Legal Notice 86 of 2026 introduces a targeted amendment to Malta’s VAT Act, narrowing the gambling exemption to only low‑risk games, occasional junket events, and on‑site betting facilities from 1 October 2026. Exempt supplies will no longer allow input VAT recovery, and all other gambling activities—including remote or online gaming—will become taxable under the place‑of‑supply rules. MTCA Guidelines issued in April 2026 provide implementation guidance.
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Deloitte Malta · 2 months ago
Malta's tax authority has issued new VAT guidelines for gambling and betting, effective 1 October 2026. The guidelines narrow the VAT exemption to low‑risk games, occasional junket events, and in‑venue sports betting, while treating most operators—including sports betting, live casino, and B2B providers—as taxable. Operators must review pricing, accounting, and billing systems to comply with the new regime.
Deloitte Malta · 2 months ago
Malta’s Value Added Tax Act will be amended by amendment 86 of 2026, taking effect on 1 October 2026, to narrow the VAT exemption for gambling and betting services. The changes are expected to improve VAT recovery for B2C operators and certain B2B providers, with detailed guidelines to follow.
MaltaToday · 3 months ago
Malta opposition leader Alex Borg defended his proposal to cut VAT on restaurants and kiosks from 18% to 7%, arguing it would benefit around 3,000 catering businesses. Finance Minister Clyde Caruana opposed the measure, citing a €140 million cost that would match the 2024 tax cut and only benefit a small sector. Borg accused Caruana of branding restaurateurs as thieves.
Zampa Partners · 3 months ago
Zampa Partners is hosting a conference on 25 March to explore how evolving financial services models, such as fintech and embedded finance, challenge traditional VAT positions. The event will feature panels on VAT exemptions, case law, and practical compliance strategies, and is accredited for 3.75 hours of CPE by the Malta Institute of Accountants.
Cumbria Crack · about 16 hours ago
The UK government’s Great British Summer Savings initiative introduces a temporary VAT reduction from 20% to 5% on certain children’s meals and family-focused activities from 25 June to 1 September 2026. Businesses must identify qualifying supplies, review pricing, adjust bundled offers, and update booking and accounting systems to manage mixed VAT treatments and potential advance‑booking adjustments.
VATcube · about 22 hours ago
Latvia will introduce a temporary 12% VAT rate on essential food products from 1 July 2026, while the standard rate remains 21% and a 5% super‑reduced rate applies to specific categories. Businesses must update invoicing, ERP, and VAT return processes before the effective date to avoid compliance issues.
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Key Takeaways
Low‑risk games, occasional junket events approved under the Gaming Authorisations Regulations, and facilities for betting on real‑life sporting events restricted to the physical location of the event.
They will no longer qualify for the exemption and will be treated as taxable supplies subject to the applicable place of supply rules.
The amendment becomes effective on 1 October 2026.
Primary source
Read the full article at RSM MaltaThis summary was published on VATfaqs.com on 10 April 2026. It relates to VAT developments in Malta. The original source is RSM Malta.