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Last updated: 24 May 2026
If you are asking how do I reinstate a company in Cyprus, the answer depends on one critical variable: how much time has passed since the company was struck off the Register. Cyprus law provides two distinct routes for the restoration of a struck-off company, administrative restoration using Form HE64, available within 24 months of dissolution, and restoration by court order, which remains available well beyond that window. The 2025 amendments to Companies Law (Cap. 113) streamlined several procedural certification steps, making the administrative route faster for eligible applicants while reinforcing the court’s equitable discretion for more complex cases.
This guide walks directors, shareholders, corporate service providers, and creditors through every step, document, cost, and risk involved in bringing a dissolved Cyprus company back to legal life in 2026.
The restoration of a Cyprus company follows one of two paths. Your eligibility for each depends primarily on the date the company was struck off and who is making the application.
Immediate next steps checklist:
The Registrar of Companies in Cyprus may strike a company off the Register under Companies Law (Cap. 113) when it fails to file annual returns, does not maintain a registered office, or appears to have ceased carrying on business. The Registrar typically issues warning notices before proceeding, but many companies miss these communications, particularly where directors reside overseas or the registered office address is no longer monitored.
Once a company is struck off, it is dissolved and ceases to exist as a legal entity. The consequences are immediate and far-reaching, affecting directors, shareholders, creditors, and commercial counterparties alike. Companies that were originally registered in Cyprus for their structural advantages may find those benefits abruptly reversed.
Understanding which route applies to your situation is the single most important decision in the restoration process. Both paths lead to the same legal outcome, the company is treated as though it had never been struck off, but they differ substantially in cost, complexity, and timeline.
Administrative restoration was introduced to provide a streamlined, Registrar-led process for companies that qualify. The form for administrative restoration, known as Form HE64, is submitted directly to the Registrar of Companies and does not require a court hearing.
Who may apply: A director or member (shareholder) of the company at the time it was struck off. Third parties, including creditors, do not have standing to use this route and must apply to the Court instead.
The 24-month limit: The application must be made within 24 months of the date the company’s name was struck off the Register. This is a hard deadline, once it passes, the administrative route is no longer available, regardless of the merits of the application.
What changed with the 2025 amendments: The 2025 amendments to Companies Law (Cap. 113) streamlined certain procedural certification steps associated with administrative restoration. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a reduction in processing times, as applicants face fewer intermediate verification stages at the Registrar. The amendments also clarified evidentiary requirements, giving practitioners greater certainty about the supporting documentation the Registrar expects alongside the HE64 form.
The HE64 must be accompanied by supporting evidence demonstrating that the company should be restored. The Registrar requires satisfaction that the company was carrying on business at the time of strike-off, or had other valid reasons for restoration, and that all outstanding statutory obligations have been addressed.
| Required Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Completed Form HE64 | Formal application for administrative restoration |
| Sworn affidavit of continuity | Confirms the company was operational or had legitimate grounds for restoration at the time of strike-off |
| All outstanding annual returns (Form HE32) | Brings the company’s statutory filing record up to date |
| Audited or certified financial statements | Demonstrates financial status and compliance with accounting obligations |
| Tax clearance certificate (Tax Department) | Confirms all tax obligations are settled or arrangements are in place |
| Proof of registered office address | Confirms the company has a valid registered office in Cyprus |
| Director and shareholder identification | Verifies identity of current officers and members |
| Bona vacantia waiver (if applicable) | Where company assets vested in the Republic, evidence of consent or arrangements for return |
| Payment of all outstanding Registrar fees and penalties | Clears accumulated filing penalties and restoration processing fees |
Where the 24-month window for administrative restoration has expired, or where the applicant is a creditor or other interested party rather than a director or member, the only route available is restoration by court order. This process involves filing an application with the District Court, which exercises equitable discretion in deciding whether to order the Registrar to restore the company to the Register.
Who can apply: Any person who was a director, member, or creditor of the company, or any other person who appears to the Court to have a legitimate interest. This broad standing provision makes court restoration the route of choice for creditors seeking to pursue claims against dissolved companies, as well as for parties involved in ongoing litigation or contractual disputes.
When the court route is preferable:
Filing a successful HE64 application requires meticulous preparation. The Registrar will reject incomplete submissions, and errors can push the applicant past the 24-month deadline. Experienced corporate service providers typically manage this process on behalf of directors and shareholders to avoid procedural pitfalls.
