“253 metres above the Mediterranean. Free entry. No crowds. The viewpoint that outclasses everything else on the island.”
The Dingli Cliffs are limestone escarpments on Malta's western coast, rising to 253 metres above sea level. They stretch for several kilometres and offer an unobstructed panorama across the Mediterranean, with nothing between you and the horizon.
No entrance fee. No visitor centre. No car park charging €5 per hour. Just cliffs, wind, and one of the finest sunsets in the Mediterranean.
Golden hour before sunset is the non-negotiable answer. In summer, sunset falls around 8:00–8:30pm; in autumn around 6:00–6:30pm.
Arrive 90 minutes to 2 hours before sunset. That gives you time to walk along the cliff edge (roughly 2km each way) and settle somewhere before the light show begins.
On a clear evening with a warm breeze off the sea, watching the sun drop into the Mediterranean from these cliffs is a moment you'll find yourself describing for years.
Bus: Route 201 from Valletta to Dingli village (about 35–40 minutes, around €1.50). From the bus stop, it's a 10-minute walk toward "il-Bastjun" (the Bastion) to reach the cliff edge.
Car: 20 minutes from Valletta, free parking at the cliffs (sparse in summer evenings — arrive early).
Bolt: About €12–15 from Valletta. Convenient for evening trips where the last bus might be inconvenient.
The only restaurant right at the cliffs is Bobbyland Restaurant — Maltese home cooking with a sea view. Open mainly evenings and weekends. Local prices, no tourist markup. Their rabbit stew and octopus are reliably good.
Alternative: pick up food from a local supermarket or deli and picnic on the cliffside grass. Also a Maltese tradition.
Clapham Junction Cart Ruts — 10 minutes by car. Mysterious prehistoric grooves cut into limestone bedrock, created by ancient sledge vehicles. Free to visit, genuinely puzzling.
Verdala Palace — 5 minutes by car. The President of Malta's summer residence, surrounded by the island's only natural woodland. Closed to visitors on regular days but visible from the road.
Rabat and Mdina — 15 minutes by car. Makes for an excellent half-day combination.
Continue in Malta
Malta Tour
When order, transport and pace matter, go straight to the team that plans this in practice.
Routes and ready-made days
See how to connect this article with the rest of the day without jumping between random pins.
Klify Dingli
Dzień 2 - Mdina, Rabat i Dingli
Planning Malta without guesswork?
Browse stays, routes, activities, and practical answers in one place.
Mdina Gate: the best way to enter the Silent City
Why Mdina should not be rushed and how to place it in the day.
Għar Dalam: the cave that shows Malta before the temples
A small stop with a long story, ideal on a South Malta route.
Inquisitor's Palace in Birgu: the darker side of the Three Cities
A short but powerful stop for travellers who want Birgu to be more than a marina walk.
North Malta and Comino: Blue Lagoon without wasting the day
A route with Comino, Red Tower, beaches and a land-based backup when wind, boats or access rules change the plan.