5 Best Sights in Malta

Background Illustration for Sights

We've compiled the best of the best in Malta - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Casa Bernard

What began life as a medieval watchtower grew into a grand palazzo by the mid-16th century, and developed a few baroque flourishes as the centuries went by. These days a personal guided tour by the owners reveals how the Maltese nobles used to live, in what is still a family home, lovingly restored by owners Josette and Georges Magri.
46 St.Paul's St., Mdina, Malta
21-451–888
Sight Details
Closed Sun.

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Casa Rocca Piccola

One of the last of Malta's patrician houses still to be occupied is the first to be opened up to visitors. The ninth Marquis de Piro and his family can trace their lineage back to when the Knights of the Order of St. John fled Rhodes for Malta in 1530, and you can see the family history laid out in their home's decor. The exquisite 16th-century house displays generations' worth of what the family calls "aristocratic bric-a-brac," including stools given to them for attending the wedding of Queen Elizabeth II; a beautiful, 18th-century, portable, Baroque chapel used for baptisms; and works by the artist Giuseppi Cali, the Marquis's great-grandfather and painter of the Rotunda at Mosta. Each charts the history of the family, the house, or Valletta itself, while beneath the house lies the remains of a vast World War II bunker, one of around 30 built across the city as the bombs started falling. It was dug from the quarry in which the stone for the house was cut some four centuries earlier. If you pay extra, you can get a personal guided tour by a family member, who can share some rather unique tales of Maltese history.

Casa Rocca Piccola recently added B&B stays to its repertoire, with five rooms set aside for guests (doubles from €160), offering a taste of aristocratic life. Breakfast is taken in the exquisite courtyard, complete with the family parrot for company.

74 Republic St., Valletta, VLT 1117, Malta
21-221--499
Sight Details
€9; €200 per group for a personalized guided tour by the family
Guided tours Mon.– Sat. 10:00–5:00
Closed Sun.

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Gran Castello Historic House

This intriguing museum was formerly known as the Folklore Museum and occupies three 16th-century houses, featuring displays relating to the traditional crafts and rural lifestyle of the island.

Your ticket also includes admission to The Archaeology Museum, The Old Prison, and The Natural Science Museum.

Triq Melite Bernado de Opeo, Victoria, VCT 1860, Malta
21-562--034
Sight Details
€5

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Palazzo Falson

Mdina's medieval Patrician stone mansion dates from between the 13th and 15th centuries and reveals a wealth of original architectural features. The mansion's rooms display more than 45 collections of silver, furniture, jewelry, armour, paintings, and more, including art works by Anthony Van Dyck, Nicolas Poussin, and Mattia Preti. There is a free audio guide.

Villegaignon St., Mdina, MDN 1191, Malta
2145–4512
Sight Details
€10
Closed Mon.

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Palazzo Parisio

This sprawling palazzo aspires to be a kind of mini Palace of Versailles, with its mirrored ballroom and Italian-style garden. Indeed, taking tea in its walled courtyard feels like the height of civilization as the church bells peal in the distance. The site is run by Christiane Ramsay Scicluna, descendent of the Marquis Guiseppe Scicluna, who set about transforming this building with neoclassical zeal into a grand winter palace when he bought it in 1898. It feels totally out of place in the quiet little town of Naxxar, yet all the more fascinating for it.
29 Victory Sq., Mosta, Malta
21-412–461
Sight Details
€15 (house and gardens), €5 (gardens only)

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