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The family court reform Malta introduced through Act VII of 2026 (Bill No. 165) represents the most significant restructuring of child-protection proceedings in more than a decade, reshaping how care orders are initiated, managed and resolved under the Minor Protection (Alternative Care) Act (Cap. 602). The reform introduces mandatory mediation, structured case-management timelines, government-funded specialist assessments and a formalised role for the children’s advocate, all designed to place the child’s welfare at the centre of every hearing. For parents facing care proceedings, foster and kinship carers navigating the system, and advocates preparing submissions, the practical changes are already being felt in courtrooms across Malta.
This guide breaks down every stage of the reformed process, provides actionable checklists and explains what each party should expect in 2026 and beyond.
Act VII of 2026 amends several provisions of the Civil Code and connected family legislation to restructure Family Court jurisdiction, embed child-centred procedures and accelerate resolution of care and custody disputes. The reform was introduced as Bill No. 165 in the 14th Legislature, debated in Parliament and enacted following a public consultation exercise led by the Ministry for Justice. Industry observers expect the practical effect will be faster hearings, earlier professional intervention and greater accountability at every stage.
The six headline changes are:
Bill No. 165 was tabled in Parliament and debated under Motion No. 444 (Various Laws on the Reform of the Family Court). Following passage, the first phase of implementation was announced by the Government of Malta through the official public consultation page on gov.mt. Several provisions, particularly those concerning mediation and specialist-assessment funding, took effect in early 2026, while further operational changes are being phased in across the year. Practitioners should monitor the Ministry for Justice website for commencement notices affecting specific sections.
The Minor Protection (Alternative Care) Act, Chapter 602 of the Laws of Malta, governs all proceedings involving children who may be at risk of harm, neglect or abandonment and who may require placement outside their birth family. Cap. 602 care orders apply whenever the state, acting through Agenzija Appogg or another competent authority, seeks to remove a child from parental custody or to formalise alternative care arrangements such as foster placement, kinship care or residential care.
Under Cap. 602, the court must be satisfied that a child is suffering, or is likely to suffer, significant harm attributable to the care being given (or likely to be given) to the child, and that making an order is in the child’s best interests. This statutory test applies across all order types:
Under the family court reform, care and protection proceedings that were previously heard alongside general family disputes are now routed through the dedicated child-protection stream. This means listing, case management and judicial continuity are handled by officers with specialist training in child welfare. The reform also clarifies the boundary between voluntary support services and compulsory care proceedings, ensuring that families engaging voluntarily with Agenzija Appogg are not prematurely drawn into formal court processes.
Care proceedings Malta now follow a seven-stage case-managed pathway. Each stage carries indicative time limits under the reformed rules, and the court actively monitors progress at regular case-management hearings. Below is the practical timeline every parent, carer and advocate should understand.
Proceedings begin when the competent authority (typically Agenzija Appogg or a social-work professional) files an application with the Family Court. The application must set out the grounds for intervention, identify the child and summarise the evidence of harm or risk. Parents are notified and served with the application documents.
What parents and carers should do:
Where a child faces imminent danger, the authority may apply for an emergency temporary care order. The court can grant this within 24 to 72 hours, often on an ex parte basis (without the parent being present). Temporary orders are subject to early review.
Once the application is filed and any emergency measures are in place, the court schedules an early case-management hearing. At this stage, the judge identifies the issues in dispute, sets a timetable for evidence and directs the parties to attend mandatory mediation sessions. Under the family court reform Malta framework, parties must complete the prescribed mediation process before a contested final hearing can be listed. Mediation is conducted by a court-approved mediator and is designed to explore whether agreement can be reached on some or all issues, including the child’s placement, contact arrangements and support services.
The court may order psychological assessments, social-work reports and other specialist evidence. Under the reformed system, the government funds these assessments so that cost is not a barrier to thorough investigation. Reports must be filed within the timeline set by the judge, and all parties are entitled to copies.
Before the final hearing, the court reviews disclosure compliance, confirms that all evidence is filed and ensures that the children’s advocate has had adequate time to meet with the child and prepare submissions. Any outstanding procedural issues are resolved at a pre-hearing directions appointment.
The final hearing is the point at which the court considers all evidence, social-work reports, expert assessments, the children’s advocate’s submissions and the testimony of parents and carers, and makes a decision. The judge must apply the Cap. 602 statutory test (significant harm and best interests) and give written reasons for the order made.
Final care orders are not permanent in every case. The reformed rules require the court to schedule review hearings at regular intervals. Where circumstances improve, the court can vary or discharge the order and set a reunification pathway with conditions and support services.
