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how to register a ship mortgage

How to Register a Ship Mortgage in Cyprus: Step-by-step Filing, Deed of Covenants & Forms

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to register a ship mortgage is essential for any shipowner, lender or maritime finance counsel dealing with Cyprus-flagged vessels. Cyprus maintains one of the largest and most reputable open ship registries in the world, and a properly recorded mortgage is the foundation of ship finance security under its Merchant Shipping Law. This guide walks through every stage of the process, from the documents required for the registration of a mortgage on a Cyprus ship, through the deed of covenants, to the final endorsement by the Registrar of Cyprus Ships, so that filing parties can avoid costly rejections and delays.

It also covers discharge, transfer of an existing mortgage and the consular legalisation options available when signatories are located abroad.

Last updated: 22 June 2026. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should engage qualified Cyprus maritime counsel before filing.

Why Register a Ship in Cyprus, Registry Benefits and Legal Effect

Under international maritime conventions administered by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), every seagoing vessel must be registered with a flag state. Registration confers nationality on the ship, determines the law that governs ownership and security interests, and enables the vessel to fly a recognised flag when trading internationally. Cyprus, as an EU member state and a signatory to major IMO conventions, offers a flag that is widely accepted by port-state-control authorities, P&I clubs and commercial charterers alike.

Key Benefits of the Cyprus Flag

  • Favourable tonnage-tax regime. Cyprus-flagged ships benefit from one of the EU’s most competitive tonnage tax systems, approved by the European Commission.
  • EU and IMO compliance. Registration brings the vessel within the EU regulatory framework and IMO safety and environmental standards, which facilitates trading access to major ports.
  • Transparent mortgage registration system. The Register of Cyprus Ships provides a publicly searchable record of ownership and encumbrances, giving lenders confidence that their security interest is enforceable and discoverable.
  • Legal certainty. Cyprus Merchant Shipping Law, modelled on English common-law principles, offers well-established rules on mortgage priority, enforcement and judicial sale.

Because registration links a vessel to Cyprus law, the ship mortgage registration requirements under that law become the controlling rules for creating, perfecting and discharging any mortgage over the vessel.

What Is a Ship Mortgage Under Cyprus Law, Definitions and Legal Nature

A ship mortgage is a registrable charge over a vessel (or a share in a vessel) that gives a lender, the mortgagee, security for repayment of a loan or other financial obligation. Under the Cyprus Merchant Shipping (Registration of Ships, Sales and Mortgages) Laws, a mortgage is created by the execution of a mortgage instrument in the prescribed form and takes effect only once it is recorded in the Register of Cyprus Ships maintained by the Department of Merchant Shipping.

Priority between competing mortgages is determined by the date and time of registration, not the date of execution. This makes prompt filing critical for any lender. A registered mortgage gives the mortgagee the right to enforce its security through judicial sale of the vessel in admiralty proceedings if the borrower defaults. The mortgage does not transfer ownership; the mortgagor (shipowner) retains possession and the right to trade the vessel unless the mortgage instrument or deed of covenants provides otherwise.

It is important to distinguish ship mortgages from maritime liens. Maritime liens, such as those arising from crew wages, salvage or collision damage, arise by operation of law and take priority over registered mortgages without the need for registration. A ship mortgage, by contrast, is a voluntary, contractual security interest that must be perfected through registration to bind third parties.

Ship Mortgage vs Real-Estate Mortgage in Cyprus

Readers searching for mortgage deposit requirements or LTV ratios should note that those concepts relate to real-estate finance under the Cyprus Land Registry system, which is an entirely separate legal regime. Ship mortgage practice is governed by the Merchant Shipping Laws and the procedures of the Department of Merchant Shipping, not the District Lands Office.

Pre-Filing Checklist, Documents Required for the Registration of a Mortgage on a Cyprus Ship

Before filing with the Registrar of Cyprus Ships, the applicant must assemble a complete set of documents. According to the Department of Merchant Shipping, the filing must include a written application submitted by a local Cyprus advocate together with advocate stamps. The table below sets out each document, whether an original is required, and any authentication or translation notes.

