Mgarr vs Xaghra

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

Summary

Mgarr is better for families seeking rural farmhouse living with land, while Xaghra suits culture lovers and tourists wanting beach access and ancient history. Mgarr, in mainland Malta, scores 9/10 for beaches with direct access to Ghajn Tuffieha and Golden Bay, and offers Malta's most affordable farmhouses with land. A car is essential here — the drive to Valletta takes 25+ minutes, and public transport scores just 3/10. The village of 4,100 residents rates 8/10 for safety and family life but only 2/10 for nightlife. Xaghra, perched on a Gozo hilltop above Ramla l-Hamra — Gozo's finest sandy beach, scoring 10/10 — sits beside the 5,500-year-old Ggantija Temples, a UNESCO World Heritage site. Its 4,900 residents enjoy higher transport connectivity (5/10) via bus route 302 to Victoria. However, reaching Valletta takes over 90 minutes including the Gozo ferry crossing, making it impractical for commuters. Property offers good-value traditional townhouses with beach proximity and fewer summer crowds than coastal resorts like Marsalforn.
Mgarr

Agricultural village with oversize church

VS
Xaghra

Ancient hilltop village above Gozo's finest beach

€1500
Avg. Rent
€1600
2
Listings
1
2
Avg. Bedrooms
3
Limited. Village centre walkable. Countryside is walkable but you'll need a car for everything else.
Walkability
Moderate. Village centre is walkable. Beach is a 15-minute walk downhill (longer coming back up). Car helpful.
Excellent. No parking pressure. Ample space.
Parking
Good. Village has adequate parking. Beach car park fills in summer.
Very low. Agricultural quiet. Occasional farm vehicles and church bells.
Noise Level
Very low. Quiet village. Beach gets busy in summer. Temple site has tourist traffic.

Living in Mgarr

Mgarr is a rural village in northwest Malta that serves as the island's agricultural heartland. Surrounded by farmland, vineyards, and olive groves, Mgarr produces more of Malta's home-grown food than anywhere else — strawberries, tomatoes, potatoes, and the grapes that go into Malta's growing wine industry. The annual Strawberry Festival draws thousands of visitors each spring. The village centre is a traditional Maltese square dominated by an enormous parish church that's dramatically oversized for the population — locals reportedly wanted to build the largest church in Malta but ran out of funds before completing the dome. The unfinished dome is a source of village pride rather than embarrassment. The surrounding countryside is scattered with cart ruts, megalithic sites, and the Bingemma valley. Property in Mgarr offers rural Malta at its most affordable. Farmhouses with land are still available, and the village has a genuine agricultural character that's disappeared from most of the island. The trade-off is distance — Mgarr is a 25-minute drive from Valletta with limited public transport.

Highlights

  • Annual Strawberry Festival — Malta's biggest food event
  • Working farms, vineyards, and olive groves
  • Farmhouse properties with land at affordable prices
  • Cart ruts and megalithic sites in the countryside
  • Genuinely rural Malta

Living in Xaghra

Xaghra (pronounced 'shara') is a hilltop village in northern Gozo that sits above two of the island's most remarkable attractions: Ggantija Temples — the oldest freestanding stone structures in the world, built 1,000 years before the Egyptian pyramids — and Ramla l-Hamra, Gozo's sweep of red-gold sand that's widely considered the best beach in the Maltese islands. The village itself is a pleasant, sleepy Gozitan settlement with a large central square, a parish church, and a few cafes. Ggantija — meaning 'giant's tower' — dominates the local identity. Legend holds that the temples were built by a giantess who carried the massive stone blocks on her head while nursing a baby. The reality is arguably more impressive: a society sophisticated enough to carve and position 50-tonne limestone blocks 5,500 years ago. Property in Xaghra offers a rare combination — village living with direct access to Gozo's best beach. Prices are moderate by Gozo standards, and the village has enough year-round residents to maintain basic amenities. It's quiet in winter and busy in summer, with the beach drawing day-trippers from across Malta.

Highlights

  • Ggantija Temples — oldest freestanding structures on Earth
  • Ramla l-Hamra — Gozo's best sandy beach
  • 5,500-year-old history beneath a quiet village
  • Calypso's Cave — legendary home of Homer's nymph
  • Moderate property prices with beach access

Lifestyle Comparison

5/10
dining
6/10
7/10
family
8/10
8/10
safety
9/10
9/10
beaches
10/10
2/10
nightlife
2/10
3/10
transport
5/10

Frequently Asked Questions

Xaghra stands out for dining, family, safety, beaches, transport. Mgarr is popular with nature lovers and families. Xaghra is popular with tourists and culture lovers.
Mgarr has a lower average rent at €1500/month compared to Xaghra's €1600 — a difference of around €100.
Mgarr and Xaghra are around 17 km apart — roughly a 43-minute drive depending on traffic.

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