Cyprus company formation
Cyprus company formation refers to the process of incorporating and registering a business entity in the Republic of Cyprus. As a member state of the European Union, Cyprus offers a regulated business environment with a 15% corporate tax rate, access to EU markets, and a wide network of double taxation agreements.[1]
Types of business entities
The most common types of companies registered in Cyprus include:
Private limited company (Ltd)
The most popular structure for international businesses. Key characteristics:
- Minimum one shareholder (individual or corporate)
- Minimum one director (must be a natural person)
- No minimum share capital requirement (typical nominal capital is EUR 1,000)
- Limited liability for shareholders
- Company secretary required (must be a Cyprus resident or Cyprus-registered company)
Public limited company (PLC)
Required for companies seeking to list shares on a stock exchange. Requires a minimum of seven shareholders and a minimum issued share capital of EUR 25,629.
Branch of a foreign company
A foreign company can register a branch in Cyprus. The branch is not a separate legal entity but operates as an extension of the parent company.
Self-employment (sole proprietorship)
Individual registration for freelancers and sole traders. This structure does not offer limited liability.[2]
Registration process
The standard process for incorporating a private limited company in Cyprus involves:
- Name approval - Submit proposed company name to the Registrar of Companies for approval. Names must be unique and not misleading. Processing time: 1-3 business days.
- Memorandum and Articles of Association - Prepare the constitutional documents defining the company's objectives, share structure, and internal governance rules.
- Registration - File incorporation documents with the Department of Registrar of Companies and Intellectual Property. Registration fee is approximately EUR 165.
- Tax registration - Register with the Tax Department for income tax and VAT (if applicable, threshold EUR 15,600).
- Social insurance registration - Register with the Social Insurance Department as an employer.
- Bank account - Open a corporate bank account with a Cyprus bank.
The entire process typically takes 5-10 business days when handled through a registered service provider.[3]
Costs
Typical annual costs for maintaining a Cyprus limited company include:
| Item | Approximate annual cost (EUR) |
|---|---|
| Annual levy (Registrar of Companies) | 350 |
| Registered office address | 500 - 1,500 |
| Company secretary services | 500 - 1,200 |
| Accounting and audit | 2,000 - 5,000 |
| Tax filing | 500 - 1,500 |
| Director services (if nominee) | 3,000 - 6,000 |
Total estimated annual maintenance costs range from EUR 4,000 to EUR 15,000 depending on the complexity of operations and whether nominee services are used.[4]
Tax advantages
Companies incorporated in Cyprus benefit from:
- 15% corporate tax rate - among the lowest in the EU[5]
- IP Box regime - effective rate as low as 2.5% on qualifying IP income
- No withholding tax on dividends, interest, and royalties paid abroad
- Participation exemption - dividends from subsidiaries and gains from disposal of securities are exempt
- 65+ double taxation treaties - reducing tax on cross-border transactions
- EU membership - access to EU directives (Parent-Subsidiary, Interest and Royalties, Merger)
- Notional Interest Deduction - deduction on new equity capital
When combined with the non-dom regime, shareholders who are Cyprus tax residents can receive dividends at 0% income tax (only 2.65% GHS contribution applies), resulting in an overall effective tax rate of approximately 5%.[6]
Regulatory framework
Cyprus companies are regulated by:
- Companies Law, Cap. 113 - the primary legislation governing company formation and operation, based on the former UK Companies Act 1948
- Department of Registrar of Companies and Intellectual Property - the government body responsible for company registration
- Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) - regulates investment firms and financial services companies
- Cyprus Bar Association - regulates legal practitioners involved in company formation
All Cyprus companies are required to prepare audited financial statements annually and file an annual return (HE32) with the Registrar of Companies.[7]
See also
- Taxation in Cyprus
- Non-domiciled tax status
- Corporate tax
- Company formation
- European Union company law
References
- ↑ PwC, "Doing Business in Cyprus 2025", PwC Cyprus, 2025.
- ↑ Department of Registrar of Companies and Intellectual Property, "Company Formation Guide", companies.gov.cy, 2025.
- ↑ Cyprus Tax Life, "Setting Up a Company in Cyprus: Costs and Process", cyprustaxlife.com, 2026.
- ↑ Cyprus Tax Life, "Real Costs of a Cyprus Company", cyprustaxlife.com, 2026.
- ↑ KPMG, "Cyprus Corporate Tax Guide 2025", KPMG Cyprus, 2025.
- ↑ Deloitte, "Cyprus Tax Facts 2025", Deloitte Cyprus, 2025.
- ↑ Republic of Cyprus, Companies Law Cap. 113, cylaw.org.
