Is Malta Good for Cycling?
The honest answer: it depends on when and where.
In July and August — narrow roads, intense heat (35°C+), no shade, heavy traffic near resort areas. Not recommended unless you're an experienced cyclist comfortable in challenging conditions.
April–June and September–November — genuinely enjoyable. Mild temperatures, lighter traffic, coastal and rural roads that reward a cyclist.
Gozo is markedly better for cycling than Malta — quieter roads, more compact geography, and some genuinely beautiful countryside.
Where to Rent
Malta:
- Mike's Bike Tours & Rentals (Sliema) — popular, good selection of city and trekking bikes
- Cycle Malta (near Valletta) — guided tours available as well as self-guided rentals
- Price: around €15–20/day for a trekking or mountain bike
Gozo:
- Gozo Adventures (Victoria/Rabat) — electric bikes and conventional bikes
- E-bike Gozo — widely recommended by independent travellers, good e-bike fleet
- Price Gozo: around €20–25/day for an e-bike (recommended given Gozo's hills)
Best Routes
Gozo: Victoria Circuit via Dwejra (30km)
Victoria (Rabat) → Gargur → Gharb → Dwejra (Azure Window site) → San Lawrenz → Kerċem → back to Victoria. Quiet roads, sea views, one proper climb. This is the best cycling day trip available in the Maltese islands.
Malta: Sliema to Marsaxlokk via the Coast (25km)
Follow the coast south from Sliema through St Julian's, Paceville, St George's Bay and down toward Marsaxlokk. Part of the route has a dedicated cycling path. End point: fresh seafood by the harbour.
Malta: Dingli Cliffs Loop (20km)
Rabat → Dingli → Cliffs → Clapham Junction → back to Rabat. Some elevation but the cliff views make it worthwhile.
Road Safety Notes
- Left-hand traffic — remember this at roundabouts and junctions
- Rural roads are often very narrow with no shoulder — stay as far right as possible
- Helmet is technically not required for adults but strongly recommended
- Sun protection is essential even in October
- Carry at least 2 litres of water per 2 hours of riding