Valletta vs Birgu
Side-by-side comparison of property prices, lifestyle, and practical info to help you choose the right area.
Living in Valletta
Valletta is a living museum — a UNESCO World Heritage city built by the Knights of St. John in the 16th century, designed on a grid plan so ahead of its time that it's still functional 450 years later. Every street reveals something remarkable: baroque churches with Caravaggio paintings inside, grand auberges that housed the knightly orders, and rooftop terraces with views across two harbours that have shaped Mediterranean history. As Malta's capital and administrative centre, Valletta punches well above its size. It packs government buildings, foreign embassies, boutique hotels, and a thriving restaurant scene into less than a square kilometre. The city went through a renaissance after its 2018 European Capital of Culture year — old buildings were restored, pedestrian zones expanded, and a creative community took root alongside the traditional Maltese families who've lived here for generations. Living in Valletta is a specific choice. Properties are predominantly historic townhouses and converted palazzos, often with original stone floors and enclosed wooden balconies. Space is at a premium, parking is almost nonexistent, and grocery shopping means visiting small shops rather than supermarkets. But residents gain something rare — a walkable city where the sea is always two streets away, where culture is on the doorstep, and where the evening paseggiata along the bastions at golden hour never gets old.
Highlights
- UNESCO World Heritage Site — entire city
- St. John's Co-Cathedral with Caravaggio's Beheading of St. John
- Barrakka Gardens with panoramic Grand Harbour views
- Grid-plan streets designed in 1566, still functional today
- 2018 European Capital of Culture
Living in Birgu
Birgu — also known as Vittoriosa — is the oldest of Malta's Three Cities and arguably the most historically significant town on the island. Long before Valletta existed, Birgu was the base of the Knights of St. John when they arrived in 1530. Fort St. Angelo, the fortress at the tip of the peninsula, commanded the Grand Harbour and became the Knights' headquarters during the Great Siege of 1565, when the Ottoman Empire threw everything it had at Malta and failed. The town's narrow streets are a living archive of Maltese history. Auberges built for the Langues of the Knights, restored palazzos with painted ceilings, and centuries-old churches sit alongside traditional Maltese houses with their characteristic enclosed wooden balconies. The waterfront has been beautifully restored into a marina and promenade — the Couvre Porte gate marks the entrance to the old Collacchio, the original knights' quarter. Birgu is experiencing a quiet renaissance. Heritage-minded buyers are restoring old properties, a handful of excellent restaurants have opened along the marina, and the European Maritime Day put the town on the map in 2024. Property is still affordable relative to its architectural quality — you can buy a 400-year-old townhouse here for less than a modern apartment in Sliema. The trade-off is distance from the commercial north and limited parking in the historic core.
Highlights
- Fort St. Angelo — HQ of the Knights during the Great Siege of 1565
- Restored marina and waterfront promenade
- Heritage properties at a fraction of Sliema prices
- Malta Maritime Museum and Inquisitor's Palace
- Authentic quiet streets with Grand Harbour views