Birkirkara vs San Lawrenz

Side-by-side comparison of property prices, lifestyle, and practical info to help you choose the right area.

Summary

Birkirkara is better for families and budget buyers seeking central convenience, while San Lawrenz suits nature lovers, retirees, and tourists wanting remote coastal tranquillity. Birkirkara, Malta's largest town with 24,300 residents, sits at the island's centre with excellent transport links rated 9/10. Regular buses reach Valletta in 20–25 minutes, Sliema in 15 minutes, and the airport in 20 minutes. Property prices are significantly lower than coastal areas, with more square metreage per euro. Families benefit from nearby schools including St. Aloysius College and a family rating of 8/10. San Lawrenz is a tiny Gozitan village of just 700 people on a remote western plateau beside Dwejra Bay. Transport scores just 2/10 and a car is essential — Victoria is 25+ minutes away, the Mgarr ferry 25 minutes by car, and the airport over 90 minutes including the ferry crossing. The trade-off is dramatic coastal scenery, world-class diving at the Blue Hole, 9/10 beach access, exceptional safety (9/10), and minimal light pollution. Foreign buyers can purchase at the Kempinski Residences without an AIP permit.
Birkirkara

Bustling residential heartland

VS
San Lawrenz

Remote plateau village beside dramatic coastal landmarks

€1594
Avg. Rent
€3000
18
Listings
1
2.3
Avg. Bedrooms
1
Good within the town centre. Hilly in parts. Daily needs are walkable but most residents use cars for commuting.
Walkability
Limited. Dwejra is a 20-minute walk. Victoria is 30+ minutes on foot. Car essential for daily life.
Moderate. Easier than coastal towns. Street parking available in most residential areas.
Parking
Excellent. No parking issues. Plenty of space around the village square.
Moderate. Typical residential town noise. Quiet in older residential streets. Busier along main arterial roads.
Noise Level
Extremely low. One of the quietest inhabited places in the Maltese islands.

Living in Birkirkara

Birkirkara is Malta's largest town by population — a sprawling residential centre in the heart of the island that most tourists never visit but most Maltese have a connection to. It's not picturesque in the way Valletta or Mdina are, but it's real, working-class Malta: bakeries that have been open for generations, parish churches that anchor entire neighbourhoods, and streets where everyone knows everyone. The town's geography is varied. The old centre clusters around the imposing St. Helen's Basilica, one of the largest churches on the island. Ta' Paris and Swatar are more modern residential areas with apartment blocks popular with young professionals. The Imrieher industrial zone sits on the edge, a reminder that Birkirkara has always been a working town. The Valley Road area, running through a natural watercourse, is one of the few green corridors in central Malta. Property in Birkirkara offers the best value proposition in central Malta. Rents and purchase prices sit well below Sliema and St. Julian's while keeping you within 15 minutes of both by car or bus. The town has its own commercial strip, good schools, and a market that sells everything from fresh fish to furniture. It's not a lifestyle choice — it's a practical one, and that's why it's the island's most populated town.

Highlights

  • Most populated town in Malta
  • Significantly more affordable than coastal areas
  • St. Helen's Basilica — one of Malta's largest churches
  • Central location with 15-min access to most of the island
  • Traditional Maltese town life with modern amenities

Living in San Lawrenz

San Lawrenz is a tiny, tranquil village perched on Gozo's western plateau — the quietest corner of an already quiet island. With a population of under 800, it is one of the smallest localities in the Maltese archipelago, yet it sits beside some of Gozo's most dramatic natural landmarks. The village is the gateway to Dwejra Bay, home to the site where the Azure Window stood before its collapse in 2017, alongside the Inland Sea, Fungus Rock, and the Blue Hole — one of the Mediterranean's top diving sites. The village itself is a cluster of traditional limestone houses around a small church square. There are no hotels, no tourist shops, and virtually no commercial activity in the village core. Life here moves at the pace of farming, church bells, and the sea breeze off the western cliffs. The surrounding countryside is open and rugged, with panoramic views toward the sea and the dramatic coastal cliffs that define Gozo's western shore. San Lawrenz also hosts the Kempinski Hotel and its associated residences — one of Gozo's few SDA-designated developments. This creates an unusual contrast: one of Malta's most exclusive luxury addresses sitting alongside one of its most rural, traditional communities. Property in the village consists almost entirely of converted farmhouses and traditional houses, many with views toward the sea or across the open plateau.

Highlights

  • Dwejra Bay — the Azure Window site, Inland Sea, and Blue Hole diving site
  • Kempinski Residences — Gozo's most prestigious SDA luxury address
  • One of the smallest and quietest villages in Malta
  • Panoramic views of western Gozo's dramatic cliff coastline
  • Fungus Rock — a protected islet once guarded by the Knights for its medicinal plant

Lifestyle Comparison

6/10
dining
3/10
8/10
family
6/10
7/10
safety
9/10
1/10
beaches
9/10
3/10
nightlife
1/10
9/10
transport
2/10

Which Area Is Right For You?

Choose Birkirkara

families budget buyers

Birkirkara comes out ahead in dining, family, nightlife, transport .

Choose San Lawrenz

nature lovers tourists retirees

San Lawrenz comes out ahead in safety, beaches .

Frequently Asked Questions

Birkirkara is the stronger pick for dining, family, nightlife, transport. San Lawrenz stands out for safety, beaches. Birkirkara is popular with families and budget buyers. San Lawrenz is popular with nature lovers and tourists and retirees.
Birkirkara has a lower average rent at €1594/month compared to San Lawrenz's €3000 — a difference of around €1406.
Birkirkara and San Lawrenz are around 30 km apart — roughly a 75-minute drive depending on traffic.