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Company Lawyers Cyprus 2026: Cap.113 Amendments, Tax Residency & Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The 2026 legislative package has fundamentally reshaped the compliance landscape for every entity registered or tax-resident in Cyprus, and company lawyers Cyprus-wide are fielding urgent questions from boards, trustees and CFOs about what must change immediately. The tax reform laws published in the Official Gazette of the Republic of Cyprus on 31 December 2025, effective 1 January 2026, raised the corporate tax rate, abolished the deemed dividend distribution regime, and adjusted the Special Defence Contribution on dividends. Separately, amendments to the Companies Law (Cap. 113) that took effect on 6 February 2026 introduced a revised definition of “Cyprus company” and tightened administration-and-control provisions.

This article provides the practical, board-level compliance checklist that in-house counsel, company secretaries and business owners need to act on now.

Key Takeaways

  • Corporate tax rate: increased from 12.5 % to 15 %, effective 1 January 2026.
  • DDD abolished: Deemed Dividend Distribution provisions no longer apply to profits earned from 1 January 2026; transitional rules govern pre-2026 retained profits.
  • Cap.113 redefined: the Companies Law amendments (6 February 2026) change the statutory definition of a “Cyprus company” and strengthen management-and-control requirements.
  • Immediate board action required: directors should convene, adopt updated substance-evidence files, record decision-making in Cyprus, and review filing deadlines before the next quarterly compliance window.

What Changed: Cyprus Tax Reform 2026, Headline Tax Changes

The Cyprus tax reform 2026 package comprises amendments to six separate laws, all published in the Government Gazette on 31 December 2025 and operative from 1 January 2026. The legislative changes represent the most significant overhaul of Cyprus corporate taxation in over a decade, and every company with a Cyprus tax-residency claim must reassess its position.

The headline corporate income tax rate moved from 12.5 % to 15 %, aligning Cyprus with the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax threshold. While the rate increase is modest compared to most EU jurisdictions, it triggers recalculations of provisional tax assessments, transfer-pricing models, and group effective-tax-rate analyses for multinational structures.

The Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on dividends paid to Cyprus tax-resident and domiciled individuals was reduced from 17 % to 5 % for dividends paid out of profits earned from 1 January 2026. Industry observers expect this to accelerate dividend distributions in the short term and improve the attractiveness of Cyprus as a holding-company jurisdiction for owner-managed businesses.

Perhaps the most operationally significant change is the abolition of the Deemed Dividend Distribution (DDD) provisions for profits earned from 1 January 2026. Under the previous regime, companies that did not distribute at least 70 % of after-tax profits within two years of the end of the relevant tax year were deemed to have distributed those profits, triggering SDC. That deemed-distribution mechanism is now removed for current-year and future profits.

Headline Tax Changes at a Glance

Provision Pre-2026 Position From 1 January 2026
Corporate income tax rate 12.5 % 15 %
SDC on dividends (tax-resident & domiciled individuals) 17 % 5 % (on profits earned from 1 Jan 2026)
Deemed Dividend Distribution (DDD) Applied to undistributed profits after 2 years Abolished for profits earned from 1 Jan 2026
60-day personal tax-residency rule Required individual not to be tax-resident elsewhere Amended, condition of not being tax-resident in another state relaxed

Cap.113 Amendments, Summary, Effective Dates & Transitional Rules

Beyond taxation, the amendments to the Companies Law (Cap.113) published in the Official Gazette and effective 6 February 2026 carry direct implications for corporate governance, registration and the legal definition of what constitutes a “Cyprus company.” These Cap.113 amendments demand attention from every company law practitioner advising entities incorporated or administered in Cyprus.

New Definition of “Cyprus Company”

The amended Cap.113 refines the statutory definition of a “Cyprus company” by introducing explicit administration-and-control criteria alongside the existing incorporation test. Previously, any company incorporated under Cap.113 was treated as a Cyprus company regardless of where management decisions were actually taken. The 2026 amendments reinforce that a company must not only be incorporated in Cyprus but must also demonstrate that its central management and control are exercised within the Republic. This legislative change aligns company law with the long-standing tax-residency test and closes a gap that previously allowed nominal incorporation without genuine operational presence.

