Malta

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Malta

 

Mark Grech

Deloitte Malta

Deloitte Place

Mriehel Bypass

Mriehel BKR3000

Malta

Tel: +356 2343 2704

Email: mgrech@deloitte.com.mt

Website: www.deloitte.com

Mark Grech, Deloitte Malta, joined Deloitte Malta as a tax director in October 2000, assuming responsibility for certain aspects of the firm's tax function. Mark is now leader of indirect tax services, leading a team of dedicated professionals providing a wide range of indirect tax advisory and compliance services to the firm's local and international clients.

Before joining Deloitte Malta, Mark began work for the public service in 1986 and in 1993 was appointed deputy head of the International Tax Unit within the Inland Revenue Department. This unit is responsible for all taxation matters relating to international business activities and the financial services sector.

Mark earned a bachelor's degree (Hons) in business management from the University of Malta in 1986 and became a qualified accountant in 1991. He is a fellow of the Malta Institute of Accountants and a member of the Malta Institute of Taxation.

He speaks Maltese, English and Italian.

deloitte-250.png


Chris Naudi

EY

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Awards
ITR is delighted to reveal all the shortlisted nominees for the 2025 Asia-Pacific Tax Awards
The fates of pillars one and two hang in the balance after the US successfully threw its weight around in G7 and Canadian negotiations
Rafael Tena tells ITR about the ‘crazy’ Mexican market, ditching the hourly rate, and refusing to grow his fledgling firm in an ‘unstructured way’
It should be easy for advisers to be transparent about costs, Brown Rudnick partner Matthew Sharp said in response to exclusive ITR in-house data
The sprawling legislation phases out Joe Biden-era green tax incentives for businesses; in other news, the UK will reportedly maintain its DST despite US pressure
New French legislation should create a more consistent legal environment for taxing gains from management packages, say Bruno Knadjian and Sylvain Piémont of Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer
The South Africa vs SC ruling may embolden the tax authority to take a more aggressive approach to TP assessments, an adviser tells ITR
Indirect tax professionals now rate compliance as a bigger obstacle than technology and automation; in other news, Italy approved a VAT cut on art sales
AI-powered tax agents are likely to be the next big development in tax technology, says Russell Gammon of Tax Systems
FTI Consulting’s EMEA head of employment tax and reward tells ITR about celebrating diversity in the profession, his love of musicals, and what makes tax cool
Gift this article