Turkey and Cyprus are geographic neighbors — on a clear day you can see Turkey from Cape Greco in eastern Cyprus. The flight from Larnaca to Istanbul takes just over an hour. In taxation, the two countries are in different worlds.
Here are the actual numbers for 2026 and why the gap matters more than the headline rates suggest.
The Core Tax Comparison
Turkey charges 25% corporate income tax on resident companies in 2026 (raised from 20% in FY2023). On top of that, dividends distributed to shareholders attract a 15% withholding tax. Total extraction burden: approximately 36.25% from gross profit to personal income.
Cyprus under Non-Dom status: 15% corporate tax, then 0% personal income tax on dividends with only 2.65% GHS (healthcare levy) applying. Total burden: approximately 17.25%.
The gap is roughly 19 percentage points.
| Tax item | Turkey 2026 | Cyprus 2026 (Non-Dom) |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax | 25% | 15% |
| Dividend tax / withholding | 15% | 0% income + 2.65% GHS |
| Combined extraction burden | ~36.25% | ~17.25% |
| Capital gains on shares | Exempt after 2 years | Fully exempt |
| Personal income tax (top) | 40% | 35% on employment |
| EU member | No | Yes (since 2004) |
| Eurozone | No (TRY) | Yes (EUR) |
| Schengen | No | Yes |
What That Looks Like on Real Numbers
On EUR 100,000 in company profits:
- Turkey: EUR 25,000 corporate tax. Remaining EUR 75,000 as dividend minus 15% WHT = EUR 11,250. You net EUR 63,750. Total tax: EUR 36,250.
- Cyprus (Non-Dom): EUR 15,000 corporate tax. Remaining EUR 85,000 as dividend minus 2.65% GHS = EUR 2,252. You net EUR 82,748. Total tax: EUR 17,252.
The difference on EUR 100K in profits is roughly EUR 19,000 per year. At EUR 500K, it exceeds EUR 95,000 annually.
The Currency Risk Factor
The Turkish Lira has lost approximately 80% of its value against the euro between 2019 and 2024. For EUR-denominated businesses or founders holding savings in EUR, running via a Turkish entity creates structural currency risk that the headline 36% tax rate does not even capture.
Cyprus uses the euro, operates inside SEPA, and offers EU-standard banking. Turkey does not.
Turkey's Personal Income Tax
Turkey's progressive income tax scale in 2026 runs from 15% at the lowest bracket to 40% above approximately TRY 3 million per year. At April 2026 exchange rates, that threshold is roughly EUR 75,000. Many mid-income professionals and business owners hit the 40% rate on personal income.
Cyprus caps personal income tax at 35% on employment income above EUR 60,000. Non-Dom holders receiving dividends pay no personal income tax on those dividends at all.
Who Qualifies for Cyprus Non-Dom?
To access the Cyprus Non-Dom status structure, you need to be a Cyprus tax resident and have not been a Cyprus tax resident in any of the previous 20 years before your application.
The fastest residency route for EU citizens is the 60-day tax residency rule: spend at least 60 days in Cyprus during the tax year, maintain a place of residence here, and do not be a tax resident in any other country. No 183-day requirement.
For non-EU citizens, including Turkish nationals, the Permanent Residence by Investment scheme requires a minimum EUR 300,000 purchase of qualifying new-build property.
First Step After Moving: The Yellow Slip
EU citizens who move to Cyprus need to register with the Civil Registry and get the Yellow Slip (MEU1 certificate). It confirms your right to reside under EU freedom of movement and is required before opening a bank account or registering with the tax authority.
Non-EU citizens including Turkish nationals follow the Immigration Department track and apply for a residence permit directly.
The Real Effective Rate in Cyprus
The ~17.25% combined rate assumes you distribute all profits as dividends with no deductions. With legitimate business expenses — software, equipment, professional services, travel — a company generating EUR 200,000 in revenue typically reports EUR 60,000-80,000 in taxable profit. The real effective rate on total revenue often lands around 4-6%, with 5% being the commonly cited benchmark for a well-structured Non-Dom founder.
That benchmark holds for 17 years under Non-Dom status, after which SDC (Special Defence Contribution) applies on dividends.
The EU Factor
Beyond taxes, Cyprus offers:
- EU legal entity recognition (Cyprus LTD invoices are fully accepted across the EU)
- SEPA transfers without FX costs
- Schengen residency
- Access to EU banking relationships
- EUR-denominated contracts and accounts
Turkey has been an EU candidate since 1987 with accession talks effectively stalled. For a business serving EU clients or needing EU banking relationships, that gap has practical consequences beyond taxation.
This is general information, not tax or legal advice. Rates quoted are for the 2026 tax year. Consult a licensed Cyprus tax advisor before making structural decisions.
Top comments (0)