Malta is a long-standing UK favourite. Around 600,000 UK visitors arrive each year, drawn to Valletta, Sliema, St Julian's and Gozo, and the historic UK-Malta link means English is an official language. So if you are a UK handler with an owner-trained assistance dog, Malta is a logical candidate for a Mediterranean break.
The catch is that Malta does not have a specific assistance-dog statute. At home, the Equality Act 2010 protects every UK handler, whether the dog was trained by a charity, an independent trainer, or the handler themselves. In Malta, that is not the rule. This guide explains what the Maltese legal picture actually is, what the airlines require, what happens at the door, and how to plan a Malta trip honestly rather than optimistically.
Nothing here is meant to put you off. UK handlers visit Malta successfully every year, and English-speaking hospitality staff make conversations easier than in many other destinations. But the statutory backing you have at home is not waiting for you at Luqa, and that is worth understanding before you book.
Malta has no specific assistance-dog law. The Equal Opportunities (Persons with Disability) Act, Cap. 413 references assistance aids only indirectly and does not set out a concrete public-access right for handlers and their dogs. There is no Maltese guide-dog or assistance-dog training school on the island; all certified dogs in Malta come from foreign schools, and practical recognition depends on that foreign certificate.
Most UK-based airlines flying to Malta, including British Airways, easyJet, Jet2, Ryanair and TUI, restrict in-cabin assistance-dog acceptance to dogs accredited by Assistance Dogs International (ADI) or the International Guide Dog Federation (IGDF). KM Malta Airlines, the successor to Air Malta, accepts assistance dogs via a specific application form and expects ADI or IGDF-type credentials.
The practical consequence is this. A UK owner-trained handler has full legal public-access rights at home under the Equality Act 2010. Those rights do not travel with you to Valletta, and the airline carrying you there may decline your dog in the cabin. Once on the ground, public access depends on a competent-authority-certified harness and, in the public sector, on goodwill. Private-sector compliance is inconsistent.
Malta has no specific assistance-dog statute. There is no dedicated Maltese law that sets out public-access rights for handlers and their dogs in the way the Equality Act 2010 does in the United Kingdom.
What exists is the Equal Opportunities (Persons with Disability) Act (Cap. 413), which provides a general disability-rights framework and references assistance aids only indirectly. Malta is a party to the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and the general anti-discrimination framework covers disability. But none of that translates into a specific, enforceable right to bring an assistance dog into any particular venue.
One important practical feature of the Maltese system is that there is no domestic guide-dog or assistance-dog training school. Every certified assistance dog in Malta is trained abroad, typically at an ADI or IGDF school. Recognition therefore depends on the foreign certificate. A handler arriving with a dog wearing a harness issued by a recognised overseas school, particularly one from a competent authority such as the UK or Ireland, is generally admitted to public-sector buildings and major attractions.
Esplora, the national interactive science centre, and other public attractions admit certified guide and service dogs wearing a competent-authority-certified harness. This is the pattern across the public sector. The private sector, however, is not bound by a clear statutory rule and compliance is inconsistent. A UK owner-trained dog without third-party certification falls outside even this harness-based recognition pattern.
Legal theory and daily reality do not always match, and in Malta the gap is usually in the handler's favour in tourist areas and less so in private-sector venues outside them. Most hotels, cafés and restaurants in Valletta, Sliema and St Julian's will admit a well-behaved dog in a professional harness without much fuss, particularly outdoors. English-speaking staff make the conversation easier than in most of the Mediterranean.
The difficulty appears where it usually does, with gatekeepers. Private-sector supermarkets, some chain retailers, smaller inland restaurants, and some transport operators may refuse. Because there is no clear statute, the response to a refusal is not "I have a legal right under Cap. 413". It is a softer conversation, usually focused on the dog's visible training, the harness, and a professional ID.
At home, a refusal can be challenged through the Equality and Human Rights Commission and the county court under the Equality Act 2010. In Malta, you are relying on goodwill, the venue's reputation, and the possibility of complaining to the Office of the Ombudsman (Uffiċċju tal-Ombudsman) or the National Commission for the Rights of Persons with Disability afterwards. Those routes can produce a useful response weeks later but will not resolve the moment itself.
For UK travellers, Malta is effectively a flight-only destination. There is no realistic surface crossing from the UK, which means the airline gate is unavoidable and it is the hardest single barrier in the trip.
The major UK-based airlines flying the route all restrict in-cabin assistance-dog acceptance to dogs accredited by ADI or IGDF. Examples from current published policy:
On the Maltese side, KM Malta Airlines accepts assistance dogs via a specific assistance-dog application form and expects ADI or IGDF-type credentials. Apply well in advance of travel.