Effective Dates and Transitional Windows

Date Event Action Required
31 December 2025 Tax reform laws published in Official Gazette Review legislation; begin internal impact assessment
1 January 2026 Tax reform provisions take effect (corporate rate, SDC, DDD abolition) Update provisional tax calculations; adjust dividend-distribution policies
6 February 2026 Cap.113 amendments enter into force Review corporate governance structure; verify management-and-control test compliance
Ongoing (transitional) DDD transitional rules apply to pre-2026 retained profits Identify retained profits subject to old DDD regime; plan distributions or reserve for deemed liability

The practical effect of the transitional provisions is that companies cannot simply ignore retained profits accumulated before 1 January 2026. Those profits remain subject to the prior DDD rules and the two-year distribution deadline. Boards must therefore maintain two profit pools, pre-2026 and post-2026, and apply different tax treatment to each.

Tax Residency and the Management & Control Test: A Practical Board Checklist

Company tax residency in Cyprus has always been determined by the management and control test: a company is tax-resident in Cyprus if its central management and control are exercised within the Republic, regardless of where it is incorporated. The 2026 Cap.113 amendments now embed this principle in company law as well as tax law, meaning that failure to satisfy the test has both tax and corporate-governance consequences.

What Is the Management and Control Test?

At its core, the test asks a single question: where are the strategic decisions that drive the company actually made? The Tax Department and the courts examine a range of factors, including the location of board meetings, the residency of directors who attend and vote, the place where contracts are negotiated and signed, and the location of the company’s books and records. No single factor is determinative, the analysis is holistic, but the weight of evidence must point clearly to Cyprus.

10-Point Board Checklist for Company Lawyers Cyprus Entities Must Follow

  • 1. Hold board meetings in Cyprus. Schedule and physically convene at least the majority of board meetings on Cyprus soil. Remote attendance from abroad by a majority of directors can undermine the residency claim.
  • 2. Ensure a majority of directors are Cyprus-resident. Appoint directors who are tax-resident in Cyprus and who actively participate in governance.
  • 3. Record all decisions in formal board minutes. Minutes should state the meeting location, list attendees physically present, and describe the decisions taken in sufficient detail to demonstrate that strategic direction originates in Cyprus.
  • 4. Sign contracts and approve transactions in Cyprus. Key commercial agreements, banking mandates and investment decisions should be executed by authorised signatories while physically present in Cyprus.
  • 5. Maintain the company’s statutory books and records in Cyprus. The register of members, minute books, accounting records and seal should be kept at the registered office.
  • 6. Use a Cyprus-based registered office with real operational presence. A brass-plate address without staff or activity is insufficient under the substance expectations that accompany the 2026 changes.
  • 7. Route strategic communications through Cyprus. Email servers, phone lines, and correspondence addresses should be Cyprus-based for matters relating to board-level decisions.
  • 8. Prepare and sign financial statements in Cyprus. The CFO or finance director should prepare accounts locally, and the audit engagement should be managed from Cyprus.
  • 9. Maintain a decision log alongside minutes. A contemporaneous log that records who proposed each decision, the analysis considered, and the final resolution provides powerful documentary evidence in the event of a Tax Department inquiry.
  • 10. Review and update the evidence file quarterly. Compile travel records, meeting attendance sheets, communication logs and signed contracts into a single evidence file and review it at every quarterly board meeting.

Sample Board Minute Language

Boards should consider adopting minute language that explicitly confirms the location and substance of decision-making. A model opening clause might read:

“The meeting was convened at [registered office address], Nicosia, Cyprus, at [time] on [date]. The following directors were physically present in Cyprus: [names]. Having reviewed the papers circulated on [date] and having discussed the matters set out in the agenda, the board resolved as follows…”

This language should appear in every set of minutes. Where a director attends remotely, the minutes should record that fact and confirm that a majority of directors were nevertheless present in Cyprus.