Practical filing sequence:
Typical fee ranges and timelines:
| Cost Component | Estimated Range (€) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Registrar restoration fee | €100–€500 | Depends on years outstanding |
| Late-filing penalties (annual returns) | €50–€500 per year overdue | Accumulates for each missed year |
| Tax clearance / settlement | Variable | Depends on outstanding tax liabilities and penalties |
| Audit and accounting fees | €500–€2,000+ | Based on complexity and number of years |
| Legal / professional fees | €500–€2,000 | Preparation of affidavits, HE64 completion, filing |
| Processing time (Registrar) | 4–12 weeks | Assumes complete documentation submitted |
Red flags that can delay or derail an HE64 application:
A court application for restoration of a Cyprus company is made by originating summons to the District Court. The applicant must serve the application on the Registrar of Companies and the Attorney General (where bona vacantia is in issue). The supporting evidence typically includes sworn affidavits setting out the history of the company, the reason for strike-off, the grounds for restoration, and the applicant’s interest in the matter. The court may require evidence that the company was solvent at the time of dissolution, that its restoration would not prejudice creditors, and that outstanding statutory obligations will be addressed promptly upon restoration.
The Registrar, the Attorney General, and any creditor or affected party may oppose the application. Common grounds for objection include outstanding tax liabilities, unresolved disputes between directors, or concerns that restoration would be used to circumvent regulatory obligations. The Court retains equitable discretion and may impose conditions on the restoration order, for example, requiring the company to file all outstanding returns within a specified period, to settle specific debts, or to change its name where a conflict has arisen.
Court restoration is inherently slower and more expensive than the administrative route. The timeline depends on court listing availability, the complexity of service requirements (particularly where respondents are overseas), and whether objections are filed. The following comparison table summarises the key differences between the two restoration routes.
| Feature | Administrative (HE64) | Court Order |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility window | Within 24 months of strike-off | Any time (practically up to 20 years under Cap. 113 interpretation) |
| Who may apply | Director or member (shareholder) | Any interested party (directors, members, creditors, other) |
| Typical timeline | 4–12 weeks (if documents complete) | 3–9 months (depends on service and objections) |
| Evidence standard | Registrar satisfaction; statutory forms and affidavits | Court’s equitable discretion; sworn evidence; possible hearings |
| Typical cost (professional + fees) | €500–€3,000 (varies) | €2,000–€15,000+ (depends on complexity) |
| Practitioner-estimated success rate | High, if documentation is complete and timely | High, but conditional orders are common |
Once a company is restored, whether by the Registrar or by court order, it is treated as if it had never been struck off. However, this legal fiction does not erase the practical disruptions that occurred during the period of dissolution. Understanding how restructuring and insolvency interact can help directors navigate the post-restoration landscape.
Every restoration is different. The following three scenarios illustrate the range of complexity, cost, and duration that applicants may encounter when seeking to reinstate a company in Cyprus.
| Scenario | Estimated Cost (€) | Estimated Timeline | Key Factors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Simple inactive company, struck off 10 months ago; no assets; no disputes; director applies via HE64 | €1,000–€2,500 | 6–10 weeks | Straightforward filing; limited outstanding returns; tax clearance obtained quickly |
| Creditor-led restoration, struck off 3 years ago; creditor applies to Court to pursue debt claim | €4,000–€8,000 | 4–7 months | Court application required (beyond 24 months); creditor standing; service on Registrar and AG; no opposition anticipated |
| Disputed restoration, struck off 5 years ago; bona vacantia assets; director and creditor disagree on terms | €8,000–€15,000+ | 6–12 months | Complex court hearing; contested evidence; bona vacantia recovery; conditional court order likely |
The following 10-step timeline outlines the typical process from initial assessment to Registrar decision or court judgment. While designed primarily for the HE64 administrative route, steps 1–4 also apply to court restoration preparation.
For the court route, add an additional 2–4 weeks for preparation of the originating summons and supporting evidence, followed by 2–6 months for court listing, service, and hearing.
Reinstating a company in Cyprus is a time-sensitive process with significant legal and commercial consequences. Whether you are within the 24-month window for HE64 administrative restoration or require a court application, the key to a successful outcome is thorough preparation, accurate documentation, and early engagement with the Registrar and Tax Department. Explore the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with a Cyprus company law specialist who can assess your eligibility, prepare the required filings, and guide the application through to completion. For broader guidance on international commercial and company law matters, Global Law Experts provides access to vetted practitioners across all major jurisdictions.
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.
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