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MALTATODAY 26 NOVEMBER 2025

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9 maltatoday | WEDNESDAY • 26 NOVEMBER 2025 OPINION FOR decades, Malta's tourism strategy has largely been shaped around one central metric—vol- ume. More arrivals, more nights stayed, more rooms built, more beds added. It was a model that made sense in its time. Tourism became a reliable engine of employment and foreign exchange, and investment flowed into con- struction, accommodation and services. But as every system matures, the trade-offs become harder to ignore. The environ- mental footprint grows, in- frastructure strains, housing pressures intensify, and com- munities begin to feel the im- balance between local life and visitor presence. In recent months, there has been growing recognition that the next chapter of Malta's tourism economy must be dif- ferent. Not smaller, but smart- er. Not less dynamic, but more discerning. The ultimate ob- jective is not to attract more tourists but to attract better matches between visitor expec- tations, local identity, and the carrying capacity of our towns, landscapes and social fabric. In other words, a shift from vol- ume to value. The draft legal notice tabled last week must be understood within this context. It signals an important change in direction: From unconstrained expansion to intentional management. By removing the allowance that previously enabled hotels to surpass local plan height limits, the message is clear. Malta can- not continue to chase growth by building higher and building more. The future of tourism depends on protecting the very qualities that make Malta ap- pealing in the first place. The new limits on rooms and beds reinforce this principle. Capping hotels at 200 rooms, guesthouses at 20 rooms or 40 beds, hostels at 40 beds, and short-term rentals at six occupants per unit is not an attempt to shrink the sector. It is an attempt to rebalance it. Quality tourism relies on a sense of place, cultural integ- rity, and the ability of commu- nities to absorb visitor flows without displacement. When accommodation supply grows without regard to urban scale or community cohesion, the consequences show up rapid- ly—overcrowding, rising rents, and a loss of identity. The cooling-off period be- tween long-let leases and short-let licences directly ad- dresses one of the most press- ing social concerns today. The rapid conversion of residen- tial properties into tourist ac- commodation has tightened the long-term rental market and accelerated housing unaffordabili- ty for young people and workers. By requiring a three-month buffer, the legislation inserts friction into a process that had become too fluid, too transactional. It re- stores the idea that housing is first a social good, not merely an asset to be optimised. Mandatory signage and clear responsibility for management of short-let properties might sound like administrative de- tails, but they speak to some- thing deeper—accountability. The anonymity of "ghost hosts" has been a key source of tension between residents and visitors. When there is no one to call, no one to engage with, and no one responsible, conflict fills the vacuum. By making short- let accommodation visible and traceable, the system affirms that tourism and communi- ty life are not opposing forces but require mutual respect and shared norms. The pilot approach in Swieqi and Valletta is also important. Tourism management must be adaptive. There is no single na- tional formula that can be im- posed uniformly. The needs of coastal villages, historic cores, entertainment districts and residential towns differ. Pilots allow learning, refinement and scaling of what works. This is how resilient systems evolve: through iteration, not imposi- tion. But while the regulatory shift is welcome, it is only part of the story. A move from vol- ume to value also requires a reorientation of Malta's tour- ism proposition. The recent decision to redirect sponsor- ship spending from mass par- ties and festival-driven tour- ism towards culture, heritage, arts and experiential travel is aligned with this path. So too is the planning of long-distance flight connectivity, including strategic routes such as New York, which expand reach to higher-value markets rather than concentrating demand in peak-season European flows. Value-driven tourism means crafting experiences rooted in Malta's identity. Its layered history, its maritime world, its creative communities, its landscapes and villages, and its Mediterranean way of life. It means developing products that are seasonal-resilient, en- vironmentally light, and cultur- ally enriching. It means seeing tourism not as an extractive industry but as a cultural ex- change. The shift underway is there- fore more than regulatory. It is philosophical. It asks: What kind of tourism economy do we want to be known for? Fast turnover of beds and beverag- es, or meaningful encounters and sustained prosperity? This transition will not be easy. It requires coordination across planning, transport, housing, environment, culture and economic policy. It re- quires the courage to prioritise long-term value over short- term volume. And it requires trust—trust that Malta's appeal lies not in expansion, but in the authenticity we choose to pre- serve. The new legal notice is not the final word. It is the first step in a much-needed recali- bration. If sustained, refined and supported, it will help Mal- ta move from growth that con- sumes to growth that sustains. From tourism that pressures to tourism that enriches. From volume to value. A new chapter for Malta's tourism model JP Fabri Economist The pilot approach in Swieqi and Valletta is also important. Tourism management must be adaptive. There is no single national formula that can be imposed uniformly

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