Safe trading

Safe trading at Monti

The vast majority of trades go smoothly. People meet, look at the item, agree, and make a good deal. But unfortunately there are some who want to exploit that trust — so we have gathered the most important advice in one place. Most of it is common sense, and that is exactly the best safeguard you have.

Monti is a meeting place: we connect buyer and seller, but we do not handle money and are not a party to the transaction itself. You manage the dialogue and the agreement directly with the other party. That gives you full control — and a little extra responsibility for making the smart choices along the way.


The golden rules — in brief

Do this:

Don't do this:


Payment — how to stay safe

Traceable payment is your best friend. An ordinary bank transfer gives you a receipt and a trail showing who received the money and when. Cash can be fine for small purchases face to face, but provides no documentation.

Be extra alert when someone:

Remember: no serious counterparty needs your login or your one-time codes. Those belong only to you and your bank.


Buying and selling a car

A car is often the biggest transaction people make between themselves. A little extra diligence pays off.

Before buying:

The deal itself:


Buying and selling a home

A home is a large and regulated transaction. Here it is common — and wise — to use professionals.


Buying from a business? Know your rights

When the seller is a registered business rather than a private person, Maltese and EU consumer law is on your side: the item must match the description and be of satisfactory quality (Consumer Affairs Act, Cap. 378), and if you bought entirely at a distance you generally have a 14-day right of withdrawal. Keep the listing, the dialogue and the receipt. If something goes wrong and the trader won't fix it, the MCCAA (mccaa.org.mt) can guide and conciliate, and smaller claims can go to the Consumer Claims Tribunal. Between two private individuals these rules do not apply — which is exactly why the advice on this page matters.


Report a suspicious listing

See something that doesn't add up? It only takes a moment to speak up, and you help the whole marketplace.

  1. Open the listing you are reacting to.
  2. Click Report listing (you'll find the link at the bottom of the listing).
  3. Choose a short reason — for example fraud, misleading content or an inappropriate item.
  4. Feel free to write a few words about what you reacted to, and send.

We review all reports and remove listings that break the rules. If you suspect you have been the victim of fraud and lost money, you should also contact your bank and report the matter to the police (in Malta: pulizija.gov.mt, or 112 in an emergency).

We work continuously to keep the marketplace tidy — but together with your common sense it becomes truly safe.