Substance Requirements Cyprus: What Evidence Will Tax Authorities Want?

The management and control test does not operate in isolation. Tax authorities and, increasingly, banks conducting de-risking reviews evaluate a company’s economic substance in Cyprus to determine whether the entity has a genuine commercial rationale for its claimed tax residency. The substance requirements Cyprus companies must satisfy in 2026 are more rigorous than ever, reflecting both the legislative tightening and the practical expectations of the Tax Department and CySEC.

Substance Scorecard

Factor Minimum Standard Documentary Evidence Required
Physical premises Dedicated office space (not virtual) with signage and operational access Lease agreement; utility bills; photographs of premises
Qualified employees At least one full-time employee or dedicated staff member with relevant expertise Employment contracts; payroll records; social-insurance contributions
Board decision-making in Cyprus Majority of strategic decisions taken at board meetings held in Cyprus Board minutes; attendance records; travel itineraries of directors
Local bank accounts & financial management Operating bank accounts held with Cyprus-based banks; payments initiated locally Bank statements; authorised-signatory records
IT and communication infrastructure Cyprus-based email servers, phone lines, or IT systems for board-level functions IT service agreements; phone-line records; domain registrations
Local professional advisers Engagement of Cyprus-based auditors, lawyers and tax advisers Engagement letters; invoices; correspondence
Commercial contracts executed locally Material agreements signed by directors while physically present in Cyprus Executed contracts with signature-page metadata (date/location stamps)
Accounting records maintained locally Books of account prepared and stored at the Cyprus registered office Access to accounting software from Cyprus servers; backup logs

The practical distinction between a holding company and a trading company is critical. A pure holding entity with no employees and no active trading can still satisfy the substance test if its board meets regularly in Cyprus, its investment decisions are taken locally, and it maintains a genuine physical office. A trading company, however, will generally need a deeper footprint: local staff, customer-facing operations and active commercial contracts managed from Cyprus.

Deemed Dividend Distribution (DDD) and Transitional Rules

The abolition of the deemed dividend distribution provisions is one of the most discussed elements of the Cyprus tax reform 2026 package. For profits earned from 1 January 2026, companies are no longer required to distribute at least 70 % of after-tax profits within two years to avoid a deemed distribution and the associated SDC charge. This gives directors and shareholders far greater flexibility in capital-allocation decisions going forward.

Transitional Rules for Pre-2026 Profits

Retained profits that accrued before 1 January 2026 remain subject to the old DDD regime. If a company earned profits in, say, the 2024 tax year and has not yet distributed 70 % of those after-tax profits, the two-year clock continues to tick. Failure to distribute by the end of the two-year period will trigger a deemed distribution and SDC at the rate applicable at the time of the deemed event.

Worked Example: DDD Transitional Impact

Consider a Cyprus tax-resident company that earned €1,000,000 in after-tax profits for the 2024 tax year and distributed nothing. Under the old DDD rules, 70 % of those profits (€700,000) will be deemed distributed by 31 December 2026. SDC at 17 % would apply to that deemed distribution, producing a tax liability of €119,000. By contrast, profits of €1,000,000 earned in the 2026 tax year carry no DDD obligation at all. The board may retain the full amount indefinitely without triggering any SDC charge, and if dividends are eventually paid, the new 5 % SDC rate applies.

Boards should therefore map their retained-profit pools by tax year and calculate the remaining DDD exposure for each pre-2026 pool. Early voluntary distributions, particularly where the reduced 5 % SDC rate applies, may be strategically advantageous compared to allowing a deemed distribution to crystallise at 17 %.

Immediate Compliance Calendar & Director Action Checklist

The following timeline consolidates the key corporate compliance deadlines and board actions that company lawyers Cyprus practitioners should implement without delay. Directors who fail to act risk not only tax penalties but also challenges to their company’s tax-residency status and, increasingly, banking de-risking measures.

