Southern Harbour
Sunday fish market
The reason most people come to Marsaxlokk: fishermen selling the catch straight off the boats along the harbourfront, plus stalls of fruit, honey and tat.
Where
Marsaxlokk, Malta
Opening hours
Held on Sunday mornings, roughly from early morning until early afternoon, with the fish element strongest first thing and the stalls winding down by lunchtime. A smaller daily tourist market runs along the front on other days. Times are informal, so treat the early morning as your window.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed; browsing the harbourfront stalls costs nothing and you only pay for whatever fish, produce or souvenirs you choose to buy.
Time needed
Around 45 minutes to an hour to walk the full length of the harbourfront market; longer if you stay on for lunch at one of the seafront fish restaurants.
In short
Visiting Sunday fish market
The Sunday market is what brings most people to Marsaxlokk: fishermen selling the catch straight off the boats along the harbourfront, alongside stalls of fruit, vegetables, local honey and a fair amount of tourist tat. Timing makes or breaks it โ get there before 9am for genuine fish and room to breathe; arrive at 11am and you trade real fish for crowds and souvenirs. Free to browse; you only spend if you buy.
What it is and the timing that matters
For most visitors, the Sunday market is the whole reason to come to Marsaxlokk, the fishing village on Maltaโs southern harbour. Along the curved waterfront, fishermen sell the catch straight off the boats โ lampuki in season, swordfish, tuna, octopus and whatever the night brought in โ while behind them stretch stalls of fruit and veg, local honey, nougat, clothes and a generous helping of tourist tat. The setting is the bonus: rows of painted luzzu boats bobbing in the harbour right beside you.
Timing is the single thing that decides whether you love it or shrug. Get there before 9am and you find genuine fish, working traders and room to move. Arrive around 11am and the coach parties have landed; the real fish has largely sold out, and whatโs left is crowds, sunglasses stands and souvenir stalls. The market runs Sunday mornings into the early afternoon, with times informal, so treat the early start as non-negotiable.
How to do it, and is it worth it
It costs nothing to browse; you only spend if you buy. If youโve no kitchen, youโre not really shopping for fish, so come for the atmosphere instead โ wander the full length of the front, watch the haggling, photograph the boats, then settle in. The smart move is to stay on for an early seafood lunch at one of the seafront restaurants; book or grab a table before the lunch rush, as they fill fast on Sundays.
Is it worth it? Early, absolutely โ itโs one of the most photogenic, genuinely local mornings on the island. Late, itโs a crowded souvenir market in a pretty spot. Public buses connect Marsaxlokk to Valletta and the south, but they get packed on Sundays, so an early arrival beats the queues both ways. Go first thing, eat fish by the water, and leave as the crowds build.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Marsaxlokk city guide.