Malta just fired a bold shot in the global battle to democratize artificial intelligence. On May 16, 2026, the Mediterranean island nation launched a nationwide AI literacy programme that hands every resident aged 14 and older a free two-hour online course—and upon completion, a one-year subscription to either ChatGPT Plus or Microsoft Copilot Pro. The initiative, branded “AI for Everyone,” puts a premium AI tool in the pocket of virtually every Maltese citizen without a credit card or corporate expense account. There is no means test, no application fee, and no catch: finish the course, pick your AI sidekick, and start building, learning, or simply experimenting.
Malta’s government has long positioned the country as a test bed for digital innovation. It was among the first EU states to regulate blockchain and crypto, and its size—just over 500,000 residents—makes it agile enough to roll out universal programs that larger nations could only study in white papers. Speaking at the launch in Valletta, Prime Minister Miriam Dalli said the programme would “equip every citizen with the fundamental skills to navigate the AI-accelerated world, not as passive consumers but as active participants.” Dalli, who also oversees the national digital portfolio, framed the move as an extension of Malta’s constitutional commitment to a free education system.
What the course covers—and why two hours?
The literacy course, hosted on the government’s e-learning platform servizz.gov, is deliberately concise. It is not a coding bootcamp or a prompt-engineering masterclass. Instead, it targets four core competencies: what AI is and isn’t, how modern language models work at a surface level, practical prompt-crafting for everyday tasks, and a section on ethics, bias, and hallucination. Modules are delivered via short videos, interactive quizzes, and a final “demonstration” where learners must generate and critique a piece of AI-produced content—like a cover letter, a meal plan, or a lesson outline.
“Two hours is the sweet spot,” explains Dr. Elaine Dutton, the curriculum designer seconded from the University of Malta. “Long enough to move from fear to familiarity, short enough that a parent or a shift worker can complete it in one evening. We designed it so that someone who has only ever used WhatsApp can walk away confident enough to ask Copilot to draft an email or have ChatGPT explain a bank statement.”
The course is available in English and Maltese, with subtitles for the hearing impaired. Early data from the pilot—run with 2,000 public sector employees in April—showed a 94% completion rate and a post-course self-assessed confidence jump from 2.3 to 4.1 on a five-point scale. Those results, which the government published alongside the launch, likely convinced Microsoft and OpenAI to underwrite the per-user licensing costs through their respective corporate social responsibility arms.
The two-horse race: ChatGPT Plus versus Copilot Pro
This is where the programme gets clever. By offering a straight-up choice between two competing ecosystems, Malta avoids picking a national winner and allows citizens to vote with their fingers. Grab a ChatGPT Plus account and you get access to GPT-5 generation models, advanced voice conversation, and all the analysis tools OpenAI has bundled into its \$20-a-month tier. Choose Copilot Pro and you unlock Microsoft 365 integration—think Word, Excel, and PowerPoint on steroids—alongside priority access to GPT-derived models inside a heavily curated, enterprise-friendly wrapper.
For most users, the decision will likely hinge on what they already use at work or school. Office workers on Microsoft 365 will lean toward Copilot; students and creatives might favor ChatGPT’s more open-ended playground. The programme’s FAQ is refreshingly blunt: “You cannot switch after redemption, so try the free versions first.” Redemption works through a single-use token issued upon course completion, valid for sixty days. The clock starts ticking the moment you click “redeem,” not when you finish the course, which means a student could, for instance, delay activation until exam season.
Who’s eligible—and how the rollout actually works
Any resident of Malta with a valid e-ID, including foreign nationals holding a residence permit, can sign up from May 16. The only hard floor is age: you must be 14 or older, aligning with the GDPR’s digital age of consent in Malta. Minors between 14 and 18 need parental consent via a digital signature, a step the government automated within the e-ID app to avoid paperwork bottlenecks.
The registration process is entirely online. Users log into the national identity portal, verify their identity, and are redirected to the course platform. Within twenty-four hours of finishing the final assessment, the system generates a token and an email with platform-specific setup instructions. The government has baked in API calls to both OpenAI and Microsoft to handle provisioning automatically, so no human operator needs to approve accounts—a design choice that should keep the programme scaling smoothly even if all 400,000 eligible residents sign up.
Why this isn’t just another “free course” gimmick
Plenty of governments have built AI skills portals. Finland’s “Elements of AI” has enrolled over a million people globally. Singapore launched a national AI literacy program for seniors. But Malta’s move is distinct because it couples a short, mandatory primer with a tangible, expensive-to-buy reward. The retail cost of a one-year ChatGPT Plus or Copilot Pro subscription hovers around \$240, a sum that is far from trivial for many households. By absorbing that cost—estimated at roughly €12 million per 50,000 redemptions—the government is putting hard cash behind the rhetoric that AI access is a new basic right.
