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:
- Progressive income tax — the same brackets that apply to salary and business income.
- 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
- 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.
- File IR.126 to declare Non-Dom status if you have not been a Cyprus tax resident in the last 17 years.
- Apply the 20% deemed deduction on gross rent before calculating income tax — no receipts required.
- Report rental income in your annual tax return (IR.1 form, filed by June 30 of the following year).
- 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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