Most real estate investors moving between countries focus on one number: capital gains tax. They should look harder at the full picture — rental income treatment, inheritance tax, annual property levies, and the interaction between corporate and personal tax when structuring portfolios across multiple countries.
Cyprus handles these differently than almost every other EU member state, and the differences are material.
How Real Estate Investors Are Taxed Across Europe
For context, here are approximate effective rates for a real estate investor earning EUR 80,000 in combined rental and investment income:
| Country | Approximate Effective Rate |
|---|---|
| UK | ~28% |
| Germany | ~30% |
| France | ~30% |
| Spain | ~24% |
| Netherlands | ~36% |
| Cyprus (Non-Dom) | ~5% |
The Netherlands figure is particularly striking because it reflects the Box 3 wealth tax — a deemed return on net assets that applies even when actual returns are zero. German landlords face progressive income tax on rental income plus solidarity surcharge. France applies prélèvements sociaux at 17.2% on top of income tax.
The Cyprus Tax Structure for Property Investors
The key facts for Cyprus in 2026:
- Capital gains on overseas property: 0%
- Capital gains on shares (REITs, property companies): 0%
- Capital gains on Cyprus real estate: 20% (after indexation and lifetime exemptions)
- Rental income from overseas (Non-Dom): zero income tax, only 2.65% GHS
- Rental income from Cyprus property: taxed at normal income tax brackets
- Inheritance tax on real estate: 0%
- Annual property tax: 0% (IPT abolished 2017, small municipal levy 0.1-0.35% applies)
For an investor with overseas holdings — property in London, Madrid, or Berlin, shares in international REITs — Cyprus offers a uniquely clean tax environment once you establish residency and Cyprus Non-Dom status.
What Non-Dom Actually Does for Investors
Non-Dom status in Cyprus exempts you from Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends and, crucially, eliminates income tax on dividends from foreign sources. Since 2026, the SDC rate for domiciled residents dropped from 17% to 5% on dividends. For Non-Dom residents, that rate is still 0% — only the 2.65% GHS contribution applies.
For a property investor receiving rental income from an overseas portfolio through a corporate structure, this translates to an effective rate in the 5-6% range on distributions, compared to 28-36% in the UK or Netherlands.
Qualifying for Cyprus Tax Residency
To access Non-Dom treatment, you must be tax resident in Cyprus. The 60-day tax residency rule is the relevant option for investors who split their time across multiple countries.
The rule requires a minimum of 60 days present in Cyprus per year, no more than 183 days in any other single country, and evidence of economic substance in Cyprus — which for property investors typically means owning or renting a property there and maintaining some form of business registration or employment.
Investors who already own Cypriot property as part of their portfolio have a natural advantage here: the property itself helps establish the economic tie requirement.
The Yellow Slip First
EU citizens establishing residency in Cyprus start with the MEU1 registration, known locally as the Yellow Slip. This document is the first step before opening bank accounts, obtaining a tax identification number, or filing for Non-Dom status. The Yellow Slip guide outlines what to bring and where to apply — the process requires an in-person visit to the Civil Registry and Migration Department.
Inheritance Planning Angle
Cyprus has no inheritance tax and no gift tax on most transfers. For investors with significant property portfolios, structuring holdings via a Cyprus holding company can provide a clean succession mechanism: shares in a Cyprus company transfer with zero inheritance tax at the Cyprus level, and capital gains on those shares are exempt.
This contrasts sharply with the UK (40% inheritance tax above the nil-rate band), France (45% for some transfers), and Germany (up to 50% for non-close relatives).
North Cyprus vs Republic of Cyprus
It is worth separating these clearly: only the Republic of Cyprus (the southern, EU-member portion) offers the Non-Dom regime, EU legal protections, and the full range of benefits described here. Property in North Cyprus sits in a legally uncertain position due to the ongoing territorial dispute and is outside the EU framework. Investors in the Republic should be aware of this distinction when evaluating the island broadly.
Practical Sequence for Property Investors
- Establish a rental or owned address in the Republic of Cyprus
- Obtain the Yellow Slip (MEU1 registration)
- Get a Cyprus tax identification number (TIC)
- Open a Cyprus bank account (local banks or EMIs like Revolut)
- Apply for Non-Dom status with the Tax Department
- Restructure any existing overseas holdings for optimal treatment
The full process from arrival to confirmed Non-Dom status takes approximately two to three months. Accounting costs for an investor structure run EUR 3,000-5,000 annually depending on complexity.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Consult a qualified Cyprus tax advisor before making structural decisions.
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