Ładowanie…
Ładowanie…
From pastizzi on the street to a serious dinner — an honest culinary guide to Malta's capital
Valletta is tiny — about 700 metres long and 300 metres wide. But in that small space you'll find restaurants for every budget and occasion, from €0.50 street pastizzi to elaborate multi-course dinners overlooking the Grand Harbour. Here's where to eat and — just as importantly — where to avoid.
Republic Street is the main tourist drag. Restaurants on it exist to serve visitors who won't come back. Prices are higher, quality is average. Turn into the side streets — Merchants Street, Old Bakery Street, St Ursula Street — that's where the real Valletta eats.
Nenu the Artisan Baker (St Dominic Street) The most authentic Maltese food experience in Valletta. Traditional dishes served in a basement decorated with antique Malta. Ftira (local bread) stuffed with tuna, goat or vegetables, mqarrun il-forn (baked pasta Maltese style), kawlata soup with bacon. Prices: €8–14 per dish. Book online — queues form.
Is-Suq tal-Belt (Market Street) Revamped historic market building with a dozen food stalls: seafood, grilled meats, gelato, local wine. A brilliant quick lunch spot with quality. Prices: €10–18.
Caffe Cordina (Republic Square) Historic café since 1837. Tourist, yes — but worth one visit for coffee and cake in the ornate interior. Ice cream is excellent.
Rubino (Merchants Street) One of Valletta's oldest restaurants, same family for generations. Genuinely Maltese: rabbit, octopus, traditional desserts. Reservation essential. Prices: €20–35 per person.
Palazzo Preca (Strait Street) Elegance in a 16th-century palazzo. Contemporary Maltese cuisine — one of the best dinner experiences in the city. Prices: €30–50 per person.
Guze Bistro (Old Bakery Street) Local favourite. Daily menu depends on market — fish, meat, seasonal vegetables. Simple, delicious, honestly priced (€15–22).
Trabuxu Bistro (South Street) Wine bar with food. Good Maltese wine, cheeses, charcuterie, small plates. Ideal for an evening of wine instead of a full dinner.
Pastizzi — try one at every bakery you pass. The best are at small ħobżiżas on Merchants Street and Old Bakery Street. Price: €0.30–0.50 each. Traditional: flaky pastry with ricotta (irkotta) or pea filling (piżelli).
Ftira sandwich — Maltese bread with tuna, olives, capers, tomatoes. Buy from bakeries, not tourist cafés.
Caffè Cordina — historical, for at least one coffee Tico Tico — cocktail bar overlooking the Grand Harbour Trabuxu — best selection of Maltese wines in the centre
Reserve popular places (Nenu, Rubino, Palazzo Preca) in advance — especially April–October. Valletta is small, tables are limited, and visitors fill them fast.
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Every article is built from real tourist discussions and enriched with tips from Monika and the community.