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Off-Season

Malta in Winter: A 4-Day Off-Season Itinerary

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.