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    <title>Malta Neighborhoods on Malta Travel Guides</title>
    <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/categories/neighborhoods/</link>
    <description>Recent content in Malta Neighborhoods on Malta Travel Guides</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://maltatravelguides.com/categories/neighborhoods/index.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
    
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      <title>Best Restaurants in Valletta: Local-Loved Picks</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-restaurants-valletta/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 21 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-restaurants-valletta/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; For most first-timers, &lt;strong&gt;Legligin&lt;/strong&gt; for slow Maltese tasting (€35–55pp), &lt;strong&gt;Trabuxu Wine Bar&lt;/strong&gt; for small plates and Maltese wine, and &lt;strong&gt;Nenu the Artisan Baker&lt;/strong&gt; for a proper ftira lunch are the three Valletta restaurants worth booking. &lt;strong&gt;Noni&lt;/strong&gt; and &lt;strong&gt;Caviar &amp;amp; Bull&lt;/strong&gt; are the fine-dining picks (€80–130pp). &lt;strong&gt;Strait Street&lt;/strong&gt; is where most evening eating happens; &lt;strong&gt;Republic Street&lt;/strong&gt; is where the historic cafes live. Skip hotel-restaurant generic Mediterranean — Valletta is small enough that the working restaurants are 5 minutes from anywhere.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Valletta is small. About 1km long and 600m wide, with maybe 80 restaurants and another 50 cafes and bars packed in between. The good news: the best ones are mostly local, mostly affordable, and walkable to from any Valletta hotel. The bad news: there are a fair number of &amp;ldquo;international Mediterranean&amp;rdquo; tourist traps with English menus on Republic Street that will sell you a €22 spaghetti carbonara that lives in a microwaveable form. This guide picks the restaurants that are worth your evening, broken down by what kind of meal you actually want.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Best Boutique Hotels in Mdina &amp; Gozo</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-boutique-hotels-mdina-gozo/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-boutique-hotels-mdina-gozo/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Mdina&lt;/strong&gt; has only a handful of in-walls hotels (the Silent City has 250 residents, not 25,000), and &lt;strong&gt;The Xara Palace&lt;/strong&gt; is the headline luxury pick. Just outside the walls in &lt;strong&gt;Rabat&lt;/strong&gt;, &lt;strong&gt;Casa Melita&lt;/strong&gt; and several smaller boutique guesthouses run at lower rates. &lt;strong&gt;Gozo&lt;/strong&gt; is the boutique-and-farmhouse heaven — &lt;strong&gt;Cesca Boutique Hotel and Quaint Sannat&lt;/strong&gt; lead the boutique pack, while traditional &lt;strong&gt;Gozitan farmhouses for whole-house rentals&lt;/strong&gt; (€120–300/night, sleeping 4–8) are one of the best lodging experiences in the Mediterranean. Book 8–12 weeks ahead for summer.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Mdina and Gozo are the two parts of the Maltese islands that reward slowing down. Both have boutique-hotel scenes that have grown quietly over the last decade — Mdina because the in-walls building stock is finite (so the conversions get serious treatment), Gozo because rural farmhouses became the Airbnb-and-boutique-hotel rehab project of the 2010s. The result: in &lt;strong&gt;Mdina&lt;/strong&gt; you can sleep in a 17th-century palace overlooking the bastion walls, and in &lt;strong&gt;Gozo&lt;/strong&gt; you can sleep in a converted three-century-old farmhouse with its own pool and a 360° view of nothing but limestone fields and church domes.