MaltaPost Postcode Finder:
Look Up Any Malta Postal Code 2026
Malta runs a precise alphanumeric postcode system managed by MaltaPost p.l.c., covering every locality across the Maltese islands and Gozo. Whether you are filling out an online shopping delivery form, registering a business address, or sending a parcel, getting the Maltapost tracking postcode right is the difference between a smooth delivery and a returned item.
Find any Malta or Gozo address postcode instantly
Start typing a street name, locality, house name,
or postcode to search Malta & Gozo addresses
What is the MaltaPost Postcode System?
MaltaPost introduced Malta’s national postcode system to improve mail sorting and delivery accuracy across all localities on the Maltese islands. Before the system existed, addresses were identified by locality name and street alone — no standardised numerical reference, which meant manual sorting at every stage.
Today, every registered address in Malta, Gozo, and Comino carries a unique postcode assigned by MaltaPost. The system is alphanumeric: three letters identifying the locality, followed by four digits that narrow down the specific street or zone within it.
Standard Format: VLT 1111
This is an independent utility tool. Not affiliated with MaltaPost p.l.c.

Malta Postcode Format Explained
Every Malta postcode follows the same structure. No exceptions.
Format: [3-letter locality prefix] [4-digit area suffix]
Example: VLT 1111
|
Component |
What It Represents |
Example |
|---|---|---|
|
3-letter prefix |
Abbreviated locality name assigned by MaltaPost |
VLT = Valletta |
|
Space |
Mandatory separator — always one space |
— |
|
4-digit suffix |
Street or zone reference within that locality |
1111 |
The prefix is derived from the official Maltese locality name — not the street, not the district. The four digits are not a counting sequence you can guess. MaltaPost assigns them to specific streets and zones, and two addresses on the same road can carry different suffixes depending on how MaltaPost zoned that area.
What is NOT a valid Malta postcode:
Note for international forms:
If a form only accepts numbers, use the 4-digit suffix (e.g., 1111) as a workaround. However, always use the full alphanumeric code whenever possible.
Why using the correct Malta postcode matters:
How to Use the MaltaPost Postcode Finder
There are three reliable ways to look up a Malta postcode. Two are digital. One is slower but gives the most definitive answer for new or rural addresses.
Official MaltaPost Postcode Finder
The official postcode lookup tool is at maltapost.com. The finder works for both Maltese and English street names, and supports forward and reverse lookup.
Why this matters: The official MaltaPost database is the primary source. If a third-party source disagrees, always trust the official MaltaPost tool.

Third-Party Postcode Finder
Use the tool at the top of this page for a faster lookup. Enter your locality name, street address, or existing postcode to return the associated code. This is useful when the official site is slow or you want to avoid navigating multiple pages.
Note: Cross-check important labels at maltapost.com, as third-party tools can occasionally lag behind recent rezoning changes.
Contact MaltaPost Directly
For addresses in rural Gozo, newly built streets, or any address not appearing in digital lookups, go to the customer care services:
MaltaPost staff can confirm the postcode for any registered delivery point and provide timelines for when new streets will be added to the digital finder.
Malta Postcodes by Major Locality
The table below lists the most-searched locality prefixes across Malta and Gozo. The prefix is the three-letter code. The four-digit suffix varies by street — use the postcode finder to get the complete code for your specific address.

