Xemxija vs Mgarr

Side-by-side comparison of property prices, lifestyle, and practical info to help you choose the right area.

Xemxija

Small sunny coastal hamlet

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Mgarr

Agricultural village with oversize church

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Good. Flat bay area. Heritage trail accessible on foot. Connected to St. Paul's Bay promenade.
Walkability
Limited. Village centre walkable. Countryside is walkable but you'll need a car for everything else.
Good. Easier than Bugibba. Marina area has paid parking. Residential streets free.
Parking
Excellent. No parking pressure. Ample space.
Low. Quiet residential atmosphere. Marina generates gentle activity.
Noise Level
Very low. Agricultural quiet. Occasional farm vehicles and church bells.

Living in Xemxija

Xemxija is a small coastal hamlet at the western end of St. Paul's Bay — a quieter, more residential alternative to the tourist strips of Bugibba and Qawra. The name means 'sunny' in Maltese, and the sheltered bay lives up to it, catching afternoon sun long after the north-facing parts of St. Paul's Bay have gone into shadow. The hamlet is tiny — a handful of restaurants, a small beach, a hillside of apartment blocks, and a marina. But its surroundings are rich with history. The Xemxija Heritage Walk is a 2km trail that passes Roman apiaries, cart ruts carved into the limestone, a Neolithic menhir, and a Knights-era watchtower — essentially a compressed timeline of Maltese civilisation in a single walk. Property in Xemxija is modestly priced and popular with buyers who want northern coastal living without the full tourist intensity of Bugibba. The marina adds a premium for waterfront properties, and the area has a small but loyal year-round community.

Highlights

  • Xemxija Heritage Walk — 5,000 years of history in 2km
  • Sheltered bay with afternoon sun
  • Marina and waterfront restaurants
  • Quieter alternative to Bugibba and Qawra
  • Loyal year-round residential community

Living in Mgarr

Mgarr is a rural village in northwest Malta that serves as the island's agricultural heartland. Surrounded by farmland, vineyards, and olive groves, Mgarr produces more of Malta's home-grown food than anywhere else — strawberries, tomatoes, potatoes, and the grapes that go into Malta's growing wine industry. The annual Strawberry Festival draws thousands of visitors each spring. The village centre is a traditional Maltese square dominated by an enormous parish church that's dramatically oversized for the population — locals reportedly wanted to build the largest church in Malta but ran out of funds before completing the dome. The unfinished dome is a source of village pride rather than embarrassment. The surrounding countryside is scattered with cart ruts, megalithic sites, and the Bingemma valley. Property in Mgarr offers rural Malta at its most affordable. Farmhouses with land are still available, and the village has a genuine agricultural character that's disappeared from most of the island. The trade-off is distance — Mgarr is a 25-minute drive from Valletta with limited public transport.

Highlights

  • Annual Strawberry Festival — Malta's biggest food event
  • Working farms, vineyards, and olive groves
  • Farmhouse properties with land at affordable prices
  • Cart ruts and megalithic sites in the countryside
  • Genuinely rural Malta