April 2025 changed the tax landscape for thousands of British entrepreneurs. The UK abolished its non-dom regime, ending the remittance basis that had allowed long-term UK residents to shelter foreign income from UK tax. For anyone drawing substantial dividends, the shift was immediate and expensive: UK higher rate taxpayers now face 33.75% on dividends, and additional rate taxpayers 39.35%.
Cyprus has become the most frequently cited alternative, and the numbers explain why.
What You Pay in Cyprus vs the UK
Under Cyprus Non-Dom status, dividends are entirely exempt from income tax and Special Defence Contribution (SDC) for up to 17 years. The only charge is a 2.65% GHS (General Healthcare System) contribution, capped at EUR 4,770 per year on the first EUR 180,000 of dividend income. Above that threshold, you pay nothing additional.
A side-by-side comparison:
| Factor | UK (post April 2025) | Cyprus Non-Dom |
|---|---|---|
| Dividend income tax | 8.75% / 33.75% / 39.35% | 0% |
| Healthcare/social charge | Included above | 2.65% GHS (capped) |
| Capital gains on shares | 10% / 20% | 0% |
| Corporate tax | 25% | 15% |
| Inheritance tax | Up to 40% | 0% |
On GBP 100,000 in dividends: a UK higher rate taxpayer pays roughly GBP 33,750. A Cyprus Non-Dom in the same position pays approximately EUR 2,650. That difference compounds quickly for anyone running a founder-owned business.
How Non-Dom Status Works for UK Nationals
Virtually every UK national moving to Cyprus for the first time qualifies for Non-Dom status automatically. The test is simple: you must not have been domiciled in Cyprus by origin, and you must not have been Cyprus tax resident for the preceding 20 years. Both conditions are almost always met for people relocating from the UK.
The Non-Dom declaration is submitted to the Cyprus Tax Department during tax registration. A Cyprus tax advisor handles this as a standard part of onboarding. Once granted, the status lasts 17 years from the date you become a Cyprus tax resident — a long runway for planning.
The mechanics of dividend tax in Cyprus under Non-Dom: corporate tax at 15% on profits, then dividend distributions at 2.65% GHS only. No further income tax layers. Combined effective rate on pre-tax profits distributed as dividends: approximately 17-18%, with the personal-level rate sitting below 3%.
The 60-Day Rule: You Don't Have to Live There Full-Time
One of the most practical features of Cyprus tax residency for internationally mobile founders is the 60-day tax residency rule. Instead of the standard 183-day requirement, you can establish Cyprus tax residency by spending just 60 days there — provided five conditions are all met in the same calendar year:
- At least 60 days physically present in Cyprus
- No more than 183 days in any single other country
- Not a tax resident in any other country during the year
- A permanent home in Cyprus (owned or rented)
- A Cyprus economic tie: company directorship, employment, or business activity
This matters for UK founders who need to maintain some presence in the UK for business or family reasons. As long as you stay below 183 days in the UK during the year — which is the threshold that triggers UK tax residency under the Statutory Residence Test — the 60-day option works.
The UK-Cyprus Double Tax Treaty
The UK and Cyprus have had a Double Taxation Convention in force since 1975. For dividend flows, the key provision is zero withholding tax on dividends from a UK company to a Cyprus tax resident who controls 25% or more of the voting power. Below that threshold, the maximum withholding is 15%.
For a UK founder who becomes Cyprus tax resident under Non-Dom status and controls their UK operating company, dividends paid to Cyprus attract 0% UK withholding tax under the treaty. Cyprus then applies only 2.65% GHS. The net rate on distributions is under 3%.
Getting Registered: The Yellow Slip and Tax Registration
Once you establish physical presence in Cyprus, two key administrative steps follow: obtaining your Yellow Slip (the MEU1 certificate of registration for EU citizens) and registering for a Cyprus Tax Identification Number (TIN) with the Tax Department.
The Yellow Slip documents your right of residence and is required for opening bank accounts, signing company documents, and formal Non-Dom status application. The TIN registration formalises your Cyprus tax residency. Both are handled through Cypriot advisors as standard procedure.
Pitfalls to Avoid
Two issues catch UK founders off guard:
UK temporary non-residence rules: If you return to UK tax residency within five years of leaving, dividends from close companies and certain capital gains realised while non-resident become taxable in the UK. Time your dividend distributions and capital events carefully during the absence period.
UK deemed domicile for IHT: Even after leaving the UK, individuals who were deemed UK domiciled (15 of the previous 20 years of residence) remain within the scope of UK Inheritance Tax on worldwide assets for three years after departure. The non-dom income tax change doesn't remove this IHT exposure. Estate planning requires separate advice.
The transition from UK non-dom to Cyprus Non-Dom is well-documented and several established advisory firms in Cyprus specialise in British expats making this move. The tax math is straightforward; the implementation requires proper sequencing.
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