Cyprus has operated a formal transfer pricing regime since the 2022 tax year, anchored in Article 33 of the Income Tax Law N.118(I)/2002 and the implementing Regulations K.D.P. 314/2022. The Cyprus tax reform 2026 update refined local-file thresholds, clarified simplified documentation under Circular 6/2023, and confirmed the Summary Information Table (SIT) as a permanent annual obligation. For tax directors, group controllers, CFOs and in-house counsel responsible for Cyprus filings, understanding these transfer pricing requirements in Cyprus is no longer optional, it is an audit-readiness essential. This guide sets out every threshold, deadline, document type and penalty you need to act on this tax year.
The statutory architecture for transfer pricing requirements in Cyprus rests on three layers: primary legislation, implementing regulations and administrative guidance. Together they create a comprehensive compliance framework aligned with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations.
Article 33 of the Income Tax Law N.118(I)/2002, as amended, establishes the arm’s-length principle for controlled transactions between related parties. It empowers the Commissioner of Taxation to adjust the taxable income of any person where terms differ from those that independent enterprises would have agreed. The section defines what constitutes a controlled transaction, sets out the relationship tests, and mandates documentation and annual reporting through the Summary Information Table. It also provides the legal basis for penalties for non-compliance.
Regulations K.D.P. 314/2022 operationalise Article 33 by specifying the content and format of transfer pricing documentation. They prescribe the required sections for both a Master File and a Local File, mirror the OECD’s three-tier approach, and set the €750,000 cumulative threshold per transaction category above which a full Local File must be prepared. The Regulations also introduce the QA confirmation requirement, under which a practising certificate holder must verify the completeness and accuracy of the Local File before it is finalised. Regulations K.D.P. 273/2022 complement this framework by establishing the structure and fields of the Summary Information Table.
Issued by the Cyprus Tax Department, Circular 6/2023 provides administrative guidance on simplified documentation for entities whose controlled transactions fall below the full Local-File thresholds. It also introduces safe-harbour parameters for common intra-group financing and low-value-adding services. Industry observers note that the Circular has become the primary practical reference for SMEs and mid-tier groups seeking to demonstrate arm’s-length pricing without commissioning full benchmarking studies.
Under Article 33(7) of the Income Tax Law, a “person” subject to the transfer pricing rules includes any company, partnership, individual or other entity that enters into controlled transactions with related parties. Two parties are considered related where one directly or indirectly holds at least 25 % of the voting rights, share capital or profit entitlement of the other, or where both are controlled by the same third party meeting the same 25 % test.
Controlled transactions are grouped into five categories for threshold and documentation purposes:
Even where a person has only one transaction with a related party and the value is minimal, the obligation to file a Summary Information Table still applies. The documentation requirements scale with value, but the SIT reporting duty is universal.
The local-file threshold is the critical dividing line between full documentation and simplified documentation under the Cyprus transfer pricing regime. Under Regulations K.D.P. 314/2022, a person must prepare and maintain a complete Local File where the aggregate value of controlled transactions in any single category exceeds €750,000 in the relevant tax year. This threshold is measured by the absolute transaction value, that is, the total of all debits and credits within the category, not the net balance.
| Transaction category | Local-file threshold | How measured |
|---|---|---|
| Category A, Goods (sales/purchases) | €750,000 | Cumulative absolute value of all goods transactions with related parties in the tax year |
| Category B, Services | €750,000 | Cumulative absolute value of all intra-group service charges received and rendered |
| Category C, Financial transactions | €750,000 | Measured by reference to the principal amount outstanding and/or total interest charged |
| Category D, Intangibles | €750,000 | Cumulative royalties, licence fees, cost-contribution charges |
| Category E, Other | €750,000 | Absolute value of all other controlled transactions |
A Cyprus-resident trading company purchases raw materials worth €400,000 from its parent and charges back management services of €120,000. Neither Category A (€400,000) nor Category B (€120,000) breaches the €750,000 threshold. The company must still file a SIT and prepare minimum simplified documentation per Circular 6/2023, but a full Local File is not required.
A Cyprus intermediate holding company grants intra-group loans with aggregate principal of €5,000,000 and annual interest income of €200,000 to three subsidiaries. Category C transactions total at least €5,200,000 in absolute value, well above the €750,000 threshold. The company must prepare a full Local File covering all Category C transactions and include benchmarking analysis to support the arm’s-length interest rate. The SIT must separately disclose each loan relationship.
The Tax Department guidance clarifies that for financial transactions, both the principal amount and interest charges should be considered in assessing whether the threshold is met. Transactions are aggregated within each category, not across categories, so a person may exceed the threshold in one category while remaining below it in others. Where only one category breaches the threshold, the Local File is required only for that category, although the SIT must report all controlled transactions.