The tension is real. The Equality Act 2010 at home does not gate UK handlers by training provider. The airlines carrying UK handlers out of UK airports do. Whether this is fully compatible with UK equality law in every case has not been comprehensively tested in court, but it is increasingly being raised by handlers and handler organisations. For now, a UK owner-trained handler cannot rely on automatic in-cabin carriage with these airlines and should plan with that limit in mind.
Airline policies cover the flight itself. They are separate from the legal status of your dog once you arrive. The airline gate is the hard stop for Malta. If you pass it, you are then into the Maltese ground picture described above.
Separately from the recognition question, your dog has to meet UK pet-export and EU pet-import rules to enter Malta. Since Brexit, this is done through a Great Britain Animal Health Certificate (AHC) rather than the old EU pet passport.
Malta has a specific tapeworm feature worth naming directly. Malta is Echinococcus-free, and it is one of the small group of destinations (alongside Ireland, Finland and Norway) that benefits from protected tapeworm status when dogs arrive from elsewhere. For a UK dog travelling to Malta, the standard EU rules apply and no tapeworm dose is required for Malta entry itself. However, on re-entry to Great Britain, you will need tapeworm treatment if you have routed back through Ireland, Finland, Malta or Norway (which, if you are coming from Malta, you will be). In practice this means you should get the tapeworm dose administered before your return flight.
You will need:
These veterinary requirements apply regardless of training route. An IGDF-certified guide dog and an owner-trained assistance dog face exactly the same paperwork.
Assume you reach Malta. What should you expect day to day?
Hotels. Maltese hotels are generally accommodating to visible, well-behaved assistance dogs, particularly in the Sliema, St Julian's and Valletta tourist triangle. International chain hotels apply their group assistance-dog policies. Book direct rather than through a third-party site so you can confirm the arrangement in writing before you arrive.
Restaurants and cafés. Outdoor seating is almost always fine. Indoor seating in tourist-area restaurants is usually fine. Smaller family-run restaurants in Mdina, Rabat, Gozo and inland villages may be more unsure and may ask for a visible harness or ID.
Shops and supermarkets. Access is inconsistent. Small shops are often fine. Larger supermarket chains may admit or refuse depending on the manager. Pharmacies are generally accessible.
Public transport. Malta Public Transport buses operate a single island-wide network. Drivers have broad discretion. A harnessed assistance dog is usually admitted, but expect to have the conversation. Taxis (including e-cabs) are generally more flexible, but mention the dog when you book.
Museums, major attractions, Esplora. The main public-sector attractions, including Esplora, will admit assistance dogs wearing a competent-authority-certified harness. Heritage Malta sites generally follow the same pattern. Outdoor sites (Mdina, Hagar Qim, Ghar Dalam) are largely accessible.
Beaches. Dog access to Maltese beaches is regulated by the local council and varies. A number of designated dog beaches exist, particularly outside summer peak. Assistance-dog exemptions are not formally codified. Check with the local council before you travel.
Gozo and Comino. The Gozo Channel ferry is the standard route for the short crossing. Assistance dogs are generally welcome on the ferry. Gozo itself is quieter and often easier for handlers than central Malta.
None of the above is a reason not to go. It is a reason to plan carefully. UK owner-trained handlers have three realistic options.
Some airlines will assess owner-trained assistance dogs on a case-by-case basis, particularly on medium-haul routes. This is not guaranteed and the published airline policies are conservative. If you try this route, contact the airline's special assistance team at least 72 hours before travel, and for KM Malta Airlines in particular submit the assistance-dog application form as early as possible. Provide everything you have in writing (training log, letter from your GP or consultant, video evidence of the dog's task work, photos in professional harness, ADR registration documentation) and be prepared for a conservative reply.
If the airline declines in-cabin carriage, your dog can usually still travel as a pet in the hold. Whether that is acceptable for your dog's role and welfare is a decision only you can make. Some handlers will never put an assistance dog in the hold; others may accept it for a three-hour flight. The answer depends on the dog, the disability, and your own risk tolerance.
Malta is an island in the central Mediterranean. There is no realistic direct surface route from the United Kingdom. In theory, a combination of Eurotunnel, a long drive through France and Italy, and an onward ferry from Sicily (Pozzallo or Catania to Malta with Virtu Ferries) is possible, and that final leg is relatively short. The full journey takes several days and most dogs would find it more stressful than a short direct flight.
If the airline gate is impassable for your specific dog, the honest advice is to consider an alternative destination in Europe where surface crossing is short and direct, rather than force a multi-day route into Malta that is likely to be harder on the dog than the original flight would have been. Mainland Mediterranean Europe (Spain via Brittany Ferries, France, or Italy) offers similar weather with a gentler journey.
