Crypto taxation in Europe is getting tighter. France charges 30% on gains, Spain 19–28%, Germany up to 45% on short-term trades. Cyprus is structurally different — and the 2026 reform made it more interesting. Here is what the numbers look like for crypto founders and traders who want to operate legally with a lower effective rate.
What Changed in Cyprus for Crypto in 2026
The 2026 reform introduced an 8% flat rate on crypto capital gains for individuals in Cyprus — a move toward clarity in a jurisdiction that previously had no specific crypto legislation. For most European crypto holders, 8% is still dramatically lower than their home country rate.
But the more interesting structure — the one most crypto entrepreneurs in Cyprus actually use — is the company plus Non-Dom combination, which gets the effective rate down to approximately 5%.
The Two Cyprus Crypto Tax Structures
Individual Under Non-Dom Status
A Cyprus-resident individual who qualifies for Cyprus Non-Dom status pays 0% income tax on capital gains from the disposal of movable assets, including crypto. Non-Dom status exempts you from the Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends and interest, and there is no capital gains tax on non-property assets for individuals. The 8% flat rate applies to individuals who are NOT Non-Dom, or to gains within a company structure at the corporate level.
The result for a Non-Dom individual holding crypto personally: 0% on capital gains from disposal. You still pay 2.65% GHS on dividend income if you extract profits from a company, but on direct personal crypto holdings the exposure is minimal.
Company Structure (Cyprus Ltd + Non-Dom)
The structure most active crypto traders and DeFi operators use:
- Crypto trading and business activities go through a Cyprus Ltd
- Company profits are taxed at 15% corporate tax
- Dividends to a Non-Dom shareholder are taxed at 2.65% GHS only (no income tax)
On EUR 100,000 of crypto trading revenue, after EUR 10,000 in business expenses, the math looks like this: EUR 13,500 in corporate tax (15% on EUR 90,000), then EUR 54,500 distributed as dividends (after EUR 22,000 tax-free salary), with EUR 1,444 in GHS contributions. Total tax: approximately EUR 14,944 — an effective rate around 15% overall, or closer to 5% on the dividend layer specifically.
The key advantage over personal holding: the company structure provides a clear separation between business trading income (15% corporate tax) and investment gains on the company's crypto portfolio (also 15% corporate, no separate CGT layer).
How Cyprus Compares to the EU Average
| Country | Crypto Gain Tax | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | Up to 26.375% (short-term) | 0% if held 1+ year personally |
| France | 30% (PFU flat rate) | No holding period exemption |
| Spain | 19–28% (progressive) | Plus mandatory Modelo 721 reporting |
| Italy | 26% flat (gains > EUR 2,000) | + 0.2% annual wealth tax on holdings |
| UK | 10–20% CGT | 45% income tax on staking/mining |
| Cyprus Non-Dom | ~5% effective | Company + Non-Dom structure |
EU DAC8 (effective 2026) requires all EU crypto exchanges to report user transactions to tax authorities. There is no EU country where crypto income is invisible to tax authorities anymore. The question is purely about the rate you pay — and Cyprus is at the bottom of that table.
Residency Requirements
To use the Non-Dom structure you need to become a Cyprus tax resident. The 60-day tax residency rule lets qualifying individuals establish Cyprus tax residency with just 60 days per year on the island — provided they hold no other primary tax residency, have Cyprus-based business ties, and own or rent property in Cyprus.
For EU citizens, the first step after deciding to relocate is getting the Yellow Slip (MEU1 registration certificate). This is the administrative foundation — it unlocks healthcare, banking, and formal residency status — and takes around 2–4 weeks to process once you have an appointment.
Practical Notes for Crypto Businesses
Record keeping is non-negotiable. Maintain transaction logs with acquisition dates, cost bases, disposal dates, proceeds, exchange rates, and wallet addresses. Crypto tax software (Koinly, CoinTracker) integrated with your exchanges is the minimum standard for a Cyprus-based operation with any volume.
Banking: Crypto companies face enhanced due diligence from Cyprus banks. Be upfront about your business model from day one. Licensed EMIs (Electronic Money Institutions) that are comfortable with crypto businesses are often a more practical first option.
MiCA compliance: If your business provides crypto services to third parties — exchange, custody, advisory — you may need authorisation from CySEC under the EU MiCA regulation that took full effect in 2026. This is a compliance requirement, not a tax one, but it affects your operating structure.
Staking and DeFi: Income from staking, yield farming, and liquidity provision through a company is treated as business income at 15% corporate tax. There is no separate higher rate for DeFi operations.
NFT sales: Generally treated as movable asset disposals — 0% CGT for Non-Dom individuals, or 15% corporate tax if sold through a company.
Cyprus combines the structural advantages (Non-Dom, 15% corporate tax, no CGT on movables) with EU membership, English common law, and a growing crypto-native ecosystem in Limassol.
Not financial or legal advice. Crypto tax treatment can change. Consult a qualified Cyprus tax adviser before structuring.
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