Most tax optimization articles focus on rates you pay. This one focuses on taxes you stop paying entirely.
Cyprus Non-Dom status does not just lower your rate — it eliminates entire tax categories that residents of France, Germany, Spain and the UK treat as unavoidable facts of life. Here is the complete list for 2026.
What Non-Dom Status Actually Is
Non-Dom (non-domiciled) is a legal tax classification available to Cyprus residents whose domicile of origin is outside Cyprus, and who have not lived in Cyprus for 17 or more of the last 20 years. You qualify automatically once you establish Cyprus tax residency — there is no application process, no approval to wait for. It is confirmed at the tax filing stage.
The primary effect is exemption from Special Defence Contribution (SDC), a surcharge that Cyprus applies to passive income for domiciled residents. For Non-Dom residents, SDC simply does not apply.
For the full eligibility rules and setup process, see Cyprus Non-Dom status.
Tax 1: Dividend SDC (Gone to 0%)
Domiciled Cyprus residents pay 5% SDC on all dividend income. Non-Dom residents pay 0% SDC.
What you pay instead: 2.65% GHS (healthcare contribution), capped at EUR 4,770 per year once your dividend income exceeds EUR 180,000. Above that cap, additional dividends are effectively tax-free at the personal level.
For a founder taking EUR 200,000 in dividends: a domiciled resident pays EUR 10,000 in SDC plus EUR 4,770 GHS = EUR 14,770. A Non-Dom resident pays only EUR 4,770 GHS. The saving is EUR 10,000 on that single income stream.
The mechanics and interaction with corporate tax are covered in detail in the dividend tax guide.
Tax 2: Interest Income SDC (Gone from 30% to 0%)
Domiciled residents pay 30% SDC on interest income — a brutal rate on savings accounts, bonds and loan interest. Non-Dom residents pay 0% SDC on interest from any source.
You still pay GHS at 2.65% on interest income, but that is the ceiling. For anyone with significant fixed-income investments or business loans to third parties, this is a material difference.
Tax 3: Capital Gains on Securities (0% for All Residents)
This one applies to every Cyprus resident, not just Non-Dom — but it is worth including because most people do not realize how comprehensive it is.
Cyprus charges 0% capital gains tax on the disposal of shares, bonds, funds, ETFs, or any other securities — whether listed or unlisted, whether held for one month or ten years. The only capital gains tax that exists in Cyprus (at 20%) applies to gains from the sale of Cyprus-situated immovable property. Everything else: zero.
No holding period requirement. No exit tax when you sell. No distinction between short-term and long-term gains.
Tax 4: Inheritance Tax (Does Not Exist)
Cyprus abolished inheritance tax in 2000. There is no estate duty, no succession tax, no wealth transfer tax of any kind. You can pass shares, property, cash and business assets to heirs without any Cypriot tax on the transfer.
For founders structuring an eventual exit, or retirees moving assets to the next generation, this is a significant structural advantage over almost every other EU member state.
Tax 5: Wealth Tax (Does Not Exist)
Spain, France, Norway and Switzerland all have some form of annual wealth or net worth tax. Cyprus has none. There is no annual levy on the value of your assets, no threshold above which you owe an annual charge on what you hold.
Tax 6: Exit Tax on Leaving Cyprus (Does Not Exist)
Spain's exit tax (Impuesto de Salida) is one of the most aggressive in Europe. France has a similar regime. Germany charges on unrealized gains when you stop being resident.
Cyprus has no exit tax. If you establish tax residency here and later decide to leave, Cyprus does not charge you on unrealized gains in your portfolio or company shares at the point of departure. You close your tax file and move on.
Tax 7: Withholding Tax on Foreign Dividends Received (0% Default)
When your Cyprus holding company receives dividends from subsidiaries in other countries, Cyprus charges 0% tax on those incoming dividends (participation exemption applies from 1% shareholding). No local withholding layer is added when those funds flow up to you as a Non-Dom individual.
Other jurisdictions add local withholding on top of treaty-reduced rates from the source country. Cyprus does not.
The Effective Rate in Practice
Combining all of the above: a Non-Dom founder running a Cyprus Limited company pays 15% corporate tax on profits, then takes dividends personally at 2.65% GHS (capped). Total effective rate on income that flows through as dividends: approximately 5%, depending on salary drawn and deductions.
That 5% figure includes everything charged in Cyprus across both corporate and personal levels.
How to Get Here
You need Cyprus tax residency first. There are two routes:
183-day rule: spend 183+ days per year in Cyprus. Straightforward but requires significant physical presence.
60-day tax residency rule: spend at least 60 days in Cyprus across the calendar year, have no tax residency in any other country, and register with the Cyprus Tax Department. This route works for people who want to split their time and do not want to be fully based in Cyprus.
Once resident, EU citizens obtain the Yellow Slip (MEU1 certificate) — the Civil Registry document confirming right of residence. It is required for opening local bank accounts and most administrative processes.
Non-Dom status is confirmed on your first Cyprus tax return. From that point, the 17-year clock starts and the SDC exemptions apply immediately.
The Full Picture
The combination of taxes that disappear — dividend SDC, interest SDC, capital gains on securities, inheritance tax, wealth tax, exit tax, WHT on inbound dividends — plus the 15% corporate rate and 2.65% GHS cap creates a tax environment that is structurally different from anywhere else in the EU.
These are not deductions or reliefs. Most of them are taxes that simply do not exist in Cyprus.
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