Find the perfect tour for your Malta adventure. We review and compare the top-rated tours, activities, and day trips to help you make the most of your visit.
ℹ️ Short answer: For most first-timers, a 3-hour Valletta food walking tour (€55–70) is the right single-tour pick — pastizzi, ftira, bigilla, Maltese wine, and a sweet stop in one organised loop. Cooking classes (€85–110) are the best second food experience if you’d rather make than eat. Sunday Marsaxlokk fish-market tours are the niche pick if your trip lands on a Sunday and you like seafood. The DIY version of any food tour is genuinely good and roughly half the price — but you lose the context, and Maltese food without context is just sandwiches. Maltese food is one of the surprises of a first Malta trip. People come for the limestone and the sea and end up texting friends about a 50-cent pastizzo from a Rabat hole-in-the-wall. The cuisine itself is a 5,000-year old layer cake — Phoenician fish, Arab spices, Sicilian pasta, Norman bread, North African pulses, British pies, Italian everything-since-1530 — and unlike the architecture, it doesn’t survive walking past it. You have to eat it.
ℹ️ Short answer: Malta is one of the best Mediterranean dive destinations — clear water (visibility 20–40m), warm summer sea, no currents most days, and a stack of WWII-and-later wrecks at recreational depths. Beginners should book a PADI Discover Scuba half-day at Ċirkewwa (~€80–110). Certified divers want the Um El Faroud, P29 patrol boat, HMS Maori, and the Blue Hole at Dwejra (Gozo). The best season is June–October; spring water is clearer but cold. Twin-tank boat dives run €80–120; full Open Water certifications are €450–550. Malta has a quietly strong reputation in European diving. Visibility is reliably 20–40 metres in summer, the sea between Malta, Gozo and Comino is sheltered enough that conditions are diveable 300+ days a year, and the rate of wrecks-per-square-kilometre is one of the highest in the Mediterranean — Malta has been at the receiving end of every major Mediterranean naval war for the last 2,500 years, and a few of the casualties got scuttled deliberately as artificial reefs.
ℹ️ Short answer: For most couples and small groups, a 2.5-hour small-group sailing yacht sunset cruise from Sliema (€55–75) is the best pick — less hen-party energy than the big catamarans, more atmosphere than a RIB, with proper drinks and a real sail. Big catamarans (€35–50) are fine if you’re a group of friends who want a party deck and an open bar. Grand Harbour sunset cruises (€25–40) are the cheap, short, photogenic option and the right pick if you only have one evening. Skip private charters under 6 people — the per-person maths doesn’t work. The Maltese sunset is the easiest “wow” in your trip. The whole western coast is limestone cliff and bastion wall, the sun sinks straight into the sea between Comino and Gozo, and on a clear July evening you’ll watch a thousand-year-old skyline turn pink for forty minutes. You can see it from the Upper Barrakka Gardens for free, and you should at least once. But the boat-borne version — drink in hand, Comino on the horizon, Valletta lit up behind you — is one of those tourist clichés that earns its cliché status.
ℹ️ Short answer: For most first-timers, a half-day Mdina + Rabat combo tour from Valletta (€35–45, ~5 hours) is the best single pick — it includes transport, both towns, the catacombs in Rabat, and a guide who can actually tell you the difference between a Knight and a noble. The Mdina night tour (€35) is atmospheric and worth a second visit if you have an extra evening. Game of Thrones fans should book the Mdina + Valletta filming combo. DIY by bus 51/52/53 from Valletta works fine and saves €25 if you don’t need a guide. Mdina is small. About 0.9 km² of bastioned hilltop, 250 residents, three cafes that matter, and a baroque cathedral that punches above its weight. You can walk the whole thing in 25 minutes. Which raises an obvious question: do you actually need a tour? Honest answer: yes, because Mdina without context is just pretty buildings. Mdina with context — Phoenician origins, Norman conquest, the Knights moving the capital out, the Borg family killing each other in the cathedral, the GoT crew filming Ned Stark’s arrival — is the most interesting square kilometre on Malta. A guide is what makes the difference.
ℹ️ Short answer: For most first-timers, a 2.5-hour paid small-group walking tour (€25–35) is the best single-tour pick — it covers St John’s Co-Cathedral, the Barrakka Gardens, the Knights of St John backstory, and the bits of context that turn “old building” into “ah, so that’s why”. Free tip-based tours are genuinely good and can save you €20 if you’re on a budget. Skip private tours unless you’re 4+ people. The food tour is the one to add as a second tour. Self-guided with an audio app works if you want to move at your own pace. Valletta is small — about 1 km long and 600 m wide — and you can cross it end-to-end in 25 minutes. Which means you don’t need a tour to see it. You need a tour to understand it. Most of what makes Valletta special isn’t the surface (although the surface is gorgeous); it’s the layered history of the Knights of St John, the Great Siege, the British Empire, the WWII Blitz that made it the most-bombed city on earth, and the fact that the whole walled grid was master-planned in the 1500s by an Italian engineer with a thing for grids.
ℹ️ Short answer: The best Gozo day trip from Malta in 2026 is a small-group jeep tour from Mellieħa or Sliema (€75–95), which covers Dwejra, Tal-Mixta Cave, Ramla Bay, the Citadel, and a Gozitan lunch in one tightly-run day. The cheapest is DIY by ferry and bus (~€20 round trip including transport), the most fun in good weather is a quad-bike self-drive (€100/quad), and the laziest is the coach + Citadel + lunch combo (€55–70). The best advice we can give: if you can possibly stretch to two nights on Gozo, do that instead — see our 5-day Malta and Gozo itinerary for why. Gozo is the second-largest of the Maltese islands and, in the opinion of every Gozitan and most second-time visitors, the better one. Half the population per square kilometre, almost no traffic, red-sand beaches, the cliffs at Dwejra, the medieval Citadel of Victoria, dinners that don’t end at 22:00. The catch: Gozo doesn’t fit in a day. The bus-and-ferry chain alone costs you 90 minutes each way, and the headline sights are spread across an island that’s 14 km tip to tip.
