Employer Thresholds and Increasing TCN Visa Rejections What It Means to the Malta Labour Market.

The labour-migration system of Malta entered a new phase in 2025. One very important change that was implemented in this phase is the introduction of employer thresholds when hiring third country nationals (TCNs). These thresholds are now transforming the business recruitment process and what is becoming more common is the denial of the visa, something that most people had never expected.

What are Employer Thresholds?

Each employer has now been assigned a specific number of employee they can employ with regards to TCNs. It is not a national number or a general quota , it is more like a ceiling based on the size of a particular company and its industry, workforce composition and record of compliance as evaluated by Jobsplus.

Practically, this implies that when the business has already reached its TCN quota, all new applications to hire new foreign employees, either new hires or transfer of employees to the employer will be automatically declined, irrespective of the qualifications of the applicant and the needs of the employer at that point in time.

Why Rejections Are Rising, And Sometimes Unexpected

Since the implementation, there have been numerous rejections even at the very beginning of the application process – even before the reviews of documents or qualifications. In several instances, both the employers and applicants could not realise that the threshold had been achieved.

That system is particularly problematic since:

  1. The application fee (both in case of new permits and when changing the employer) has been increased to EUR600.
  2. The fee cannot be refunded, meaning that applicants can waste hundreds of euro without any fault of their own.
  1. The fact that the threshold status is patchy in its visibility (only available directly through Jobsplus) is a big source of confusion, making it more likely to get caught unawares at a high cost especially for applicants.

What Responsible Employers Should Do


In the case of Malta-based companies (and recruitment agencies) dealing with TCNs:

Never submit a job opportunity to a TCN or approve a change-of-employer application without first checking with Jobsplus that the threshold status is met. Do not use previous approvals as limits vary these days. Insert threshold check into your recruitment process. As the workforce is evolving rapidly, with the slightest change in your staff, your eligibility to new TCN employees may be affected.

Be honest with applicants and tell them clearly whether the company is at its knees, as not to waste their time and money on applications.

What TCN Applicants Should Learn

As a third-country national who wishes to work in Malta:

  1. Check with prospective employers to establish their threshold before you pay any amount and make an application.
  2. Ask the employer (after Jobsplus contact) to send a written confirmation that they can hire more TCNs. This will help you avoid losing money in case the application is blocked due to technical reasons.

Broader Labour-Market Implications

The move to employer-specific thresholds is indicative of a larger change: under the 2025 labour-migration reforms, Malta is shifting to a comparatively open-ended TCN demand framework, to a system that is controlled and measured, in other words, one that will match foreign labour supply to actual sectoral demands and national labour market equilibrium.

At that, it is not a secret that the first to be hit will be the companies whose staff is already flooded with TCN employees or whose compliance/turnover history leaves much to be desired. In industries that are largely dependent on non-EU labour (as with hospitality, caregiving, some trades), this might be in the form of freeze hiring, staffing shortages or more competition among employers over the small TCN quotas.

What This Means for Recruit in Malta, And Our Clients

This update highlights the importance of being informed and active as a recruitment agency that is well integrated in the Malta labour market. For us and our clients, this means:

  1. Adopting risk conscious employment measures: making sure that clients are aware of threshold risks to offer TCNs employment.
  2. Improving pre-screening and compliance assistance: the checking of threshold position, facilitation of documentation, providing transparency to both sides.
  3. Recommending TCN applicants the principles of due diligence: it is advisable that they should focus on employers who are compliant, honest and transparent about their eligibility.

This is not a bureaucratic system, this is more of a structural change which will determine the way recruitment and foreign-labour flows will work in Malta in the next few years. With the changing landscape, being ahead of the regulations will be the difference between easy hires and expensive rejections.

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