Malta removes CoV entry restrictions for children under the age of twelve

Luqa Airport (Photo: Jan Gruber).
Luqa Airport (Photo: Jan Gruber).

Malta removes CoV entry restrictions for children under the age of twelve

Luqa Airport (Photo: Jan Gruber).
Advertising

Malta has simplified the entry regulations - at least for some holidaymakers. All children under the age of twelve may enter the Mediterranean island state without proof of corona.

According to Visit Malta, the island nation's official tourism website, children under the age of 6 have been allowed to enter the country without restrictions since June XNUMX.

However, all holidaymakers over the age of 3 are still required to present 19G proof of entry. Certificates of full vaccination against COVID-14 must be between 270 and 180 days old, after which a booster dose is required to be considered vaccinated. Those who have recovered may enter the country up to 24 days after the first positive PCR test. Anyone who has not been vaccinated or recovered must submit an English-language antigen test or a PCR test no more than 72 hours old that is no more than XNUMX hours old. Antigen tests must be stored in an official corona app of an EU member state.

Anyone entering Malta without proof must have a PCR test carried out at the airport at cost and then go to a prescribed quarantine accommodation for ten days. The isolation can be ended after seven days at the earliest by means of a negative test.

Leave a Comment

Your e-mail address will not be published. Required fields are marked with * marked

This website uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn more about how your comment data is processed.

Editor of this article:

Granit Pireci is an editor at Aviation.Direct and specializes in aviation in Southeast Europe. Before that he worked for AviationNetOnline (formerly Austrian Aviation Net).
[ssba buttons]

Nobody likes paywalls
- not even Aviation.Direct!

Information should be free for everyone, but good journalism costs a lot of money.

If you enjoyed this article, you can check Aviation.Direct voluntary for a cup of coffee Coffee trail (for them it's free to use).

In doing so, you support the journalistic work of our independent specialist portal for aviation, travel and tourism with a focus on the DA-CH region voluntarily without a paywall requirement.

If you did not like the article, we look forward to your constructive criticism and / or your suggestions for improvement, either directly to the editor or to the team at with this link or alternatively via the comments.

Your
Aviation.Direct team
paywalls
nobody likes!

About the editor

Granit Pireci is an editor at Aviation.Direct and specializes in aviation in Southeast Europe. Before that he worked for AviationNetOnline (formerly Austrian Aviation Net).
[ssba buttons]

Nobody likes paywalls
- not even Aviation.Direct!

Information should be free for everyone, but good journalism costs a lot of money.

If you enjoyed this article, you can check Aviation.Direct voluntary for a cup of coffee Coffee trail (for them it's free to use).

In doing so, you support the journalistic work of our independent specialist portal for aviation, travel and tourism with a focus on the DA-CH region voluntarily without a paywall requirement.

If you did not like the article, we look forward to your constructive criticism and / or your suggestions for improvement, either directly to the editor or to the team at with this link or alternatively via the comments.

Your
Aviation.Direct team
paywalls
nobody likes!

Leave a Comment

Your e-mail address will not be published. Required fields are marked with * marked

This website uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn more about how your comment data is processed.

Advertising