ℹ️ Short answer: The cheapest way to the Blue Lagoon is the Comino shuttle ferry from Ċirkewwa (~€15 round trip, runs every 30 minutes in summer). The most popular way is a full-day cruise from Sliema that adds the Crystal Lagoon, Gozo’s caves, and lunch (€35–45). The most enjoyable way — if you can spend €60–90 — is a small-group catamaran or RIB that arrives early or late and skips the worst of the midday crush. Whichever you choose, avoid 11:30–14:00 in July and August — the Lagoon is unrecognisable from the brochure photos at that hour. The Blue Lagoon — the impossibly turquoise channel between Comino and the tiny islet of Cominotto — is the photo every Malta brochure leads with, and it deserves the hype. The water really is that colour. The catch is that 6,000+ people a day arrive in the high season, almost all of them on the same big boats, almost all in the same three-hour window. Get the timing wrong and you’re elbowing toward a swim spot in water the colour of swimming-pool chemicals. Get it right and you’re floating in something genuinely surreal.
ℹ️ Short answer: The single best-value tour in Malta is the full-day Comino + Gozo + caves boat cruise from Sliema (€35–45) — it covers the Blue Lagoon, the most photographed coastline on the island, and Gozo all in one day. Pair it with a Valletta walking tour (€20–35) for context on the city’s history and you’ve covered 80% of what most people come to Malta for. Below are 11 tours we’d actually book — sorted by who they’re for, with the trade-offs we’d want a friend to flag for us. There’s a tour for every square kilometre of Malta and a tout for every restaurant in Sliema. The trick isn’t finding tours — it’s finding the right one for the trip you’re actually trying to have. A first-timer with three days needs different tours than a returning diver, a family with two kids, or a couple celebrating an anniversary.
ℹ️ Short answer: Malta is a genuinely great family destination — short flights from Europe, English everywhere, safe, walkable, with beaches, forts, boat trips and a working Popeye Village that toddlers cannot get over. The trick with kids: stay in Mellieħa or Buġibba (not Sliema/Paceville), slow the pace to one big thing per day, and accept that any day with limestone-step sightseeing for under-7s ends in tears. This 5-day itinerary works for kids roughly 4–11; we flag what to swap for younger and older. Family travel in Malta is easier than family travel in most of southern Europe. Distances are tiny, English is universal, the medical system is European-standard, and almost every restaurant has half-portions and a high-chair without making a face about it. The catch: most Malta itineraries online are written for couples, with day plans that work fine for two adults and quietly demolish a 5-year-old by 14:00.
ℹ️ Short answer: Malta in winter (Nov–Mar) is mild (12–18°C daytime), half-empty, and 40–60% cheaper than summer. The sea is too cold for comfortable swimming, some Gozo restaurants close for the season, and Comino boat tours scale back hard. What works brilliantly: Valletta and Mdina at their atmospheric best, hiking the Dingli–Buskett–Gozo coast, food (rabbit-stew season), and museum-and-cathedral days without queues. This 4-day itinerary covers Valletta, Three Cities, Mdina/Rabat and a Gozo day-trip, all without a swimsuit or a sweat. Most travel writing about Malta is summer writing. Beach writing. Sun writing. Which is fine — Malta in July is genuinely great if you’ve made peace with crowds and 35°C heat. But Malta has a quieter trick: from mid-November to mid-March the islands turn into the warmest, cheapest, most walkable corner of Europe with restaurants you can actually get a table at and a Mdina bastion-wall view that’s all yours.
ℹ️ Short answer: With one day in Malta, do Valletta and only Valletta. From a cruise port at the Valletta Waterfront you’re already there; from the airport it’s a 30-minute taxi or 45-minute bus. Spend 6–9 hours on a walking tour of Valletta + St John’s Co-Cathedral + Upper Barrakka + a Three Cities hop. Don’t try to add Mdina or Comino — the bus times will eat your day. Budget €80–130 per person for the full day including one paid tour and lunch. A whole day in Malta is enough to make you want to come back. It is not enough to “see the island.” If you’ve got 6–9 hours — a long layover, a cruise stop, or a same-day arrival-and-onward connection — the only sensible play is to pick one place and go deep, and the obvious choice is Valletta. It’s UNESCO-listed, walkable end-to-end in 25 minutes, packed with the best bits of Maltese history (Knights of St John, the Great Siege, WWII, the Caravaggio), and it’s where the cruise ships dock anyway.
ℹ️ Short answer: Seven days is the sweet spot for Malta. Spend 4 nights based in Sliema or Valletta (Valletta + Three Cities + Mdina + a south-coast or Marsaxlokk day), then 3 nights in Gozo with Comino slotted in on the return ferry day. You don’t need a car if you base in Sliema and hire one only for Days 4–7. Total budget for a couple, mid-range: €1,400–2,000 all-in excluding flights. A week in Malta is enough to see almost everything that matters — but only if you don’t try to do everything every day. Malta is small (316 km²) but the bus rides are slow, the heat in summer is real, and ten minutes more at lunch in a Marsaxlokk waterfront restaurant beats a third museum every single time. This is the itinerary we’d give a first-timer who has 7 nights, wants the highlights without the death-march pacing, and would rather come home rested than ticked-off-a-list.