Freelancers considering Cyprus face an immediate question: do you operate as a sole trader, or do you go through a Cyprus LTD? The answer depends on your income level, client base, and how seriously you want to optimise your tax position. Here is the honest breakdown for 2026.
Option 1: Sole Trader (Self-Employed Individual)
The simplest path. You invoice clients directly as a Cyprus tax resident individual. No company registration required. Income is declared on your personal Cyprus tax return.
Tax treatment:
- Personal income tax bands apply (0% up to EUR 22,000 / 20% on EUR 22,000–32,000 / 25% on EUR 32,000–42,000 / 30% on EUR 42,000–72,000 / 35% above)
- Social insurance at 16.6% of declared net income (self-employed rate), capped on annual insurable earnings of approximately EUR 62,868
- GHS contribution at 2.65% of all income
For a freelancer earning EUR 60,000/year net with reasonable expenses, effective income tax might run around 18-20% on the taxable portion, plus social insurance and GHS on top. Total effective burden: roughly 25-30% for a mid-level earner.
This is still well below most of Western Europe, but it is not the 17-18% headline figure that gets cited for Cyprus.
Option 2: Cyprus LTD with Non-Dom Dividend Treatment
This is the structure that produces the well-known effective rate of approximately 17-18% for higher earners. Here is how it works:
- Register a Cyprus private limited company
- Invoice clients through the company
- The company pays 15% corporate tax on net profits
- You take income as dividends
- As a Cyprus Non-Dom individual, dividends are subject only to 2.65% GHS — zero income tax, zero Special Defence Contribution
On EUR 100,000 revenue with EUR 15,000 in expenses, the company has EUR 85,000 in profit. Corporate tax at 15% = EUR 12,750. Remaining EUR 72,250 distributed as dividends, GHS at 2.65% = EUR 1,914. Total tax: approximately EUR 14,664, or about 14.7% effective on revenue (or 17.2% on gross profit).
The Non-Dom window lasts 17 years from first establishing Cyprus tax residency. Almost everyone moving to Cyprus for the first time qualifies — you simply cannot have been a Cyprus tax resident for 20 of the last 25 years.
When Does the LTD Structure Make Sense?
The LTD structure involves setup and ongoing costs:
- Company formation: EUR 1,500–2,500
- Annual accounting and audit: EUR 1,500–3,000/year
- Registered office and secretary: EUR 400–800/year
- Total annual overhead: EUR 2,000–4,000/year
Break-even versus sole trader is typically around EUR 40,000–50,000 in annual freelance income. Above EUR 60,000, the tax saving usually justifies the overhead by a wide margin.
Below EUR 30,000, sole trader is simpler and the difference in effective rate may not justify the administration.
VAT Registration
Freelancers providing services to EU or non-EU clients need to understand Cyprus VAT rules:
- Threshold for mandatory registration: EUR 15,600 annual taxable turnover
- Standard rate: 19%
- B2B services to EU clients: Under reverse charge rules, you do not charge VAT; the client accounts for it in their country
- Non-EU clients: Generally outside scope of Cyprus VAT
- B2C digital services to EU consumers: Complex rules apply; you may need to register for the One-Stop-Shop (OSS) scheme
Most freelancers working exclusively for business clients (B2B) outside Cyprus have minimal Cyprus VAT exposure. Purely local revenue over EUR 15,600 triggers registration and quarterly filings.
Establishing Tax Residency First
None of the above applies until you are actually a Cyprus tax resident. You need either:
- More than 183 days in Cyprus in a calendar year, or
- To meet the 60-day tax residency rule — 60 days in Cyprus, no other country's tax residency, a permanent home in Cyprus, and some local economic activity
For freelancers with no fixed employer, the 60-day route is often attractive. You can spend significant time elsewhere while qualifying in Cyprus — as long as you are not also tax resident elsewhere.
Once resident, register with the Cyprus Tax Department for a Tax Identification Code (TIC). For EU nationals, also get your Yellow Slip (the MEU1 registration certificate), which is required to open a bank account.
Social Insurance: The Freelancer's Biggest Surprise
Many freelancers focus on income tax and overlook social insurance. In Cyprus, self-employed individuals contribute 16.6% on declared insurable income — paid entirely by the individual (no employer share).
On EUR 60,000 of net income, that is EUR 9,960 in social insurance alone. The cap applies at approximately EUR 62,868 of insurable earnings (2026), so the maximum annual social insurance bill is roughly EUR 10,436.
This cost does not apply to dividend income from a Cyprus LTD. The LTD structure effectively removes social insurance from the equation for income drawn as dividends (though a nominal director's salary may still trigger some social insurance).
Freelance Contracts and Invoice Structure
Practical note on invoicing: if you operate as a Cyprus LTD invoicing non-Cyprus EU clients, include your Cyprus VAT number on invoices (even if no VAT is charged under reverse charge). Foreign clients will ask for it.
For non-EU clients, standard commercial invoices work. Ensure your contracts clearly state the governing law and jurisdiction — using Cyprus or English law is common and practical.
What Most Freelancers Do in Practice
In Limassol and Paphos — the two main expat hubs — the typical pattern for a relocated freelancer earning EUR 80,000+:
- Arrive, get Yellow Slip and bank account (month 1)
- Register Cyprus LTD, engage local accountant (months 1-3)
- Transfer existing client contracts to the new entity
- File quarterly VAT returns if applicable
- Pay corporate tax twice yearly (provisional in June/September, final in August of following year)
- Distribute dividends annually or quarterly
The system is not complicated. It requires a decent local accountant (budget EUR 150–200/month for a straightforward freelance LTD) and some initial paperwork. After that, the ongoing cost is low and the tax saving is significant.
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