When the Weather Turns in Malta: A Local’s Guide to the Indoor Day
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18 Jun 2026
Anyone who lives here knows the islands have a second personality. Here’s how a local
rides out the grey days when the sea turns the colour of slate.
You can usually feel it coming before the forecast confirms it. The light goes flat, the wind
swings round to the northeast, & the ferries to Gozo start posting delays. A proper Maltese
winter day, all sirocco & sideways rain, doesn’t last long, but while it’s here, the whole
rhythm of the island shifts inland & indoors.
When that happens, the day quietly moves onto screens for a lot of us. The first hour of a
wet morning is usually spent at the window deciding it isn’t worth it, & then the phone
comes out. Between catching up on a series, reading, & the mobile games people fill the
gaps with, there’s a steady local audience for the casino apps that run straight off a phone.
Operators offering them are licensed by the Malta Gaming Authority, & the sector is
restricted to players over 18, so it tends to sit alongside streaming & gaming as just
another way Maltese adults pass a closed-in afternoon.
The Museum Afternoon
A rainy day is the excuse most of us never take to actually visit the places tourists queue for.
Valletta is built for it. The cathedral, the war rooms under the city, the National Museum of
Archaeology, a few minutes’ walk apart, all of it dry & most of it walkable under the
balconies if you time the showers. Go on a weekday afternoon, & you’ll often have a
gallery to yourself.
If you’re out east, the Three Cities reward a wander far more than the guidebooks suggest,
& Birgu in particular feels made for low clouds & quiet streets.
Where Everyone Ends Up: The Shopping Centre
There’s no shame in admitting it. When the rain sets in for the day, half the island ends up in
Sliema or at one of the larger complexes, walking laps with a coffee. It’s less about buying
anything & more about being somewhere warm with other people doing exactly the same
thing. The cafés along the Sliema front stay busy precisely because the weather is bad, &
a long lunch while it hammers down outside is its own kind of local tradition.
Steam, Spa & Slowing Down
The other instinct is to lean into it. Malta has a good spread of spas & wellness centres,
& a grey afternoon is when they make the most sense. Somewhere like Carisma Spa, with
branches in Sliema & Gżira, runs saunas, steam rooms & thermal circuits you can book
by the session rather than the night, & a couple of quiet hours there feel like a far better
use of a washout than fighting the weather. Plenty of the hotel spas also open their doors to
non-guests off-season, which is when the rates are kindest too.
Something To Make
If sitting still isn’t your thing, a wet day is the one that finally pushes people into a class
they’ve been meaning to try. The Mediterranean Culinary Academy in Naxxar runs hands-on
workshops around Maltese & Mediterranean staples, & elsewhere there’s a pottery
wheel to sit at or a wine tasting to settle into out of the rain. It’s the same impulse that fills the
cinemas in St Julian’s the moment the forecast turns, & it’s why bad weather here rarely
means a wasted day.
For a fuller rundown of options when the rain settles in, our own rainy day indoor activities
guide covers the practical side, from opening hours to where to head by region.
The Local Secret
Here’s the thing visitors miss. Maltese weather turns as quickly as it arrives. The same front
that ruins a morning often clears by late afternoon into the kind of washed, golden light you
only get after rain, & the promenade fills up again as if nothing happened. The trick locals
know is not to write off the day at breakfast. Plan the indoor hours, keep an eye on the sky,
& more often than not, you’ll still get your walk by the water before dark. The same eye on
the sky pays off in summer, when the catch isn’t rain but the evening humidity that settles
over Malta’s open-air festivals long after the day’s heat has gone.
So when the weather turns, don’t fight it. Move indoors, take the slow morning, & let the
island do what it always does & hand the afternoon back to you.
