The headline Cyprus corporate tax rate is 15%. In practice, founders who set up correctly often pay an effective rate well below that — sometimes under 5% on the full income-to-pocket journey. Here is how the structure works.
The Basic Stack
A typical Cyprus holding setup has three layers:
- Operating company — can be in Cyprus or another jurisdiction, earns the revenue
- Cyprus holding company — receives dividends from the operating company, holds IP, owns shares
- Founder as shareholder — tax resident in Cyprus with Non-Dom status, extracts dividends
Each layer has its own tax treatment.
Layer 1: Corporate Tax at the Holding Level
If your operating company is a Cyprus-registered LTD, profits are taxed at 15% (the 2024 reform rate, up from 12.5%). Allowable deductions — salary, office, software, professional services — reduce the taxable base.
If the operating company is in another jurisdiction (Ireland, UK, Netherlands), it pays corporate tax there. The holding company in Cyprus receives the dividends.
Layer 2: Dividend Exemptions at the Holding Level
This is where Cyprus structures get interesting. Dividends received by a Cyprus holding company from a subsidiary are exempt from corporation tax, provided the subsidiary is not a tax-resident of a jurisdiction that pays less than 6.25% corporate tax.
So if your operating company is in Ireland (12.5%), the Netherlands (25.8%), or Germany (30%+), the dividend flows into the Cyprus holding company completely free of further corporate tax.
Layer 3: Non-Dom Dividend Extraction
When the Cyprus holding company pays dividends to you as the shareholder, and you hold Cyprus Non-Dom status, you pay:
- 0% income tax on dividends (SDC exemption under Non-Dom)
- 2.65% GHS contribution on dividends received
That is your total personal tax on the dividend. Not 30-45% like most of Europe. 2.65%.
The 60-day tax residency rule is the entry point for founders who do not want to spend 183+ days in Cyprus. You can establish Cyprus tax residency with just 60 days on-island, provided you do not spend more than 183 days in any other single country and meet the economic substance conditions.
The IP Box Layer (Optional)
If your company earns income from qualifying intellectual property — software, patents, processes — the Cyprus IP Box regime allows you to pay just 2.5% effective corporate tax on that IP income. The regime applies to a 80% deduction on qualifying profits from qualifying IP assets.
For SaaS companies where the core asset is software, this can bring the corporate-level effective rate close to zero on IP-derived income.
Putting It Together: What the Numbers Look Like
For a founder with a Cyprus LTD earning €500,000 profit from software (qualifying IP):
| Stage | Amount | Tax |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | €500,000 | — |
| Corporate tax (IP Box, ~2.5% effective) | ~€12,500 | — |
| Retained profit available for dividend | ~€487,500 | — |
| Non-Dom dividend tax (2.65% GHS) | ~€12,919 | — |
| Net in pocket | ~€474,581 | ~5.1% effective |
This is not a loophole. It is the documented, published tax framework that Cyprus has maintained since EU accession. The EU has reviewed it multiple times.
What You Actually Need to Set This Up
- Register a Cyprus LTD (around €1,500–2,000 in legal fees, takes 5-10 working days)
- Apply for Yellow Slip registration (the first residency document for EU citizens)
- Apply for Non-Dom status at the tax authority (straightforward once you have residency)
- Open a Cyprus business bank account (this is often the most time-consuming step — allow 2-4 weeks)
- Ensure economic substance: a registered office, at least one local director or management meetings in Cyprus, and documented board decisions made on-island
The Substance Requirement Is Real
Post-BEPS, Cyprus requires that holding companies have genuine economic substance to qualify for the full range of treaty benefits and participation exemptions. That means local management, real decision-making on the island, and documentation.
For a solo founder or small team this does not mean employing ten people locally. But it does mean more than a mailbox. It means being demonstrably present and making core management decisions from Cyprus.
Limitations
- Corporate tax reform: The 15% rate applies from 2024. The old 12.5% rate is gone.
- Minimum top-up tax (Pillar Two): Companies with global revenue above €750M are subject to the 15% global minimum under the EU Pillar Two directive. Below that threshold, standard Cyprus rates apply.
- SDC (Special Defence Contribution): Non-Dom residents are exempt. Cyprus tax residents without Non-Dom status pay SDC on dividends at 17%. Non-Dom is the key.
General information only. Get specific advice from a Cyprus-qualified tax adviser.
Cyprus Tax Life is the independent resource for expats and founders navigating Cyprus tax and residency.
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