
Not sure which rule applies to your course, or which intake gives you the best head start on working? Check the current Malta intakes for 2026, or talk to us before you apply — we’ll map your course type against the work rules so there are no surprises after you land. Reach Rise Up Education on +91 77273 56027 or WhatsApp for a free consultation.
About the Author – M Fazeel
M Fazeel is a highly experienced admission counsellor with over 15 years of expertise in guiding students across India and abroad. Recognised among the top education counsellors in India, he has successfully mentored thousands of students who are now pursuing or have completed their education in leading institutions in India and overseas.
He is a well-educated researcher and author, known for providing practical, result-oriented guidance in career and admission planning. M Fazeel also holds professional certifications from Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, further strengthening his credibility and expertise in the education domain.
LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohammed-fazeel-9a543722/
Twitter: https://x.com/fazeelkhan7
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External Resources (Official Sources)
- Identità – Central Visa Unit: Student Visa Employment — official work rules for students
- Jobsplus Malta — employment licences and the national jobs portal
- Commissioner for Revenue, Malta — TIN registration and tax bands
- Study in Malta (official) — MQRIC-recognised institutions