Document Original Required? Notarisation / Apostille Certified Translation Needed? Notes
Written application by a Cyprus advocate Yes No No (filed in English or Greek) Must bear advocate stamps (currently €30)
Mortgage deed (prescribed form) Yes, original(s) If signed abroad: notarisation + apostille or consular legalisation If not in English or Greek Must identify vessel by name, port of registry, official number and IMO number
Deed of covenants (if separate) Yes, original or certified copy Same as mortgage deed If not in English or Greek Sets out covenants, lender remedies, acceleration, insurance and maintenance obligations
Board resolution or equivalent corporate authorisation of the mortgagor Certified copy Notarised and apostilled if foreign entity If not in English or Greek Must authorise execution of the mortgage and identify authorised signatories
Power of Attorney (if signed by an attorney-in-fact) Original or certified copy Notarised and apostilled If not in English or Greek Must specifically authorise mortgage execution
Certificate of registration / transcript of register Certified copy No (issued by Registrar) N/A Confirms vessel details and registered owner
Certificate of incorporation and good standing of the mortgagor (if a company) Certified copy Apostilled if foreign If not in English or Greek Registrar verifies legal existence
Schedule of secured obligations / loan details Original or certified copy Not typically required If not in English or Greek Often annexed to mortgage deed or deed of covenants

The above list reflects the ship mortgage registration requirements Cyprus practitioners encounter in practice. The Department of Merchant Shipping may request additional documents on a case-by-case basis, so it is advisable to confirm the current checklist directly with the Registrar before submission.

Common Document Mistakes

  • Inconsistent vessel particulars. The vessel name, official number and IMO number in the mortgage deed must match the Register exactly. Even a minor discrepancy, such as an outdated name following a vessel renaming, can result in rejection.
  • Missing or insufficient corporate authorisation. A generic board resolution that does not specifically mention the mortgage transaction or identify the signatories by name is frequently rejected.
  • Omitting advocate stamps. The filing application must bear the correct value of advocate stamps. Submitting without them delays processing because the Registrar will not proceed until the requirement is satisfied.

Deed of Covenants and Mortgage Instrument, Drafting Practicalities

In Cyprus ship finance transactions, the security package typically consists of two closely related instruments: the mortgage deed (sometimes called the statutory mortgage instrument) and the deed of covenants. The mortgage deed is the short-form document in the prescribed statutory format that is recorded in the Register. The deed of covenants is a more detailed agreement, usually executed simultaneously, that sets out the full commercial terms between the mortgagor and the mortgagee.

The deed of covenants for a Cyprus ship mortgage will ordinarily include provisions covering the following areas:

  • Description of the secured obligations. The loan agreement, facility letter or other credit document under which the debt arises, including the principal amount, interest rate and repayment schedule.
  • Positive covenants of the mortgagor. Obligations to maintain the vessel in class, keep insurance in force, pay crew wages, comply with flag-state requirements and provide periodic financial information to the mortgagee.
  • Negative covenants. Restrictions on creating additional encumbrances, changing the vessel’s flag or name, selling or scrapping the vessel, or entering into certain charter arrangements without the mortgagee’s consent.
  • Events of default and acceleration. A detailed list of events (e.g., missed payments, breach of covenant, insolvency of the mortgagor) that entitle the mortgagee to accelerate the debt and enforce the mortgage.
  • Remedies on default. The mortgagee’s right to take possession of the vessel, appoint a receiver, sell the vessel (judicially or privately where permitted) and apply the proceeds to the outstanding debt.
  • Governing law and dispute resolution. Most Cyprus ship mortgages are governed by English law or Cyprus law, with disputes referred to London arbitration (LMAA terms) or the Cyprus Admiralty Court.