If this is your first European trip with your owner-trained dog and you want a softer entry point before committing to a flight and a stay abroad, consider an initial trip to the Netherlands. Dutch law is the most welcoming in the EU for owner-trained handlers, effectively rights-based rather than certificate-based. The Harwich to Hook of Holland overnight ferry with Stena Line is a direct, pet-friendly crossing. A successful Dutch trip will give you a realistic measure of how your dog copes with European travel before you commit to Malta.
Be honest about this. An Assistance Dog Registry card has no legal force in Malta. No UK-issued document does, because Malta relies on its own harness-and-foreign-certificate recognition pattern. That is true of every non-Maltese ID, not just ADR.
What an ADR card can do is change the practical conversation. Maltese venue staff are generally English-speaking, professional, and used to visiting handlers. When they ask "is that an assistance dog?" they are looking for a signal that tells them this is not a random pet. A professional card, a QR-linked online profile that verifies in any browser, a clearly visible vest or harness, and a calm, prepared handler produce a very different outcome from an unbranded dog with no documentation.
That is social standing, not legal standing, and the distinction matters. In Malta your card is a practical tool that reduces refusals at the door. It is not a legal right of access. Handlers who understand that tend to travel more successfully, because they neither overclaim nor underuse what the documentation can actually do.
If a Maltese business refuses to admit you and your dog, the practical hierarchy is:
Malta is not impossible, and in many ways it is easier than other Mediterranean islands. English is an official language, the public sector has a workable harness-and-certificate recognition practice, and the major attractions admit assistance dogs. But it is honest to say Malta has no specific assistance-dog statute, the airlines carrying you there operate a strict ADI or IGDF gate, and private-sector compliance is inconsistent. A UK owner-trained handler should plan carefully and expect to depend on visible certification and calm, prepared conversation rather than statute.
The good news is that your UK rights are intact and undiminished. Travel is a temporary journey out of a legal framework that recognises you, and back into it on return. Once you land back in Bristol or Manchester, the Equality Act 2010 is still there. Your dog is still the same trained assistance dog. Nothing about a difficult moment in Sliema changes that.
Malta is also, because of the English language and the UK-Malta history, one of the easier Mediterranean destinations in which to have the refusal conversation well. If you travel, document what happens, treat venues fairly, and share your experience back with ADR and with the Office of the Ombudsman. Handler evidence matters, and Malta's current silence on this question in statute is exactly the kind of silence that gets filled by documented cases.
Assistance Dog Registry is an independent UK registry for owner-trained and charity-trained assistance dogs. Our cards, QR-linked profiles and handler documentation give you something professional to show when you need to have a conversation at a hotel, a restaurant, or a departure gate.
Over 6,000 UK handlers have already registered.
No. Malta has no specific assistance-dog statute. The Equal Opportunities (Persons with Disability) Act, Cap. 413, references assistance aids only indirectly. Public-sector venues generally admit dogs wearing a competent-authority-certified harness. Private-sector compliance is inconsistent.
Under published policy, no. Both require the dog to be accredited by an ADI or IGDF member organisation. Some airlines will consider owner-trained dogs case-by-case with significant documentation, but this is not guaranteed.
KM Malta Airlines (the successor to Air Malta) accepts assistance dogs via a specific assistance-dog application form and expects ADI or IGDF-type credentials. Apply well in advance of travel.
No, not to enter Malta. Malta is Echinococcus-free. However, because Malta is a protected tapeworm-status destination, your dog will need tapeworm treatment administered 24 to 120 hours before your return arrival at a GB entry point. Arrange this with a Maltese vet before your return flight.
No. No UK-issued document has legal force in Malta. However, a professional ID card, QR-linked profile and visible harness can meaningfully reduce refusals at the door, particularly in the English-speaking tourist hospitality sector.
A microchip, a valid rabies vaccination (minimum 21 days before travel), and a Great Britain Animal Health Certificate issued within 10 days of entry to the EU. These are veterinary rules, separate from the assistance-dog recognition question.
Stay calm, ask for the manager, show your documentation, and if you are still refused, record the incident and report it to the Office of the Ombudsman or the National Commission for the Rights of Persons with Disability. Share it with ADR to contribute to the wider evidence record.
This guide is part of a growing series covering the legal position for UK owner-trained assistance dog handlers in every major European destination.
Each country guide covers the same things: what the law actually says, what the airlines actually require, what happens at the door, how to plan the trip, and how to respond to problems.
About the author: This guide was prepared by the team at Assistance Dog Registry, the UK's most-read independent voluntary registry for assistance dog handlers. Our guides cover owner-trained and charity-trained dogs alike, with a focus on practical, plain-English information UK handlers can actually use.
Disclaimer: This article is provided as general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Maltese law and airline policy change; verify current rules with the airline and the Office of the Ombudsman or the National Commission for the Rights of Persons with Disability before you travel. For legal advice on a particular situation, consult a qualified advocate in Malta.
Last updated: April 2026. This page is reviewed annually.