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Best Hotels in Sliema &amp; St Julian&#39;s (Locally Reviewed)</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-hotels-sliema-st-julians/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-hotels-sliema-st-julians/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; &lt;strong&gt;Sliema&lt;/strong&gt; is Malta&amp;rsquo;s most practical base — walkable seafront, ferry to Valletta in 8 minutes, every restaurant and cafe at hand. &lt;strong&gt;St Julian&amp;rsquo;s&lt;/strong&gt; is the dressier neighbour. &lt;strong&gt;Paceville&lt;/strong&gt; within St Julian&amp;rsquo;s is the nightclub strip and the right answer for almost no traveller. The high-end picks are the &lt;strong&gt;Westin Dragonara Resort, Hilton Malta, Le Méridien St Julian&amp;rsquo;s, AX Palace&lt;/strong&gt; and &lt;strong&gt;The Hotel Phoenicia (Floriana, just outside Valletta)&lt;/strong&gt;. Mid-range: &lt;strong&gt;Hotel Juliani, Holiday Inn Express Sliema, Plaza Regency&lt;/strong&gt;. Book seafront-facing rooms 8–12 weeks ahead in summer.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Sliema and St Julian&amp;rsquo;s are where most Malta travellers actually sleep, and for good reason — between them they have &lt;strong&gt;150+ hotels&lt;/strong&gt;, every restaurant in the country in walking distance, the &lt;strong&gt;Sliema-Valletta ferry&lt;/strong&gt; for sightseeing, and the &lt;strong&gt;Coast Road bus connections&lt;/strong&gt; to everywhere else. The catch is that &amp;ldquo;Sliema and St Julian&amp;rsquo;s&amp;rdquo; is really four neighbourhoods stitched together, each with a very different sleeping experience: the &lt;strong&gt;Sliema seafront&lt;/strong&gt;, &lt;strong&gt;inland Sliema (Tigné, Townsquare)&lt;/strong&gt;, &lt;strong&gt;St Julian&amp;rsquo;s Spinola Bay&lt;/strong&gt;, and &lt;strong&gt;Paceville&lt;/strong&gt;. Pick the wrong one and you&amp;rsquo;ll be 100m from a 04:00 nightclub bouncer when you wanted to be 100m from a quiet cafe.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Best Hotels in Valletta for Every Budget</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-hotels-valletta/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-hotels-valletta/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; Valletta has gone from &amp;ldquo;no real hotels&amp;rdquo; to one of the best small-city hotel scenes in the Mediterranean in 10 years. &lt;strong&gt;The Phoenicia (just outside City Gate)&lt;/strong&gt; is the grand classic; &lt;strong&gt;Iniala Harbour House&lt;/strong&gt; is the modern luxury benchmark; &lt;strong&gt;Casa Ellul&lt;/strong&gt; is the small-boutique sweet spot; and &lt;strong&gt;The Saint John Boutique Hotel&lt;/strong&gt; sits in the mid-range range under €200/night. Skip Republic Street if you want quiet — the &lt;strong&gt;side streets like Old Bakery, Old Theatre and Strait Street&lt;/strong&gt; have the same access without the foot-traffic noise. Book &lt;strong&gt;8–12 weeks ahead&lt;/strong&gt; for summer.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Until about 2014, Valletta had two hotels and not much in between. Then the city got serious — UNESCO money, a tourism push around being European Capital of Culture 2018, and a slew of disused palazzos that property developers realised could be 8-room boutique hotels with rooftop terraces. Now there are 50+ hotels in Valletta proper, and the small-luxury scene is one of the most interesting in southern Europe.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Where to Stay in Malta: Best Areas for Every Traveler</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/where-to-stay-in-malta/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/where-to-stay-in-malta/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; For most first-timers staying 3–7 days without a car, &lt;strong&gt;Sliema&lt;/strong&gt; is the right base — it&amp;rsquo;s mid-priced, has the ferry to Valletta, the boat departures for Comino, and a thousand restaurants. Pick &lt;strong&gt;Valletta&lt;/strong&gt; if you want to be inside the postcard and you&amp;rsquo;re OK paying 30–40% more for a smaller room. &lt;strong&gt;Mellieħa&lt;/strong&gt; wins for families who want a beach. &lt;strong&gt;Mdina or Three Cities (Birgu)&lt;/strong&gt; wins for a quieter, more romantic stay. &lt;strong&gt;Paceville&lt;/strong&gt; is for nightlife only — avoid otherwise. Skip Buġibba unless your priority is a budget package deal.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Malta is small — 27 km long — so wherever you stay, you can reach the rest of the island in under an hour. That sounds liberating until you realise it means &lt;em&gt;every&lt;/em&gt; hotel claims it&amp;rsquo;s &amp;ldquo;perfectly located,&amp;rdquo; and the actual differences between neighbourhoods are about vibe, transport convenience, and price-per-square-foot rather than distance to the sights.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Best Mdina &amp; Rabat Tours from Valletta (Compared)</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-mdina-rabat-tours/</link>
