Santa Lucija vs Luqa

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

Santa Lucija

Quiet residential suburb with garden

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Luqa

Airport town with aviation heritage

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Good. Small locality. Connected to Paola and Tarxien on foot.
Walkability
Moderate. Town centre walkable. Airport is walkable but not pleasant — no proper pedestrian route.
Good. Residential streets have adequate parking.
Parking
Good. Residential streets have adequate parking. Airport parking is separate.
Low. Quiet residential area.
Noise Level
High. Aircraft noise is constant. The defining feature of living in Luqa.

Living in Santa Lucija

Santa Lucija is a small residential locality on the southern edge of the Paola-Tarxien urban area — a quiet suburb that developed in the mid-20th century as housing spread southward from the harbour towns. Named after its parish church dedicated to St. Lucy, it's one of Malta's smaller localities with a predominantly residential character. The village has a well-maintained central garden — one of the nicest small green spaces in southern Malta — and a compact residential area of townhouses and apartment blocks. The Chinese Garden of Serenity, a surprisingly authentic Chinese-style garden, was built here as a gift from a foreign government and has become an unexpected local landmark. Property in Santa Lucija is affordable and practical. The location provides easy access to Paola's commercial area, the Three Cities, and the airport. It's a quiet, family-oriented neighbourhood without tourist pretensions.

Highlights

  • Chinese Garden of Serenity — unexpected landmark
  • Well-maintained central green space
  • Easy access to Paola and the Three Cities
  • Affordable family-oriented housing
  • Close to the airport

Living in Luqa

Luqa is a small town in Malta's south that's best known as the home of Malta International Airport — the island's only civil airport sits on what was once Luqa's farmland. The town's identity is inseparable from aviation: during WWII, RAF Luqa was a critical Allied airbase, and the airfield was bombed more heavily than any other target in Malta. The town centre, a short distance from the airport perimeter, is a traditional Maltese village with a parish church dedicated to St. Andrew. The church has an unusually ornate interior, with marblework and gilding that reflects Luqa's relative prosperity from airport employment over the decades. The surrounding streets mix traditional houses with more utilitarian post-war development. Property in Luqa is affordable and practical. The airport proximity is both its defining feature and its main drawback — convenient for travel but noisy. Prices are among the lowest in the urbanised part of Malta, making Luqa a practical choice for airport workers and budget-conscious buyers who value quick access to the terminal.

Highlights

  • Home to Malta International Airport
  • WWII airfield — one of the most bombed sites in the war
  • Most affordable property near the airport
  • Parish church with unusually ornate interior
  • Quick access to the airport terminal