|
Locality |
MaltaPost Prefix |
Island |
|---|---|---|
|
Valletta |
VLT |
Malta |
|
Sliema |
SLM |
Malta |
|
St Julian’s (San Ġiljan) |
STJ |
Malta |
|
Birkirkara |
BKR |
Malta |
|
Qormi |
QRM |
Malta |
|
Gżira |
GZR |
Malta |
|
Msida |
MSD |
Malta |
|
Ħamrun |
HMR |
Malta |
|
Marsa |
MRS |
Malta |
|
Naxxar |
NXR |
Malta |
|
Pembroke |
PBK |
Malta |
|
Marsaskala |
MSK |
Malta |
|
Marsaxlokk |
MST |
Malta |
|
Rabat |
RBT |
Malta |
|
Mdina |
MDN |
Malta |
|
Luqa |
LQA |
Malta |
|
Żabbar |
ZBR |
Malta |
|
Victoria (Rabat Gozo) |
VCT |
Gozo |
|
Nadur |
NDR |
Gozo |
|
Xagħra |
XGH |
Gozo |
Important: This table gives you the locality prefix only. Never use just the prefix as a complete postcode — always add the four-digit suffix specific to your street. The MaltaPost postcode finder or our tool above gives you the full code.
Use a Malta Postcode on Delivery Forms
Finding the postcode is step one. Using it correctly across different platforms is where most errors happen.
Online Shopping Deliveries (UK & EU Retailers)
UK and EU retailers — such as Amazon, ASOS, and Zara — generally accept Malta postcodes in the format XXX 0000 (prefix, space, four digits). If a form rejects the space, try removing it (XXX0000).
Pro Tip: If the form only accepts numeric codes, enter the 4-digit portion only and include the full alphanumeric postcode in the “Street Address” line so the courier can still see it.
International Shipping
When sending abroad, your return address must carry your full Malta postcode. This ensures the parcel routes back correctly if delivery fails.
Financial & Gov Forms
KYC, VAT, and eID applications require verified addresses. An incorrect postcode can trigger verification failures and delay approvals.
International Courier Labels (DHL, FedEx, UPS)
These carriers recognize the XXX 0000 format. If the shipping platform returns a format error, use the no-space variant (XXX0000). Courier platforms vary in how they validate alphanumeric codes, so having both options ready is helpful.
MaltaPost Postcode Finder vs Google Maps
A common shortcut is to use Google Maps, but for Malta addresses, this is often unreliable. Google geocoding is updated less frequently than the primary MaltaPost database.
|
Method |
Data Source |
Accuracy |
|---|---|---|
|
MaltaPost Official Finder |
MaltaPost primary database |
Highest |
|
Our Third-Party Tool |
MaltaPost-sourced data |
High |
|
Google Maps |
Google geocoding |
Variable |
|
Apple Maps |
Apple geocoding |
Variable |
The MaltaPost official finder is the right tool every time. Use it as your primary source for all labels and official documents.
Tips for Using Malta Postcodes Correctly
Always include the space: The correct format is SLM 1234, not SLM1234. While some platforms may require removing the space, the spaced version is the MaltaPost standard and should be your first attempt.
Do not guess the suffix: Knowing the prefix (e.g., BKR) tells you nothing about which four digits apply to your specific street. Adjacent roads can have entirely different suffixes; always look up the complete code.
Use reverse lookup for verification: Run a postcode through the finder in reverse to confirm the matching locality and street range. This helps catch errors before a parcel is shipped.
When postcodes are mandatory: While not strictly required for basic local letters, postcodes are essential for registered mail, parcels, and tracked items to avoid manual sorting delays.
Recheck for newly built addresses: If a new building does not appear in the finder, call +356 2122 4422 to confirm if a code has been issued yet.
Specify “Gozo” on international forms: If the recipient is in Gozo, explicitly add “Gozo” to the address line, as many international platforms group Malta and Gozo under a single “Malta” dropdown.
Malta postcodes are not ZIP codes: ZIP codes are US-specific. If an international form asks for a ZIP, enter your alphanumeric Malta postcode instead.
Do not infer location from digits: The four-digit suffix is an assigned reference, not a geographic sequence. Treat the suffix as a unique identifier rather than a coordinate.
Pro Tip: Store your own postcode in your phone’s contacts or notes app for quick access during online checkouts.
Frequently Asked Questions — MaltaPost Postcode Finder
Final Thoughts
The MaltaPost postcode format is simple: three letters, one space, four digits. The part that causes real problems is not the format — it is assuming the digits are guessable, that Google Maps has the current data, or that the prefix alone is enough to get a parcel delivered.