The Summary Information Table is the cornerstone of annual transfer pricing reporting in Cyprus. Every person who has entered into even a single controlled transaction during the tax year must file a SIT, irrespective of whether the transaction value exceeds the Local-File threshold. This universal obligation makes the SIT the Tax Department’s primary tool for identifying transfer pricing risk and selecting audit targets.
| Tax year | Statutory deadline | Transition / special notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 28 February 2025 (Decree K.D.P. 359/2024) | Commissioner announced no administrative penalties would be imposed for SIT submissions made by 31 May 2025 |
| 2023 onward | Filed together with the Income Tax Return (per Article 33(10)) | Standard annual deadline, check the TFA portal for the current due date each tax year |
The SIT is submitted electronically through the Tax For All (TFA) portal operated by the Ministry of Finance. The step-by-step process involves:
The SIT requires disclosure of the identity of each related party (name, jurisdiction, TIC if applicable), the nature and category of each controlled transaction, the total value per category and per counterparty, and the transfer pricing method selected. For financial transactions, additional fields capture the loan principal, interest rate and currency. The Tax Department uses this data to cross-reference group structures and benchmark returns against market parameters.
Regulations K.D.P. 314/2022 establish three documentation tiers, each with specific content requirements. The tier that applies depends on whether the person exceeds the €750,000 per-category threshold and, where it does, on the nature of the group structure.
Groups with Cyprus entities exceeding the threshold must maintain a Master File containing:
The Local File must be entity-specific and cover each transaction category that exceeds the €750,000 threshold. Required content includes:
The Local File must be finalised by the time the SIT is due and be available for production to the Tax Department within 60 days of a written request.
Entities whose controlled transactions fall below the €750,000 threshold in every category must still prepare minimum documentation. Under Circular 6/2023, simplified documentation includes:
The practical effect is that no entity with related-party transactions escapes documentation entirely, the difference is in the depth and benchmarking rigour required.
Circular 6/2023 introduced safe-harbour parameters that provide a compliance shortcut for two of the most common intra-group transaction types: financing and low-value-adding services. Where a taxpayer prices its controlled transaction within the safe-harbour range and documents its workings, the Tax Department will not challenge the pricing absent unusual circumstances.
The safe-harbour interest rate for intra-group loans is determined by reference to the yield on the 10-year government bond of the borrower’s jurisdiction, plus an arm’s-length credit-risk spread. The Circular provides the methodology for calculating the minimum acceptable return. A simplified worked example: if the 10-year Cypriot government-bond yield is 3.5 % and the prescribed credit-risk uplift for a BB-rated subsidiary is 2.0 %, the minimum arm’s-length rate would be 5.5 %. The taxpayer must retain the yield-curve data and credit-rating documentation in its simplified file.
For low-value-adding services, such as human resources support, accounting, IT helpdesk and general administrative services, the safe harbour permits a cost-plus mark-up of 5 %, consistent with the OECD’s recommended simplified approach. The taxpayer must demonstrate that the services meet the low-value-adding criteria: they are supportive in nature, not core to the group’s main business, and do not involve the use of significant intangibles or the assumption of material risk.
Reliance on a safe harbour does not eliminate documentation requirements. The taxpayer must include in its simplified file the workings showing how the safe-harbour rate was calculated, the market data relied upon, and a confirmation that the transaction meets the qualifying criteria. Early indications suggest that the Tax Department will scrutinise safe-harbour claims during audits, particularly for financing transactions involving large principal amounts.
The penalty regime for transfer pricing requirements in Cyprus is set out in Article 33 and the implementing Regulations, supplemented by administrative announcements from the Commissioner of Taxation. Penalties apply to both late or missing SIT filings and to failures to produce documentation upon request.
| Breach | Penalty / consequence | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Late SIT submission | Administrative fine of €500, plus additional tax penalties applicable to late Income Tax Return filings | Gov.cy announcement under Decree K.D.P. 359/2024 |
| Failure to produce Local File or Master File within 60 days of a Tax Department request | Administrative penalties, the Regulations provide for escalating fines for delayed or non-production | K.D.P. 314/2022; Tax Department FAQs |
| Transfer pricing adjustment (arm’s-length correction) | Additional tax assessed on the adjusted income, plus interest and potential further penalties under general tax law | Article 33; Income Tax Law N.118(I)/2002 |
When the Tax Department issues a written request for transfer pricing documentation, the taxpayer must produce the Local File and/or Master File within 60 days. Failure to meet this deadline triggers administrative fines and may result in adverse inferences during the audit. To maintain audit readiness, taxpayers should prepare the following items in advance:
Use this ten-point checklist at each fiscal year-end and before the SIT submission deadline to confirm transfer pricing readiness:
For governance purposes, the board or audit committee should receive an annual transfer pricing assurance report confirming that all documentation obligations have been met, safe-harbour reliance is properly evidenced, and the SIT has been filed on time. This report serves as both an internal control and a mitigating factor in the event of a Tax Department inquiry.
The transfer pricing requirements in Cyprus demand annual action from every entity transacting with related parties, from the smallest single-loan SPV to the largest multinational group. Identifying your transaction categories, measuring them against the €750,000 threshold, preparing the appropriate documentation tier, and filing the SIT by the deadline are non-negotiable compliance steps. With the Tax Department now equipped with SIT data for cross-referencing and audit selection, the practical cost of non-compliance, both in penalties and reputational risk, has increased significantly. Entities should treat transfer pricing governance as a standing board-level responsibility, not a year-end afterthought. For tailored guidance, consult a qualified Cyprus tax adviser through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kalaitzaki Anastasia at Eurofast, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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