Economists have long argued that free access to premium tools can jumpstart productivity, especially for micro-enterprises and sole traders. Malta’s economy leans heavily on tourism, financial services, and iGaming—sectors where drafting, translation, coding assistance, and data analysis can directly translate into revenue. A boutique hotel owner who learns to use Copilot to write marketing copy in five languages, or a freelance bookkeeper who offloads spreadsheet formula generation to ChatGPT, may see immediate returns that dwarf the programme’s per-person cost.
Risks and scepticism
Not everyone is cheering. Digital rights group Access Now warned in a statement that the programme “effectively builds a pipeline of captive users for two American tech giants under the guise of literacy.” They argue that the government should have prioritized open-source alternatives or at least negotiated stronger data-sovereignty clauses. Malta’s privacy regulator, the IDPC, reviewed the programme and mandated that accounts created through the scheme use a separate, non-work identity where possible, but the reality is that both Microsoft and OpenAI process user data under their standard policies. Users are prompted during setup to review those policies, but the two-hour course does not dive deeply into the legal nuances of data handling or jurisdictional issues—a gap that critics say undercuts the ethics module.
There is also the ever-present fear of AI dependency. Educators have questioned whether a two-hour primer is long enough to convey the pitfalls of over-reliance on large language models. “We’re effectively giving every teenager a turbo-charged homework machine,” said Dr. Carmel Borg, a prominent Maltese education professor. “Where is the parallel investment in assessment reform?” The education ministry has responded by promising subject-specific guidelines for schools and a dedicated helpline for teachers, but those materials are still in development.
Early uptake and anecdotal impact
Within seventy-two hours of launch, servizz.gov reported 41,000 course completions and 38,000 token redemptions—a conversion rate that suggests the “easy winner” psychology is working. Early Reddit threads and Maltese Facebook groups are a mix of enthusiasm and troubleshooting: a parish priest in Gozo posted about using ChatGPT to prepare homilies, a Valletta waiter described asking Copilot to generate a menu with calorie counts, and a dozen users complained about the token redemption step failing on older Android phones (a fix was deployed within 48 hours).
The most viral story so far came from a 72-year-old retired nurse, Carmen Azzopardi, who told local station TVM that she had “never touched a computer” before her grandson signed her up. “Now I ask it to write poetry in the style of Dun Karm,” she said, referring to Malta’s national poet. Azzopardi’s soundbite captures the programme’s emotional hook—it isn’t just about economic productivity, but about cultural participation and intergenerational connection.
The bigger picture for Europe
Malta’s move lands at a time when the European Union is still wrestling with how to regulate AI while also fostering adoption. The EU AI Act is now in force, but its provisions on literacy are largely advisory. Brussels has pledged to invest in “AI knowledge hubs” but has not matched Malta’s direct-to-consumer subscription model. Several EU officials privately told local media that they are watching Malta’s experiment closely; if the ROI metrics hold up, the model could be cloned in other small member states like Luxembourg, Cyprus, or Estonia—countries that share Malta’s appetite for digital-first public services.
Microsoft and OpenAI also have much to gain. For Microsoft, this is a Trojan horse into a population that might otherwise default to Google’s free tools. For OpenAI, it’s a chance to demonstrate mass-market loyalty and collect usage data that could inform product development—though both companies have pledged not to use programme-created account data for model training without opt-in consent, a line that will be tested by privacy watchdogs.
What comes next
The Ministry for Digital Economy has already hinted at a second phase: a sixteen-hour “AI Citizen Developer” track that would teach low-code automation, custom GPT creation, and the basics of Retrieval-Augmented Generation. That course, expected in early 2027, would carry a nominal fee but include a six-month extension on the AI subscription for those who pass. Meanwhile, the Malta College of Arts, Science and Technology is launching a dedicated AI diploma that accepts the literacy course as a prerequisite.
For now, the immediate challenge is sustaining momentum. A one-year subscription is a generous carrot, but it will expire, and users will face a choice: pay up or lose the assistant they’ve come to rely on. Whether that attrition turns into a commercial boom for Microsoft and OpenAI, or a backlash of entitlement, remains the great unanswered question. But for the moment, Malta has given its entire population a key to the AI kingdom, no strings attached—an audacious bet that literacy plus access equals empowerment.