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Single Permit for Thai Nationals in Malta (2026)

How Thai nationals apply for Malta's Single Permit in 2026: visa requirements, employer steps, pre-departure course, and what's different for workers from Thailand.

Official SourceLast updated 10 June 2026

Every third-country national needs a Single Permit — Malta's combined work and residence authorisation — before starting a job. For Thai nationals, the process follows the same Identità Malta framework as everyone else, but a few details (visa entry rules, common sectors, and consular logistics) differ depending on where you're applying from.

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What's different for applicants

Thai nationals need a Schengen Type D (national) visa to enter Malta for employment, in addition to the Single Permit itself. The visa lets you travel to Malta; the Single Permit is what authorises you to work and reside once your employer's application is approved. Apply for the visa only after your employer has started the Single Permit process — applying too early can cause timing mismatches.

Where workers are employed in Malta

Small community, mainly in tourism areas. Most Thai Single Permit holders work in Hospitality, Wellness & Spa, Food Services. If your role falls under hospitality or tourism, you'll also need the Skills Pass alongside your Single Permit and pre-departure course.

Next steps

Your employer files the Single Permit application with Identità Malta — you cannot apply on your own behalf. The full Single Permit guide below covers the complete process: documents, fees, the mandatory pre-departure course (since 1 March 2026), and renewal timing for Thai workers and everyone else.

Read the full Single Permit guide

This page is a Thai-specific summary. The full guide covers every step, fee, and document in detail.

Read the full Single Permit guide

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do Thai nationals need a visa for the Single Permit process?

Yes. Thai nationals need a Schengen Type D (national) visa to travel to Malta for work, in addition to the Single Permit, which is your employer-sponsored work and residence authorisation.

What sectors commonly hire Thai workers under the Single Permit?

Hospitality, Wellness & Spa, Food Services, Retail are the sectors where Thai nationals are most commonly employed in Malta. Small community, mainly in tourism areas.

Can Thai Single Permit holders change employer in Malta?

Yes, but it requires a formal change-of-employer process — your new employer submits a new application to Identità Malta, and you cannot start the new job until it's approved. See the change-employer guide for the full process and risks.

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MaltaPathway is not a law firm, immigration consultancy, or government agency. The information on this page is based on publicly available official sources and is provided for informational purposes only. Immigration rules change — always verify with the relevant authority before making decisions. If your case is complex, consult a licensed immigration lawyer.