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January 15, 2026
On 15 January 2026, the Office for Competition with the Malta Competition and Consumer Affairs Authority (“Malta NCA”) published a request for consultation on its proposed changes (“Consultation”) to the Control of Concentrations Regulations (“Regulations”). The Consultation marks the first substantive update to the Regulations since 2007 with proposed changes including an increase in turnover thresholds and a new “call-in power” for below threshold transactions.
The Regulations provide for Malta’s merger control regime.
The Malta NCA is the competent authority in Malta for screening proposed concentrations under the Regulations.
Under the Regulations, a concentration, whether a merger, acquisition, or the creation of a full-function joint venture, that meets the jurisdictional test must be mandatorily notified to and cleared by the Malta NCA before implementation.
The current turnover thresholds require the notification of concentrations where the undertakings’ combined turnover in Malta exceeds €2.3 million, and each party to the transaction has a turnover in Malta equivalent to at least 10% of that combined figure in Malta.
The Consultation proposes raising these to a combined turnover in Malta of €4.5 million, with at least two undertakings each generating €800,000 in turnover locally.
This amendment will limit notifications to transactions that may give rise to competition concerns on the local market.
Similarly to the approach taken in other EU jurisdictions, the Consultation proposes the introduction of a “call-in” power which would allow the Malta NCA to require the notification of transactions which do not meet the turnover threshold test.
The Consultation highlights that this change is being proposed to equip the Malta NCA with a mechanism to examine so-called “killer acquisitions” which fall below the thresholds.
A key limitation of this “call-in” power is that it applies only to concentrations that have not yet been implemented, and the Malta NCA cannot review any concentrations that are already in effect.
In addition to this “call-in” power, the Consultation also proposes empowering the Malta NCA with enhanced powers to request information on planned deals allowing it to better scrutinise them.
Currently, notifiable concentrations are subject to a filing fee of €163.06.
The Consultation proposes revised filing fees:
Other proposed updates include:
Feedback may be submitted via consultation.gov.mt or konsultazzjoni.gov.mt until 30 January 2026.