      <pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-mdina-rabat-tours/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; For most first-timers, a &lt;strong&gt;half-day Mdina + Rabat combo tour from Valletta (€35–45, ~5 hours)&lt;/strong&gt; is the best single pick — it includes transport, both towns, the catacombs in Rabat, and a guide who can actually tell you the difference between a Knight and a noble. The &lt;strong&gt;Mdina night tour (€35)&lt;/strong&gt; is atmospheric and worth a second visit if you have an extra evening. &lt;strong&gt;Game of Thrones fans&lt;/strong&gt; should book the Mdina + Valletta filming combo. &lt;strong&gt;DIY by bus 51/52/53 from Valletta&lt;/strong&gt; works fine and saves €25 if you don&amp;rsquo;t need a guide.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Mdina is small. About 0.9 km² of bastioned hilltop, 250 residents, three cafes that matter, and a baroque cathedral that punches above its weight. You can walk the whole thing in 25 minutes. Which raises an obvious question: &lt;em&gt;do you actually need a tour?&lt;/em&gt; Honest answer: yes, because Mdina without context is just pretty buildings. Mdina &lt;strong&gt;with&lt;/strong&gt; context — Phoenician origins, Norman conquest, the Knights moving the capital out, the Borg family killing each other in the cathedral, the GoT crew filming Ned Stark&amp;rsquo;s arrival — is the most interesting square kilometre on Malta. A guide is what makes the difference.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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      <title>Best Valletta Walking Tours: Free vs Paid (Honest Verdict)</title>
      <link>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-valletta-walking-tours/</link>
      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      
      <guid>https://maltatravelguides.com/posts/best-valletta-walking-tours/</guid>
      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;tip-box my-4 p-4 bg-blue-50 dark:bg-blue-900/20 border-l-4 border-blue-500 rounded-r-lg&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;flex gap-3&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;text-xl&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;div class=&#34;text-gray-700 dark:text-gray-300&#34;&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Short answer:&lt;/strong&gt; For most first-timers, a &lt;strong&gt;2.5-hour paid small-group walking tour (€25–35)&lt;/strong&gt; is the best single-tour pick — it covers St John&amp;rsquo;s Co-Cathedral, the Barrakka Gardens, the Knights of St John backstory, and the bits of context that turn &amp;ldquo;old building&amp;rdquo; into &amp;ldquo;&lt;em&gt;ah, so that&amp;rsquo;s why&lt;/em&gt;&amp;rdquo;. &lt;strong&gt;Free tip-based tours&lt;/strong&gt; are genuinely good and can save you €20 if you&amp;rsquo;re on a budget. Skip private tours unless you&amp;rsquo;re 4+ people. The &lt;strong&gt;food tour&lt;/strong&gt; is the one to add as a second tour. Self-guided with an audio app works if you want to move at your own pace.&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Valletta is small — about 1 km long and 600 m wide — and you can cross it end-to-end in 25 minutes. Which means you don&amp;rsquo;t need a tour to &lt;em&gt;see&lt;/em&gt; it. You need a tour to &lt;em&gt;understand&lt;/em&gt; it. Most of what makes Valletta special isn&amp;rsquo;t the surface (although the surface is gorgeous); it&amp;rsquo;s the layered history of the Knights of St John, the Great Siege, the British Empire, the WWII Blitz that made it the most-bombed city on earth, and the fact that the whole walled grid was master-planned in the 1500s by an Italian engineer with a thing for grids.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      
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