Cyprus and Malta are often mentioned in the same breath as EU-based tax optimization destinations. Both are Mediterranean, English-speaking, EU members, and have tax regimes designed for international residents. But the structures are quite different in practice.
Here are 5 key differences that matter for founders and remote workers.
1. Corporate Tax: Flat 15% vs 35% With a Refund Mechanism
Cyprus charges a flat 15% corporate tax. Malta charges 35% on paper — but shareholders can claim a 6/7 refund, reducing the effective rate to approximately 5%.
On the surface, Malta's effective rate looks similar. In practice:
- Malta: Company pays 35% → Shareholder files refund claim → Gets 6/7 back, eventually
- Cyprus: Company pays 15% → Done
The Malta refund process takes months or years and requires the shareholder to be a registered taxable person in Malta. The cash-flow cost is real. For most founder structures, Cyprus's flat 15% is simpler and more predictable.
2. Dividend Tax for Non-Dom Residents
Cyprus: Under Cyprus Non-Dom status, dividends are exempt from Special Defence Contribution. Only a 2.65% GHS healthcare contribution applies. Duration: 17 years from establishing Cyprus tax residency. No minimum annual tax.
Malta: Non-Dom status uses a remittance basis — only income brought into Malta is taxed. But there's a minimum annual tax of EUR 15,000 regardless of income. For lower-income years, you pay that minimum even if actual dividends are small.
For a founder taking, say, EUR 80,000 in dividends: Cyprus is EUR 2,120 (2.65%). Malta is at least EUR 15,000.
3. Residency Requirement
Cyprus: The 60-day tax residency rule allows establishing tax residency with just 60 days per year in Cyprus. You need a Cyprus business or employment, and can't spend more than 183 days in any other single country.
Malta: Ordinary residence requires a longer physical presence. Malta's Global Residence Programme (GRP) and HNWI scheme have different rules, but the flexibility to spend as little as 60 days per year while maintaining residency doesn't exist in the same form.
For founders who travel heavily, Cyprus's 60-day threshold is a significant practical advantage.
4. Cost of Living
| Category | Cyprus | Malta |
|---|---|---|
| 1BR apartment (central) | EUR 900-2,000/month | EUR 1,500-3,000/month |
| Coworking (full-time desk) | EUR 150-300/month | EUR 250-500/month |
| Restaurant meal | EUR 10-18 | EUR 14-22 |
Malta's cost of living, particularly in Valletta and the central areas, is noticeably higher than Cyprus — particularly post-pandemic.
5. Compliance Complexity
Cyprus: straightforward company structure, clear Non-Dom regime, well-documented process. The first administrative step for EU citizens is the Yellow Slip (MEU1), followed by a Non-Dom application once tax residency is established.
Malta: the 35%/refund corporate structure, remittance-basis personal tax, and various specialized programmes create more moving parts. Accounting and legal fees in Malta tend to run higher.
Summary: Which One Works Better for Founders
If your priorities are simplicity, low effective tax rate, residency flexibility, and lower cost of living — Cyprus is the cleaner choice for most founder profiles. Malta has its use cases (particularly for certain financial services regulated activities), but for a standard founder structure it introduces complexity and cost that Cyprus avoids.
Full comparison with detailed numbers: Cyprus vs Malta Tax Comparison (2026)
Informational only. Not tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified adviser before making residency or structure decisions.
Cyprus Tax Life — taxes, residency, and relocation for expats and entrepreneurs.
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