Lender Protections to Include

  • Assignment of earnings and insurances. A separate assignment (or clause within the deed of covenants) covering freight earnings, hire payments and insurance proceeds, giving the lender direct recourse if the borrower defaults.
  • Priority and subordination language. Where multiple mortgages exist, an express inter-creditor or subordination agreement should be annexed or cross-referenced.
  • Quiet enjoyment undertaking. The lender permits the mortgagor to operate the vessel freely so long as no event of default has occurred, an important operational safeguard for both parties.

Industry observers expect that lenders increasingly request additional cyber-risk and sanctions-compliance covenants in modern deed of covenants drafting, reflecting the evolving regulatory landscape for ship finance.

Cyprus Ship Mortgage Registration Process, Filing at the Registrar of Cyprus Ships

Once the documents are assembled and properly executed, the filing at the Registrar of Cyprus Ships follows a structured sequence. The Department of Merchant Shipping, which operates the Register, handles all mortgage recordings at its offices. The steps below reflect established practice.

  1. Step 1, Instruct a Cyprus advocate. All filings must be submitted through a qualified Cyprus advocate. The advocate prepares the written application, affixes the required advocate stamps (€30 as per the Department of Merchant Shipping checklist), and reviews all supporting documents for completeness.
  2. Step 2, Submit the application and original mortgage deed. The advocate presents the written application together with the original mortgage deed, deed of covenants (if separate), corporate authorisations, powers of attorney and any other supporting documents to the Registrar of Cyprus Ships.
  3. Step 3, Registrar review. The Registrar examines the documents for compliance with the Merchant Shipping Laws. This includes verifying that the vessel particulars match the Register, that the mortgage deed is in the prescribed form, and that all signatures are properly authenticated.
  4. Step 4, Endorsement and annotation. If satisfied, the Registrar endorses the mortgage on the Register, noting the date and time of registration, the parties, the amount secured (if stated) and any other relevant particulars. The endorsed original is returned to the filing advocate.
  5. Step 5, Confirmation and certificate. The advocate receives the annotated original and, upon request, a transcript of the Register showing the recorded mortgage. This document is the primary evidence of perfection and should be provided to the mortgagee promptly.
Filing Step Who Is Responsible Original Document Needed? Estimated Fee
Written application with advocate stamps Cyprus advocate Yes €30 advocate stamps
Mortgage deed submission Cyprus advocate Yes, original(s) Registrar filing fee (confirm with DMS)
Supporting documents (board resolution, POA, certificate of incorporation) Cyprus advocate Originals or certified copies Included in filing fee
Registrar endorsement Registrar of Cyprus Ships N/A (Registrar endorses originals) Included in filing fee
Transcript of register (optional) Registrar, upon request N/A Separate fee (confirm with DMS)

Processing timelines at the Registrar of Cyprus Ships can vary depending on the volume of filings and the complexity of the documentation. In straightforward cases where all documents are in order, early indications from practitioners suggest that registration can be completed within a few business days. However, any deficiency, a missing apostille, an inconsistent vessel name or an incomplete board resolution, will trigger a request for rectification and extend the timeline accordingly.

Consular Legalisation and Foreign-Signed Deeds

Ship mortgage transactions frequently involve signatories in different jurisdictions. When a mortgage deed or deed of covenants is executed outside Cyprus, the Registrar will generally require that foreign signatures be properly authenticated before accepting the document for registration. The two principal authentication routes for a consular filing of a Cyprus ship mortgage are:

  • Apostille (Hague Convention). If the country where the document is signed is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, a notary public in that country notarises the signature and the competent authority (e.g., a court or ministry) issues an apostille certificate. This is the simpler and more widely available route.
  • Consular legalisation. If the signing country is not a Hague Convention member, the document must be notarised locally, then legalised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of that country, and finally authenticated by the nearest Cyprus consulate or embassy.

Practitioners should confirm the Registrar’s current acceptance requirements before dispatching documents, as practice can evolve. Electronic signatures are not generally accepted for statutory mortgage instruments filed with the Registrar, although certain ancillary documents may be submitted electronically by arrangement, this should be verified on a case-by-case basis.