Compliance Timeline

Timeframe Action Responsible Party
Immediate (this week) Convene an emergency board meeting in Cyprus to acknowledge the 2026 legislative changes and resolve to update governance procedures Company secretary / board chair
Within 30 days Conduct an internal substance audit: verify premises, employee records, director-residency status, and decision-making logs In-house counsel / CFO
Within 30 days Recalculate provisional tax for 2026 at the new 15 % rate and file amended estimates with the Tax Department if necessary Tax adviser / CFO
Within 60 days Map all retained-profit pools by tax year; identify pre-2026 pools still subject to DDD; assess distribution strategy CFO / external tax adviser
Quarterly (ongoing) Review and update the evidence file (minutes, decision logs, travel records, signed contracts) Company secretary
By 31 January 2027 File corporate tax return for the 2026 tax year under the reformed rules (noting the expected new filing deadline) Tax adviser / CFO

Reporting Obligations & Key Dates by Entity Type

Entity Type Key New Obligations (Cap.113 & Tax Reform) Urgent Steps (What the Board Must Do)
Cyprus tax-resident trading company 15 % corporate tax on worldwide income; substance requirements heightened; Cap.113 administration-and-control provisions apply Recalculate provisional tax; conduct substance audit; update board-minute templates; verify local employee count
Cyprus holding company No DDD on post-2025 profits; SDC on dividends paid to resident individuals now 5 %; management-and-control test must be satisfied for both tax and company-law purposes Map retained-profit pools for DDD transitional treatment; schedule quarterly board meetings in Cyprus; compile evidence file
Non-resident branch registered in Cyprus Cap.113 registration filing obligations unchanged, but branch must ensure it does not inadvertently create Cyprus tax residency through local management decisions Review branch-governance framework; confirm that strategic decisions are documented as originating at head office abroad

Sample Board Resolution

“RESOLVED THAT, having considered the amendments to the Income Tax Law, the Special Defence Contribution Law and the Companies Law (Cap.113) effective from 1 January 2026 and 6 February 2026 respectively, the Board hereby directs the Company Secretary to: (a) update all board-minute templates to reflect the new governance requirements; (b) compile a substance-evidence file in accordance with the 10-point checklist adopted by the Board; (c) instruct the Company’s tax advisers to recalculate provisional tax at the rate of 15 %; and (d) prepare a DDD exposure report for all retained profits accrued before 1 January 2026.”

Reporting, Penalties & Enforcement Risk

Non-compliance with the 2026 changes carries risks at multiple levels. The Tax Department may challenge a company’s claimed Cyprus tax residency if the management-and-control test is not satisfied, potentially resulting in the loss of access to Cyprus’s extensive double-tax-treaty network and the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive benefits. Administrative penalties for late or incorrect filing of corporate tax returns are imposed under the Assessment and Collection of Taxes Law.

Beyond tax enforcement, Cyprus banks and financial institutions have intensified their de-risking practices. A company that cannot demonstrate adequate economic substance faces the prospect of having its banking facilities reviewed or, in extreme cases, terminated. The reputational consequences of losing a banking relationship can be more damaging than the tax penalty itself.

Practical Steps to Reduce Enforcement Risk

  • Maintain a contemporaneous evidence file. If the Tax Department opens an inquiry, the company’s first line of defence is a well-organised, date-stamped file of minutes, decision logs, travel records and contracts.
  • Engage qualified company lawyers in Cyprus to review governance structures and flag weaknesses before they attract scrutiny.
  • File all tax returns on time and at the correct rate. Late filing triggers automatic penalties and may prompt a wider audit.
  • Proactively communicate with bankers. Provide updated substance documentation to your bank’s compliance department before they request it.

When to Seek Legal Advice

The 2026 changes are not merely technical adjustments, they alter the legal foundations on which Cyprus companies operate, are taxed and are recognised under the Companies Law. Boards should seek specialist legal advice immediately if any of the following apply:

  • The majority of directors reside outside Cyprus or attend board meetings remotely from abroad.
  • The company has significant retained profits from pre-2026 tax years that have not been distributed.
  • The entity relies on Cyprus tax residency for treaty benefits, EU directive access or IP-box relief.
  • The company’s physical presence in Cyprus is limited to a registered-agent address without staff or operational activity.
  • Dividend-distribution policies need to be restructured in light of the DDD abolition and SDC rate change.

