Finland's combination of high income taxes, mandatory YEL pension contributions, and cold climate has pushed many Finnish entrepreneurs to explore alternatives. Cyprus is increasingly the destination of choice for those who want EU membership, Mediterranean weather, and a structurally low tax rate.
Here is the full comparison for 2026.
Finland's Tax Structure for Entrepreneurs
Finland operates a dual income system that affects Oy (Osakeyhtiö) owners differently from employees:
- State income tax: Progressive, up to 31.25%
- Municipal income tax: 7.5–10.5% (varies by municipality)
- Combined earned income top rate: approximately 44%
- Capital income tax: 30% up to EUR 30,000, then 34% above that
For Finnish limited company (Oy) owners distributing dividends, the rules are complex. Dividends up to 8% of the company's mathematical value are classified as capital income, with only 25% of that taxable — an effective rate of approximately 7.5%. Above that threshold, 85% of dividends become earned income, potentially pushing the effective rate above 35%.
The YEL (self-employed pension insurance) is mandatory for self-employed individuals and requires contributions of 24–25% of declared income. This is in addition to income taxes — making Finland's total burden among the highest in the EU for entrepreneurs.
The Numbers on EUR 100,000 Revenue
Finland (Oy + salary/dividends):
- Combined effective rate: approximately 38–46%
- EUR 100,000 revenue → EUR 42,000 tax → EUR 58,000 after tax
Cyprus (Ltd + Cyprus Non-Dom status):
- Corporate tax 15% + 2.65% GHS on dividends
- EUR 100,000 revenue → EUR 5,000 tax → EUR 95,000 after tax
Annual savings: EUR 37,000 on EUR 100,000 revenue. At EUR 200,000, Finland takes approximately EUR 92,000 (46%) while Cyprus takes EUR 10,000 (5%). The gap widens with income because Cyprus has no progressive rate on dividends.
The YEL Problem
The Finnish YEL system is one of the most significant hidden costs for self-employed professionals. You are required to declare a "YEL income" (separate from your actual income) and pay 24–25% of that as pension contributions. Many founders set their YEL income low to minimize contributions, but this also reduces future pension entitlements — creating a trade-off with no good answer.
In Cyprus, social insurance for directors of limited companies is structured differently. The rate is lower, capped, and the structure is more predictable.
Tax Residency: The 60-Day Option
For Finnish founders who want to relocate without spending most of the year in Cyprus, the 60-day tax residency rule allows you to establish Cyprus tax residency with just 60 days of physical presence per year.
Conditions:
- Do not spend more than 183 days in any other single country
- Do not become a tax resident of any other state
- Maintain a Cyprus address (rented or owned) and a business or employment connection in Cyprus
For Finnish professionals who split time between Helsinki, Cyprus, and other EU cities, this rule makes Cyprus tax residency achievable without a dramatic lifestyle change.
Finland's Exit Tax Considerations
Finland applies worldwide taxation to residents and has anti-avoidance rules (VML 28) that can challenge structures lacking business substance. Before formally deregistering from Finnish tax residency, founders should:
- Ensure the Cyprus company has genuine economic substance (office, employees, management decisions made in Cyprus)
- Consult a Finnish tax adviser on the CFC rules and any exit tax implications for share holdings
- Check treaty residency tie-breaker rules if there is any period of dual residence
The Finland-Cyprus double tax treaty prevents double taxation during the transition.
Practical Steps: Helsinki to Limassol
- Find accommodation in Cyprus and sign a rental contract
- Apply for the Yellow Slip (MEU1) — EU registration certificate, 2–4 weeks processing
- Get a Cyprus TIC (Tax Identification Code)
- Register for GESY (public healthcare, 2.65% of income)
- Incorporate a Cyprus Ltd (2–3 weeks via a local law firm)
- Notify Vero (Finnish Tax Administration) of change of tax residency
Limassol is the most popular destination for Finnish tech professionals moving to Cyprus — it has a significant international business community, direct flights to Helsinki, and an established expat network.
For the full relocation checklist, tax calculator, and cost of living comparison, see the complete guide to moving from Finland to Cyprus.
General information only. Consult qualified advisers in Finland and Cyprus before making any tax residency changes.
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