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Posted on • Originally published at cyprustaxlife.com

Cyprus Rental Income Tax 2026: What Founders and Property Owners Actually Pay

Owning property in Cyprus or receiving rent from a Cypriot tenant comes with a tax stack that most guides gloss over. There are two separate charges — income tax and Special Defence Contribution (SDC) — and the Non-Dom regime eliminates one of them entirely. Here is what the numbers look like in 2026.

The two-layer tax structure

Cyprus tax residents who receive rental income face:

  1. Progressive income tax — the same brackets that apply to salary and business income.
  2. SDC (Special Defence Contribution) — an additional levy at a deemed rate of 2.25% of gross rent.

SDC is calculated as: 75% × gross rent × 3% = 2.25% of gross rent. The 75% is a statutory expense allowance built into the formula — you do not need receipts to claim it.

Example: EUR 18,000 gross annual rent.

  • SDC = 0.75 × 18,000 × 3% = EUR 405
  • Income tax depends on your total annual income (see brackets below)

Income tax brackets (2026)

Annual income Rate
Up to EUR 22,000 0%
EUR 22,001 – 32,000 20%
EUR 32,001 – 42,000 25%
EUR 42,001 – 72,000 30%
Above EUR 72,000 35%

Rental income stacks on top of other income. If your salary is EUR 28,000 and rent adds EUR 10,000, your first EUR 4,000 of rent falls in the 20% band and the next EUR 6,000 in the 25% band.

Before applying the brackets, you can deduct 20% of gross rent as a deemed expense — no supporting documents required. So EUR 18,000 gross rent → EUR 14,400 taxable rental income.

The Non-Dom SDC exemption

Here is where Cyprus Non-Dom status makes a concrete difference. Non-domicile residents pay 0% SDC on rental income. That removes 2.25% from the gross rent, every year.

On EUR 50,000 of annual rent, that is EUR 1,125 per year saved — automatically, without any planning, just by holding Non-Dom status.

Non-Dom also eliminates SDC on dividends (which for domiciled residents is now 5% post-2026 reform). If you are running a Cyprus company alongside a rental portfolio, the combined SDC savings are material.

Non-residents: flat 30%

If you are not a Cyprus tax resident but own Cypriot property, you pay 30% flat on net rental income (after the 20% deemed deduction). SDC does not apply to non-residents.

Non-resident example: EUR 18,000 gross rent → EUR 14,400 net → EUR 4,320 tax. Effective rate on gross: ~24%.

This is often higher than the effective rate for a Cyprus tax resident who qualifies for the 0% bracket on the first EUR 22,000 of total income.

How to establish residency for the tax benefit

To be taxed as a resident, you must qualify as a Cyprus tax resident for that calendar year. There are two routes:

  • 183-day rule: spend more than 183 days in Cyprus.
  • 60-day tax residency rule: spend at least 60 days in Cyprus, not be tax resident elsewhere, maintain a permanent home in Cyprus, and have professional activity or a company here.

For property investors who are not full-time residents, the 60-day rule is often the relevant path. The key is that you must not be a tax resident in any other country — which rules this out for people who are still registered in their home country.

Practical steps for property owners

  1. Register as a Cyprus tax resident via MEU1 (EU citizens) or ARC/Pink Slip (non-EU). The Yellow Slip guide covers this for EU nationals.
  2. File IR.126 to declare Non-Dom status if you have not been a Cyprus tax resident in the last 17 years.
  3. Apply the 20% deemed deduction on gross rent before calculating income tax — no receipts required.
  4. Report rental income in your annual tax return (IR.1 form, filed by June 30 of the following year).
  5. SDC on rental income is payable twice yearly (June 30 and December 31) via JCC Smart or at the Tax Department.

The numbers side by side

Scenario Gross rent SDC Income tax (est.) Total tax rate
Domiciled resident, EUR 30k total income EUR 18,000 EUR 405 ~EUR 1,440 ~10.2%
Non-Dom resident, EUR 30k total income EUR 18,000 EUR 0 ~EUR 1,440 ~8%
Non-resident EUR 18,000 EUR 0 EUR 4,320 (30% flat) ~24%

The Non-Dom benefit on rental income is smaller than the dividend SDC exemption but it compounds over time on a rental portfolio.

Key takeaway

Cyprus rental income tax is manageable if you are a tax resident — particularly with Non-Dom status. The 20% deemed deduction and 0% SDC for Non-Doms make it one of the more landlord-friendly regimes in the EU. Non-residents face a significantly higher effective rate and should assess whether establishing Cyprus tax residency makes sense for their overall situation.


This article is informational only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed Cypriot accountant for your specific circumstances.

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