Global Law Experts maintains a Cyprus legal guide and a searchable directory of qualified Cyprus lawyers with expertise in corporate governance, company law and tax compliance to assist boards navigating the 2026 reforms.

Conclusion: Five Immediate Actions for Boards

The 2026 reforms demand prompt, documented action. Company lawyers Cyprus entities rely on should be advising boards to take the following steps without delay:

  1. Convene a board meeting in Cyprus this month to formally acknowledge the legislative changes and adopt updated governance procedures.
  2. Conduct a substance audit, verify premises, employees, decision-making records and communication infrastructure against the substance scorecard.
  3. Recalculate provisional tax at the new 15 % rate and file amended estimates with the Tax Department where necessary.
  4. Map all retained-profit pools by tax year and prepare a DDD exposure report for pre-2026 profits, considering whether early voluntary distributions at the reduced 5 % SDC rate are advantageous.
  5. Compile and maintain a quarterly evidence file, minutes, decision logs, travel records and signed contracts, ready for inspection by the Tax Department or banking compliance teams.

This article provides general guidance on the Cyprus tax reform 2026 and Cap.113 amendments. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for specific professional counsel tailored to your company’s circumstances. Readers are encouraged to seek qualified legal advice before taking action based on the information provided.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paris M. Mavronichis at Paris Mavronichis & Co LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Department of Registrar of Companies and Intellectual Property (Cyprus)
  2. Ministry of Finance, Tax Department (Republic of Cyprus)
  3. PwC Cyprus, The Cyprus Tax Reform (2026)
  4. KPMG Cyprus, The Cyprus Tax Reform (PDF 2026)
  5. Harneys, Key Insights of the 2026 Cyprus Tax Reform
  6. Chambers, Economic Substance in Cyprus Companies
  7. BDO, Cyprus Tax Reform Includes Corporate Tax Rate Increase

FAQs

What are the key Cap.113 amendments introduced in 2026 and when do they take effect?
The principal Cap.113 amendments refine the definition of a “Cyprus company” to require genuine administration and control in Cyprus, not just incorporation. These amendments were published in the Official Gazette and took effect on 6 February 2026. The broader tax reform package, covering corporate tax rates, SDC and DDD, took effect on 1 January 2026.
The revised definition aligns company law with the tax-law management-and-control test, meaning a company must now demonstrate that its strategic decisions are taken in Cyprus for both corporate-law and tax purposes. Boards that have been conducting governance abroad risk losing both their legal standing under Cap.113 and their Cyprus tax-residency status.
Convene a board meeting in Cyprus, adopt an updated substance-evidence file, record all decisions in formal minutes, appoint locally resident officers where needed, recalculate provisional tax at 15 %, and map retained-profit pools for DDD transitional treatment.
Yes. The DDD provisions have been abolished for profits earned from 1 January 2026. However, retained profits accrued before that date remain subject to the old DDD rules and the two-year distribution deadline. Companies must track pre-2026 and post-2026 profit pools separately.
Key evidence includes: a registered-premises lease and utility bills, employment contracts and payroll records, board minutes recording physically-attended meetings, decision logs, signed commercial contracts with location metadata, IT service agreements for Cyprus-based infrastructure, and engagement letters from local professional advisers.
The corporate income tax rate increased from 12.5 % to 15 %, effective 1 January 2026. This aligns Cyprus with the OECD Pillar Two global minimum tax floor and applies to all Cyprus tax-resident companies on their worldwide income.
Immediately, particularly if your board makes decisions outside Cyprus, if you have material undistributed pre-2026 profits, if the company has limited physical presence on the island, or if dividend or group-structuring planning is affected by the SDC and DDD changes.

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Company Lawyers Cyprus 2026: Cap.113 Amendments, Tax Residency & Compliance

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