What parents and carers should do at each stage:
| Order Type | Typical Timeframe Under Reform | Decision-Maker / Entity |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency temporary care order (immediate protection) | Within 24–72 hours (application and court direction) | Magistrate or Family Court judge on urgent application |
| Interim care order (short-term) | 14–28 days (review/renewal windows) | Family Court judge following hearing |
| Final care order / placement | 3–6 months (case-managed timeline, subject to review) | Family Court judge after final hearing and evidence |
A children’s advocate is an independent legal professional appointed by the court to represent the child’s interests in care proceedings. The advocate is not the parent’s lawyer and is not aligned with the state authority, their sole duty is to ascertain and present the child’s wishes and welfare needs to the court.
Under Act VII of 2026, the role of the children’s advocate Malta has been strengthened in several ways:
Parents, carers and even the child (if of sufficient age and understanding) can request the court to appoint a children’s advocate. In practice, the court will appoint one of its own motion in most care cases. At the first meeting, the advocate will introduce themselves to the child, explain their role and begin gathering the child’s perspective. For younger children, this may involve observation and play-based interaction rather than formal interviews.
Checklist for children’s advocates preparing a submission:
Expert evidence is central to care proceedings Malta, and one of the most important practical changes under the family court reform is the confirmed availability of government-funded specialist assessments. Previously, families could face significant costs if the court ordered a psychological or psychiatric evaluation, creating inequality between well-resourced and legally aided parties.
Under the reformed framework, the court may direct assessments by:
Reports must be disclosed to all parties and the children’s advocate in advance of the hearing. Experts may be called to give oral evidence and may be cross-examined. The court retains discretion to commission joint expert instructions (a single expert instructed by both sides) to avoid duplication and delay.
Not every case results in a care order. The reformed Family Court actively considers less restrictive alternatives, including supervised access Malta arrangements, contact plans and guardianship orders Malta, before making a final placement decision. The guiding principle is that intervention should be proportionate, the court should adopt the least intrusive order that adequately protects the child.
Supervised access allows a parent to maintain contact with their child under controlled conditions, typically at a designated contact centre, in the presence of a trained supervisor. The court specifies the frequency, duration and conditions of contact. Supervised access is often used as an interim measure while assessments are underway, or as a step-down arrangement after a care order is varied.
Guardianship orders transfer parental responsibility to a named individual, often a grandparent, aunt, uncle or other family member, without placing the child in the formal state-care system. Guardianship orders Malta offer greater permanence and stability for the child while keeping them within their extended family network. The court applies the same best-interests test and requires evidence that the proposed guardian is suitable.
Parents can request supervised access at any stage of the proceedings. The application is made to the Family Court, which will consider the views of the children’s advocate, the social-work team and any expert reports before setting the contact terms. Early indications suggest that the reformed rules encourage more frequent, shorter contact sessions to maintain the parent-child bond while managing any identified risks.
Preparation is the single most important factor in navigating care proceedings effectively. The following checklists summarise the key actions for each participant.
If a care order is made that a parent believes is unjust or disproportionate, there are clear avenues of challenge. The reformed system retains and strengthens the right of appeal.
A social worker referred a case involving a seven-year-old child whose parent had been hospitalised following a mental-health crisis, leaving the child without supervision. Agenzija Appogg applied for an emergency temporary care order, which was granted within 48 hours. The child was placed with a maternal aunt under a kinship arrangement. Following discharge, the parent engaged with a court-directed psychological assessment and a parenting programme. At the three-month review, the children’s advocate reported that the child wished to return home. The court discharged the care order and put in place a supervision order with fortnightly social-work visits. The case illustrates how the reformed timeline can facilitate swift reunification where the parent demonstrates progress.
An application for a final care order was contested by a paternal grandmother who sought a guardianship order instead. The social-work report recommended residential care, but the children’s advocate, after meeting the two children, reported that they had a strong bond with their grandmother and wished to live with her. Expert evidence confirmed that the grandmother was capable of meeting the children’s needs. The court, applying the principle of least restrictive intervention under Cap. 602, granted a guardianship order rather than a care order. The lesson: the children’s advocate’s submission and the children’s own expressed views carried significant weight in the final outcome.
The family court reform Malta represents a generational shift in how care proceedings are managed, moving from an open-ended, often slow process to a structured, child-centred system with professional support at every stage. Whether you are a parent who has just been served with an application, a kinship carer considering guardianship or an advocate preparing your first submission under the new rules, understanding each stage and preparing thoroughly are critical.
For a high-level overview of the reform’s legislative background, see the existing summary on Global Law Experts. Official government materials, including the reform booklet and public consultation documents, are available through the Ministry for Justice and the gov.mt consultation portal. The authoritative text of the Minor Protection (Alternative Care) Act (Cap. 602) can be accessed through the Laws of Malta database.
If you need legal advice on care proceedings, the appointment of a children’s advocate or any aspect of the reformed Family Court process, search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for a specialist family lawyer in Malta.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr Sandra Sladden at Sladden & Sladden Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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