Discharge, Memorandum of Discharge and Transfer of Mortgage

When the secured debt has been fully repaid, the mortgage must be formally discharged from the Register. The standard procedure for discharge of a mortgage on a Cyprus ship requires the execution and filing of a Memorandum of Discharge. This document, signed by the mortgagee (lender) or its duly authorised representative, confirms that the secured obligations have been satisfied and requests the Registrar to remove the mortgage entry from the Register.

The Memorandum of Discharge must be properly stamped and submitted to the Registrar through a Cyprus advocate, following the same procedural requirements as the original registration, including advocate stamps and, where the mortgagee signs abroad, notarisation and apostille or consular legalisation.

Upon receipt of a compliant Memorandum of Discharge, the Registrar annotates the Register to reflect that the mortgage has been discharged and returns the original documents to the filing advocate. Practitioners should retain certified copies for the lender’s records.

Transfer and Assignment of a Ship Mortgage

A transfer of mortgage on a Cyprus ship arises when the mortgagee assigns its rights under the mortgage to a new lender, for example, in a loan syndication or debt-trading scenario. The assignment is effected by an assignment deed executed by the existing mortgagee in favour of the new mortgagee. The assignment deed, together with the original mortgage (or a certified copy) and any required consent from the mortgagor, is submitted to the Registrar for endorsement.

The Registrar records the assignment and updates the priority particulars. The date of the original mortgage registration, not the assignment date, continues to determine priority, provided the assignment is duly registered.

Action Key Documents Registrar Step
Memorandum of Discharge Original mortgage + discharge deed signed by mortgagee, advocate stamps, ID of signatories Registrar annotates discharge and returns originals
Transfer / Assignment of Mortgage Assignment deed, original mortgage (or certified copy), consent (if required), advocate stamps Registrar enters assignment; priority preserved from original registration date

Practical Timelines, Costs and Typical Turnaround for How to Register a Ship Mortgage

The table below provides an indicative overview of the main actions, expected timelines and associated costs. Because the Department of Merchant Shipping may update its fee schedule, the figures shown should be confirmed directly with the Registrar or through local counsel before filing.

Action Typical Timeline Estimated Cost
Document preparation and execution (including notarisation and apostille abroad) 1–3 weeks (depending on jurisdictions involved) Legal fees + notary/apostille fees (variable)
Filing application with advocate stamps Same day (once documents are ready) €30 advocate stamps + advocate professional fee
Registrar review and endorsement Typically a few business days (straightforward cases) Registrar filing fee (confirm with DMS)
Discharge, Memorandum of Discharge processing Similar to initial registration Advocate stamps + Registrar fee
Transfer / assignment recording Similar to initial registration Advocate stamps + Registrar fee

The most common source of delay is not the Registrar’s processing time but incomplete or defective documentation arriving at the filing stage. Industry observers note that engaging experienced Cyprus maritime counsel at the outset, before documents are executed abroad, significantly reduces the risk of rejection and re-filing.

Common Pitfalls, Checklist Before Submission

Before submitting any ship mortgage filing to the Registrar of Cyprus Ships, the filing advocate should confirm that the following items have been addressed:

  • Signature defects. Every signatory must be authorised and every signature properly witnessed, notarised and (where applicable) apostilled. Unsigned pages or illegible witness details trigger rejections.
  • Missing advocate stamps. The written application must bear advocate stamps in the correct amount. Filing without them is treated as incomplete.
  • Inconsistent vessel particulars. The vessel name, official registration number and IMO number in the mortgage deed must match the Register of Cyprus Ships exactly. Check for recent name changes or re-registrations.
  • Wrong vessel name or IMO number. Transposition errors in long IMO numbers are more common than expected. Cross-check against the vessel’s Certificate of Registry.
  • Missing original documents. The Registrar requires original mortgage deeds for endorsement. Filing only copies, even certified copies, without an accompanying original will be rejected unless the Registrar has expressly agreed to accept a copy in specific circumstances.
  • Untranslated supporting documents. Any document not in English or Greek must be accompanied by a certified translation.

