A practical guide for multinationals and Cyprus-based groups;
Executive summary
- As of January 1, 2026, Cyprus implemented new defensive measures targeting profits moved to certain lower-tax jurisdictions, following Circular 1/2026 issued April 9, 2026.
- The measures align with Cyprus’s EU Recovery and Resilience Plan commitments and EU tax transparency goals, creating incentives to reassess cross-border structures.
- Cyprus now offers compliant, substance-friendly alternatives that can deliver efficient tax outcomes while maintaining EU credibility.
- Key opportunities include the abolition of deemed dividend distributions (DDD) from 2026 profits onwards, a favorable IP regime, notional interest deduction (NID), reduced Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends for non-domiciled residents, and exemptions on certain foreign dividends and securities disposals.
- While frontline offshore jurisdictions face new non-deductibility and withholding tax costs, Cyprus-based reorganizations can achieve competitive tax efficiency within an EU framework.
- The 2026 changes: defensive measures in brief:
- LTJ definition for 2026: A jurisdiction is deemed low-tax if its headline corporate tax rate is below 7.5% (i.e., 50% of Cyprus’s 15% corporate tax rate).
- Affected jurisdictions (LTJ list 2026): Anguilla, Bahamas, Bahrain, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands (BVI), Cayman Islands, Guernsey, Isle of Man, Jersey, Turks and Caicos Islands, Vanuatu (note: Vanuatu is also EU-blacklisted).
- Key defensive measures (self-assessed, automatic for 2026):
- Interest and royalties: Payments to associated companies (direct or indirect 50%+ ownership) in LTJs are not tax-deductible in Cyprus.
- Dividends: Dividend payments to in-scope recipients in LTJs face a 5% withholding tax.
- EU-blacklisted jurisdictions (Anguilla and Vanuatu): Stricter enforcement of pre-existing measures applies.
- Practical impact: The after-tax cost of shifting profits from a Cyprus entity to an LTJ holding structure is significantly increased, discouraging profit shifting through these jurisdictions.
- Why re-allocation to Cyprus structures can be advantageous
- Cyprus substance-friendly positioning within the EU: The island combines competitive taxation with EU credibility, a robust treaty network, and a growing focus on substance.
- Strategic opportunities within Cyprus:
- Abolition of Deemed Dividend Distribution (DDD): Effective for 2026 profits and onwards, eliminating automatic shareholder-level taxation on profits retained in Cyprus entities.
- Reduced Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends for non-domiciled residents: SDC rate reduced to 5% for non-domiciled individuals holding Cypriot-tax-resident status.
- IP Box regime: 80% of qualifying IP profits exempt from corporate tax, yielding an effective rate around 3% on qualifying income.
- Notional Interest Deduction (NID): Allows deduction for capital used in generating income, reducing taxable profits on new equity.
- Exemption on foreign dividends and disposal of securities: Dividends received from foreign subsidiaries are generally exempt, and gains on disposal of shares are tax-exempt.
- Practical implications: A Cyprus-centric holding and operating structure can be tax-efficient while aligning with EU standards and improved transparency, reducing the risk/complexity of cross-border tax planning that relies on offshore jurisdictions.
- Practical considerations and next steps for groups
- Structural assessment:
- Map current group entities and flows to identify which payments (interest, royalties, dividends) go to LTJs and calculate potential non-deductibility and WHT costs under the new regime.
- Evaluate current ownership structures to determine 50%+ associated relationships triggering the LTJ rules.
- Reorganisation options within Cyprus:
- Consolidation into Cyprus-based holding structures to leverage IP, NID, and SDC benefits.
- Reallocate profitable activities to Cyprus entities with substantive substance (employees, facilities, management, and decision-making capabilities) to satisfy substance requirements and EU expectations.
- Consider IP ownership in Cyprus to maximize the IP Box regime benefits, ensuring proper “qualifying IP” alignment and documentation.
- Tax efficiency vs. compliance:
- Ensure compliance with EU anti-abuse rules and the Cyprus tax authorities’ substance guidelines.
- Maintain robust transfer pricing documentation to support intercompany charges (interest, royalties) and to justify pricing in line with the arm’s length principle.
- Regulatory monitoring:
- Track any updates to LTJ lists or changes in defense measures, as well as any expansions of the IP regime or NID rules.
- Implementation steps:
- Engage local Cyprus tax counsel/advisory team to design a phased implementation plan, including entity reorganisations, internal transfer pricing updates, and IP structuring.
- Prepare a communication and governance plan to ensure board approval and stakeholder alignment across regions.
- Caveats and considerations
- Circular 1/2026 is an administrative guidance instrument; ensure you verify the latest official text and any subsequent amendments that may affect interpretation.
- Some measures apply automatically but may be subject to anti-avoidance scrutiny; ensure robust substance and genuine business rationale.
- The LTJ list can evolve; sensitivity to future revisions is essential.
- While Cyprus offers attractive regimes, every restructuring must consider treaty benefits, PE risk, CFC rules in other jurisdictions, and local substance requirements.
- Conclusion
- The 2026 reforms shift incentives away from offshore, low-tax structures toward compliant, substance-focused Cyprus configurations.
- A Cyprus-based, substance-supported holding and operating framework can deliver robust tax efficiency while preserving EU credibility, enhanced transparency, and a broad network of double tax treaties.
- Groups should conduct a detailed reassessment of structures, focusing on opportunities like the IP Box, NID, DDD abolition, and foreign-dividend exemptions, while ensuring compliance with evolving rules and governance standards.
For further information on this topic, please contact its author, Mr. Paris Hadjipanayis at [email protected].