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Road safety in Malta

Cheryl

Hello everyone,

Navigating roads and experiencing traffic in Malta as an expat can be a learning experience. We invite you to share your insights in order to help other expats and soon-to-be expats stay safe on the road in Malta, whether driving, cycling or just crossing the street.

Are traffic rules strictly respected or enforced in Malta?

Are there any unspoken rules, unexpected habits or regulations that you had to adapt to?

Are the roads safe and well-maintained?

Are there specific times of day, weather conditions, or seasons that make driving more dangerous?

If you have children, do you feel comfortable letting them travel alone on local roads, whether on foot, by bike, or motorbike?

What are your tips or advice to stay safe on the roads in Malta?

Share your insights and experience.

Thank you for your contribution.

Cheryl
º£½ÇÂÒÂ× Team

See also

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superluigis

As a pedestrian , you better watch out while walking on the roads or even in the towns you can be run over by one of these maltese drivers, no kidding

GozoMo

Driving standards here are poor, drive in the middle of the roads, don't signal and double park even outside the police station.  You have to be careful using the crossings as a pedestrian, quite often you are ignored.  We were both

nearly ran over crossing one although the driver was very apologetic.  The roads in Gozo are in a bad state not many nice smooth ones.

Evreham

@GozoMo

Completely agree with you, driving standards are terrible, probably worse over here in Malta than you have in Gozo. The state of the roads do not help, but are not always the blame of accidents.


I think the number of recent fatalities have shocked the population. It is not just careless driving, is is lawless driving. Idiots driving over the alcohol limit, or after taking some other substance, driving without a licence or no insurance. An underage drunk teenager driving a powerful car in the case of Sunday's killing the Nepalese courier. Last month, a 23 year old speeding driver who was six times over the legal limit killed a lady in Valletta, to name just two cases.


As someone who does not hold a driving licence, from a pedestrian's point of view, pavements are not the best either! There are doorsteps blocking pavements, ramps to garages, large flower pots outside houses, forcing you to walk in the street, or building work that has taken over pavements completely. Even when you do the sensible thing and cross at traffic lights, there is no guarentee that drivers will stop. My son was in a very serious accident when a driver in a hurry, decided to "jump the lights" and drive into him when he was walking accross a pedestrian crossing.


The powerful car, drinking and speeding habits have to change. Higher fines, driving bans and prison sentences are needed.

rosedunphy

@Evreham

rosedunphy

I agree with you 100 percent and to top it all talking or texting on the phone and nobody cares.  As far as pedestrian crossing goes it is a joke.  I make sure that the vehicles are completely stopped before I attempt to cross. They all thinks they r so cool. 

GozoMo

@rosedunphy

When we visit family in the UK we still wait at the crossings then realise the cars have already stopped, unlike here