Roll Credits: The Best All-You-Can-Eat Sushi Spots in Malta
There was a time when all-you-can-eat sushi in Malta meant one restaurant, one specific night and an order sheet that looked suspiciously like an exam paper. Fast-forward a few years and the island has quietly built a surprisingly strong collection of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants and unlimited sushi experiences, ranging from Michelin-listed Sunday brunches in Valletta to beachfront Mondays in Buġibba where the Mediterranean is doing most of the decorating.
Not every restaurant does it the same way. Some only run their all-you-can-eat sushi offer on certain days, some have built their entire concept around unlimited sushi, some hand you a tablet instead of an order sheet, while others somehow manage to make eating your body weight in sushi feel almost… refined.
Whether you’re after a quick weekday fix, a beachfront sushi lunch or a long Sunday bottomless brunch, these are the best all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants in Malta. Chopsticks ready. Elastic waistband optional, but strongly advised.
Alma — Sliema

A full-service restaurant on Tower Road where the menu wanders from burgers and pizza to pasta, but make no mistake: the all-you-can-eat sushi is why most people are here. The selection is generous without feeling repetitive, covering everything from chicken katsu, spicy salmon and tuna truffle rolls to tempura prawns, bang bang noodles, edamame and egg fried rice. The bonus? Free evening parking at the Sliema Multi-Storey during the week, which in Sliema is bordering on a public service. Possibly the rarest item on the menu.
When: Mon–Thu dinner / Fri–Sat lunch & dinner
Price: From €28.95 / €32.95
Alma
132 Tower Road
Sliema
Website
AKI — Valletta

Michelin-listed, beautifully designed and very much the sort of place where the room earns its own compliments before the food even arrives. Their Sunday Shokunin Brunch takes the all-you-can-eat sushi formula in a more polished direction: choose a starter before moving into unlimited sushi featuring flamed beef rolls, spicy Maltese bluefin tuna, crispy rice with salmon, surf and turf rolls and more, alongside Japanese sides.
Three packages are available: classic, pink prosecco or champagne with cocktails. If you’re already committing to unlimited sushi in a Michelin-listed restaurant, there’s a convincing argument for not stopping at the prosecco.
When: Sundays, 12pm–4pm
Price: €45 / €55.50 with prosecco / €69.50 with champagne
AKI
175 Corner of Strait Street
Valletta
Website
Osaka — Msida & Naxxar

A modern Japanese grill, sushi and brunch spot with locations in Msida and Naxxar. Their all-you-can-eat sushi menu runs through an app on your phone: five dishes per person every fifteen minutes until surrender. Nigiri, hosomaki, uramaki, spicy rolls, hot dishes and starters keep things moving at a steady pace. The system sounds clinical, but it quietly prevents the table-wide negotiations that usually begin with, “Who actually ordered six portions of gyoza?”
Quality over theatrics, and one of the more organised unlimited sushi experiences on the island.
When: Daily, lunch & dinner
Price: Lunch €29.99 / Dinner €35.99
Osaka
Msida & Naxxar
Website
Hi Sushi — Valletta Waterfront & Sliema

Unlike most restaurants here, all-you-can-eat sushi isn’t a promotion or a particular day of the week. It’s the reason the restaurant exists.
Every table orders through a tablet, which somehow makes asking for your fifth round of salmon sashimi feel completely reasonable. The menu covers everything from uramaki and nigiri to bao buns, duck, noodles, rice dishes and hot plates. The Valletta Waterfront branch, in particular, feels considerably smarter than you’d expect from somewhere actively encouraging unlimited orders.
If you’re looking specifically for an all-you-can-eat sushi restaurant in Malta rather than a weekly deal, this is probably the clearest answer.
When: Daily, lunch & dinner
Price: Dinner €39.90 / Lunch €29.90 (Mon–Fri) / €39.90 (weekends & public holidays)
Hi Sushi
Vault 2, Valletta Waterfront & The Plaza, Sliema
Website
Amami — Mellieha

For anyone who likes their unlimited sushi with a sea view, Amami makes a convincing argument. The Infinity Brunch combines unlimited sushi with one of the island’s better waterfront settings. Local tuna hosomaki, dynamite rolls, prawn tempura maki and spicy salmon are joined by bao, dumplings, udon, fried rice and sharing plates that make this feel more like a proper weekend lunch than an eating competition.
Up north, overlooking the water, with unlimited sushi and a Friday afternoon. Honestly, the itinerary writes itself. The only real decision is whether you’re still capable of making other plans afterwards.
When: Fridays & Saturdays, 12pm–3pm
Price: €33
Amami
Marfa Road
Mellieha
Website
Okurama — San Gwann

If variety is your priority, this is probably the strongest all-you-can-eat sushi spread on the list. Four rounds ordered on paper cover nigiri, sashimi, fancy rolls, mini rolls, teppanyaki, hot dishes, noodles and rice, with sensible limits on the premium items to stop one table accidentally bankrupting the restaurant.
Not the most atmospheric room in Malta, but that’s not really why people come. They come because somewhere around Round Three, self-restraint quietly leaves the building.
When: Daily
Price: €29.50 adults / €15.50 children (6–10)
Okurama
Misrah Lourdes
San Gwann
Website
Nine Lives — Bugibba

Beach clubs aren’t usually where you’d expect to find one of Malta’s better all-you-can-eat sushi nights, yet here we are.
Every Monday, Nine Lives serves unlimited sushi right on the water in Bugibba. Fresh rolls, sea views and the sort of setting where you’re never entirely sure whether you’re here for dinner or accidentally stayed for sunset. Since it’s a seasonal beach club, it’s worth confirming availability before making the trip. There are certainly worse ways to improve a Monday.
When: Mondays
Price: €28.40
Nine Lives
Perched Beach
Bugibba
Website
Every all-you-can-eat sushi meal ends the same way. Somebody says, “I could probably manage one more roll.” Nobody ever needed one more roll.
A few things to know before you go: booking is essential almost everywhere, the whole table usually needs to take part, and most restaurants charge for excessive leftovers. Order in rounds, pace yourself, and resist the temptation to treat Round One like it’s your last meal. Future You will have notes.
