Most countries have figured out how to tax crypto. Cyprus mostly hasn't, and that is working in your favour if you structure this correctly.
Here is the honest breakdown for founders and developers holding crypto in 2026.
Zero CGT: The Core Rule
Cyprus does not have a general capital gains tax on financial instruments. Shares, bonds, and crypto that is not classified as business income fall outside CGT entirely. For a non-dom resident in Cyprus, that means selling BTC or ETH after appreciation is not a taxable event at the personal level.
The catch: this only holds if crypto is held as a personal investment, not as business inventory. If you are actively trading at high frequency, HMRC and most EU tax authorities would classify that as trading income. Cyprus would too.
For most founders, the pattern is: receive tokens as equity, hold them, sell after vesting or TGE. That sits cleanly in the investment bucket.
The Non-Dom Layer
Cyprus Non-Dom status removes Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends and passive income for 17 years. SDC is the 17% levy that catches most passive income streams for Cypriot tax residents who are domiciled here.
Without Non-Dom: dividends from a Cyprus company holding crypto gains would trigger 17% SDC.
With Non-Dom: that drops to 2.65% GHS only.
The practical implication: if you are converting treasury crypto into dividends, the Non-Dom status is the difference between a 17% hit and a 2.65% hit.
The 60-Day Threshold
You do not need to live in Cyprus full-time to access this. The 60-day tax residency rule lets you establish Cypriot tax residency with a minimum of 60 days on the island per year, provided you are not a tax resident anywhere else and you have some presence here (accommodation, business activity).
This is the rule most founders use when they want Cypriot tax treatment without relocating entirely.
The Yellow Slip Requirement
Before any of this is legally clean, you need the Yellow Slip (Certificate of Registration for EU citizens, or equivalent for non-EU). It is your proof of legal residency in Cyprus and the document the tax office expects when you register for tax residency.
Without it, your Cyprus tax residency claim has no paper trail, which is a problem if another country's tax authority challenges it.
DAC8 and What Changes in 2026
The EU's DAC8 directive extends automatic exchange of information to crypto assets from 2026. This means Cypriot residents with crypto held on EU-regulated exchanges will have that data reported to the Cypriot tax authority automatically.
This does not change the tax treatment. Zero CGT is still zero CGT. But it does mean that not filing (or filing incorrectly) becomes significantly riskier. Make sure your tax position is clean before the reporting kicks in.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Founders commonly structure it like this:
- Establish Cyprus tax residency via the 60-day rule
- Apply for Non-Dom status within 60 days of registration
- Hold crypto in personal name or through a Cyprus holding company depending on the volume
- Dividends from the company pay out at 2.65% GHS (Non-Dom)
- Personal crypto disposals are CGT-free
The company route adds cost (registered office, secretary, annual filing) but creates a clean separation between personal and business treasury.
The Limits
- Income tax still applies if crypto is business income (trading, mining at scale, staking as a business)
- Non-Dom status requires you not to have been a Cypriot tax resident in the 20 years prior to claiming it
- The 60-day rule requires genuine economic activity or accommodation on the island, not just a hotel stay
- Cyprus is an EU member, so FATF and AMLD compliance requirements apply to exchanges and wallets above certain thresholds
This is not tax advice. The rules above reflect the position as of mid-2026 and may change. Get proper legal advice before restructuring your affairs.
For a full breakdown of crypto-friendly jurisdictions in Europe, see cyprustaxlife.com.
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