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Cyprus Tax Life
Cyprus Tax Life

Posted on • Originally published at cyprustaxlife.com

How to Apply for Cyprus Non-Dom Status: The Actual Process, Step by Step

Most people researching Cyprus Non-Dom status ask the wrong question. They want to know what it is — the 2.65% GHS on dividends, the zero income tax on foreign-source income, the effective ~5% rate. That part is well documented.

The question that actually matters when you arrive: how do you apply for it?

I went through this process in 2024 when I set up a company in Cyprus. What follows is what I wish someone had told me before I started — the exact documents, the realistic timeline, and the one counterintuitive fact most guides miss: there is no standalone Non-Dom application form.

First: Non-Dom Is Not a Standalone Application

This trips up almost everyone. You cannot walk into the Tax Department and submit a form that says "I would like Non-Dom status please."

Non-Dom is a tax classification that gets established through your first annual income tax return (the IR1 form), filed by the end of July for the prior fiscal year. Your accountant marks the Non-Dom election on that return, and from that point you are classified as non-domiciled for tax purposes.

The implication: if you arrive in Cyprus in March 2025 and want to be Non-Dom for fiscal year 2025, the earliest your status is formally established is when you file your IR1 in mid-2026. You can still benefit from Non-Dom treatment during 2025 (no dividend withholding), but the official classification comes via the return.

Who Qualifies

Two prerequisites:

1. Cyprus tax residency. You become a Cyprus tax resident under one of two rules:

  • The 183-day rule: spend 183+ days in Cyprus during a calendar year
  • The 60-day tax residency rule: spend at least 60 days in Cyprus, have a permanent home here (owned or rented), have business activity or employment in Cyprus, and not be a tax resident in any other country in the same year

Most founders and remote workers use the 60-day rule. It requires careful documentation of your physical presence — flight records, hotel receipts, utility bills. The Tax Department can audit it.

2. Non-domicile status. In Cypriot tax law, domicile differs from residency. You are domiciled in Cyprus only if you were born in Cyprus to Cypriot parents, or have been a Cyprus tax resident for 17 of the last 20 years. If you are a foreign national with no Cypriot heritage relocating from abroad, you qualify as non-domiciled automatically. No petition required.

For the Cyprus Non-Dom status full technical breakdown, the pillar guide covers the legal definitions in detail.

Documents to Gather (In Order)

These are not Non-Dom-specific documents. They are the foundational registration documents you need to function as a taxpayer in Cyprus. Get them in sequence because each depends on the previous.

1. Yellow Slip (MEU1) — For EU citizens, this is your registration certificate confirming legal residence in Cyprus. Required for everything else. Apply at the Civil Registry with your passport, proof of address, and financial resources. See the Yellow Slip guide for the document checklist.

2. Tax Identification Number (TIN) — Required to open a bank account, register a company, and file taxes. Obtained at the Tax Department in person, or via your accountant with a power of attorney. You need your passport and Yellow Slip.

3. Bank account — You need a TIN and Yellow Slip to open a bank account in Cyprus. Common options: Bank of Cyprus, Revolut Business, Hellenic Bank. Business accounts require company registration documents.

4. Cyprus company (if applicable) — If you plan to extract income via dividends (the main Non-Dom tax structure), you need a Cyprus-registered company. Formation takes 10-15 working days. Your accountant files everything at the Registrar of Companies.

5. GHS / GESY registration — You must register for GHS (public healthcare) separately. Employed individuals register through their employer. Self-employed and directors register directly with the HIO. GHS contributions (2.65% on dividends for Non-Dom) are how you pay for healthcare.

The Timeline — Realistically

Step Typical duration
Gather documents, book Civil Registry appointment 1-2 weeks
Yellow Slip processing 1-4 weeks
TIN registration Same day to 1 week
Bank account opening 1-4 weeks (varies significantly by bank)
Company formation 10-15 working days
GHS registration 1-2 weeks
Total to be fully operational 5-10 weeks

The bottleneck is usually the bank account. Some banks (particularly traditional Cypriot banks) have slow onboarding for new residents. Revolut Business Cyprus can be faster but has its own requirements.

Non-Dom classification itself appears on your first IR1 tax return — filed by July 31 of the year following your first year of Cyprus tax residency.

What Can Go Wrong

Missing documentation at the Civil Registry. The most common delay. Your rental contract must be in your name (not your partner's, not your employer's). A lease in someone else's name gets rejected.

Insufficient proof of financial resources. Bank statements under €2,000 are typically rejected. If employed, substitute with your employment contract and recent payslips.

Not documenting the 60-day physical presence. If you are using the 60-day rule, keep a contemporaneous log of your Cyprus days with supporting evidence. The Tax Department does check, especially in audit situations.

Paying dividends before GHS registration. If your company pays dividends before you are registered with GHS, the 2.65% GHS contribution on those dividends can become a compliance issue. Register with GHS before the first dividend distribution.

Distributing salary instead of dividends. Some founders default to paying themselves a large salary from their Cyprus company, not realizing that salary is subject to income tax under the progressive rates (0% to 35%) plus GHS on the full amount. The Non-Dom advantage is specifically on dividends, not salary. Structure your remuneration correctly from the start.

After Non-Dom Is Established: What Changes

Once you are a Cyprus tax resident and your Non-Dom election is on file:

  • Dividends from your Cyprus Ltd: 2.65% GHS only, no income tax
  • Foreign-source dividends: 0% if received by a Non-Dom (no SDC)
  • Interest income: 0% SDC for Non-Dom
  • Capital gains on shares and ETFs: 0% CGT (separate from Non-Dom, applies to all Cyprus residents)
  • Salary: taxed under normal progressive rates (Non-Dom does not help here)

The effective rate on your total income depends on how you structure salary vs. dividends. Most founders using the Cyprus structure pay a modest salary (around €15-20K/year for social insurance and GHS purposes) and extract remaining profits as dividends.

At €100K total annual income split roughly 20% salary / 80% dividends, the effective rate comes out around 5-6%. At higher incomes, it improves further.

Professional Advice Is Worth It

The setup is straightforward once you understand the sequence, but each step has edge cases. A Cyprus-based accountant who handles relocating expats will run you €1,500-2,500 for the full setup (company formation, TIN, bank account assistance, first IR1 filing). For anything beyond €50K annual savings, that fee pays for itself immediately.


Full technical guide on the Non-Dom regime: cyprustaxlife.com/learn/non-dom

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