Next Steps, How to Register a Ship Mortgage with Confidence

Navigating the Cyprus ship mortgage registration process requires careful coordination between the shipowner’s counsel, the lender’s counsel and the Registrar of Cyprus Ships. Errors in documentation or authentication can delay closing, jeopardise lender security and add unnecessary cost. Engaging a qualified Cyprus maritime advocate at the earliest stage of the transaction is the most effective way to ensure that the mortgage is perfected promptly and stands up to scrutiny.

For those who need to understand how the Cyprus process compares with other jurisdictions, our guide to registering a ship mortgage in Greece provides a useful point of comparison on filing procedures, priority rules and document requirements.

If the transaction involves an urgent element, for example, where a vessel is about to be arrested or a competing mortgage is anticipated, practitioners should consider filing a priority notice with the Registrar to preserve the intended priority date while the full documentation is being finalised.

Appendix, Downloadable PDF Checklist and Sample Forms Exhibit

A downloadable PDF checklist consolidating all documents required for the registration of a mortgage on a Cyprus ship is available for use by filing advocates and lender counsel. The checklist mirrors the table in the pre-filing section above and includes tick-boxes for each item, columns for date-of-completion tracking, and reminders on notarisation, apostille and translation requirements.

A redacted sample mortgage deed and Memorandum of Discharge exhibit is also provided for reference. These samples illustrate the statutory form and typical layout but should not be used as-is without adaptation to the specific transaction and review by qualified Cyprus maritime counsel.

Disclaimer: This article is published by Global Law Experts for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for advice from a qualified Cyprus maritime lawyer. Laws, regulations and Registrar practices may change; readers should verify all procedural requirements with the Department of Merchant Shipping before filing.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sonia Ajini at SONIA AJINI & CO LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Gov.cy, Documents Required for the Registration of a Mortgage on a Cyprus Ship (Department of Merchant Shipping)
  2. IMO, Registration of Ships and Fraudulent Registration Matters
  3. Lexology, Q&A: Ship Mortgages and Liens in Cyprus
  4. C.I. Shipping / MACI (Cayman), Registration of a Mortgage or a Priority Notice
  5. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Registering a Mortgage Over a Ship (paywalled)
  6. Global Law Experts, How to Register a Ship Mortgage (Greece)

FAQs

Why do ships register in Cyprus?
Ships register in Cyprus to obtain flag-state nationality, access the EU regulatory framework and IMO convention compliance, benefit from the tonnage-tax regime, and use a transparent mortgage registration system recognised internationally.
It is the official registry maintained by the Department of Merchant Shipping under Cyprus Merchant Shipping Law. It records vessel ownership, registered shares and all registrable charges including mortgages.
A ship mortgage is a registrable charge giving the lender security over the vessel. Priority is determined by the date and time of registration. Discharge requires a Memorandum of Discharge filed with the Registrar.
Yes. Foreign signatures generally require notarisation and either an apostille (Hague Convention countries) or consular legalisation (non-Hague countries) before the Registrar will accept the document.
Processing typically takes a few business days for compliant filings. The application requires advocate stamps (currently €30) plus Registrar filing fees. Contact the Department of Merchant Shipping or local counsel for current fee amounts.
Execute a Memorandum of Discharge signed by the mortgagee, affix advocate stamps, and submit it to the Registrar through a Cyprus advocate. The Registrar annotates the discharge and returns originals.
A deed of covenants is the detailed agreement setting out the shipowner’s obligations to the lender, covering maintenance, insurance, non-encumbrance, events of default and remedies, supplementing the statutory mortgage instrument.
Yes. Any document submitted to the Registrar that is not in English or Greek must be accompanied by a certified translation. This applies to corporate authorisations, powers of attorney and the mortgage deed itself if drafted in another language.

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How to Register a Ship Mortgage in Cyprus: Step-by-step Filing, Deed of Covenants & Forms

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