COMING SOON
Santas Toy Town
Santas Toy Town
Let us fill in the blanks of your holiday and overflow your stay with the best activities you can try here in Malta.
Take your pick for a truly memorable holiday!

The Palace State Rooms
Due to the 2017 Maltese Presidency of the Council of the European Union, the Palace State Rooms will remain closed until the end of June. The Palace Armoury will close according to the exigencies of Malta’s Presidency and related events taking place at the Palace. Please check opening hours prior to your visit.
The State Rooms are the show piece of the Presidential Palace sited at the heart of Malta’s World Heritage capital city of Valletta. The Palace itself was one of the first buildings in the new city of Valletta founded by Grand Master Jean de Valette in 1566 a few months after the successful outcome of the Great Siege of Malta in 1565. The Palace was enlarged and developed by successive Grand Masters to serve as their official residence. Later, during the British period, it served as the Governor’s Palace and was the seat of Malta’s first constitutional parliament in 1921. The palace today is the seat of the Office of the President of Malta.
It was Grand Master Fra Pietro del Monte who, back in the late 16th century, first commissioned the building of a Magisterial Palace that was improved upon, enlarged and embellished by his successors to reach its present structure by the mid-eighteenth century. Following the brief interlude of the French in Malta between 1798 and 1800, the Palace became the official residence of the British Colonial Governor of Malta. While it was mostly through the embellishments of the various Grand Masters that the Palace reached its current appearance and dimensions, the British Governors also contributed to the dynamic and at times rather complicated architectural history of this edifice. The damage suffered by the President’s Palace as a result of the Second World War was considerable. Fortunately, the competent repairs after the devastating air-raids of February and April 1942 helped to revive the prime national and stately function of the Palace. The Palace subsequently became the seat of Malta’s Legislative Assembly set up in 1947, Malta’s first parliament following Independence in 1964 and subsequent legislatures till the present day.
Ever since the times of the Order of St John, the palace was the seat of a collection of works of art and heritage items some of which still grace its walls. Some were purposely produced and form part of the historic fabric of the building. Others were acquired, transferred or presented at different times throughout its chequered history.


Grandmasters Palace, Palace Square, Valletta VLT 1191
Tel: +356 21 249349
Opening Hours
Monday to Friday between 10.00 and 16.30hrs (last admission at 1600hrs).
Saturday and Sunday between 09.00 and 16.30hrs (last admission at 1600hrs).
Closed on the 24, 25 & 31 December, 1 January & Good Friday.
The Palace State Rooms may also be closed to visitors at short notice due to the exigencies of the Office of the President.
Admission
Joint admission fees for the Palace Armoury and State Rooms:
Adults (18 - 59 years): €8.00
Youths (12 - 17 years), Senior Citizens (60 years & over), and Students: €6.00
Children (6 - 11 years): €4.00
Infants (1 - 5 years): Free


Getting there
Bus numbers 13, 14, 16, 17 from St. Julian's/Sliema to Valletta