Our Expert in Cyprus
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Build‑to‑rent in Cyprus has moved from a niche affordable‑housing initiative to a mainstream institutional asset class in less than three years. The government’s revised Built‑to‑Rent scheme, redesigned in late 2025 to offer developers enhanced density bonuses and accelerated planning, now sits alongside two major regulatory shifts that take effect in 2026: a comprehensive tax reform package (effective 1 January 2026) and a mandatory electronic rent‑payment rule for all rents exceeding €500 per month (effective 1 July 2026). At the same time, the off‑plan buyer protections introduced by Law 132(I)/2023 continue to reshape how developers allocate units between sale and rental pools.
Together, these measures create both urgent compliance deadlines and significant structuring opportunities for developers, institutional investors and project‑finance teams launching PRS Cyprus projects this year.
Before examining each reform in detail, every developer with an active or planned BTR project in Cyprus should confirm progress on the following items. Each is expanded in the sections that follow.
The Cyprus Tax Reform 2026, which came into force on 1 January 2026, is the most significant overhaul of the island’s fiscal framework in over a decade. For developers operating institutional rental projects, three clusters of changes demand immediate attention: the corporate‑income‑tax rate adjustment, the recalibration of the Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on rental income, and the revised withholding‑tax regime on outbound dividend and interest payments.
The reform raises the headline corporate‑income‑tax rate, directly compressing net yields for SPVs that hold and operate BTR portfolios. At the same time, the SDC, historically levied on rental income received by Cyprus tax‑resident companies with Cyprus‑domiciled shareholders, has been adjusted in scope and rate, altering after‑tax cash flows for both domestic and international investor structures. Industry observers expect these changes to push developers toward more tax‑efficient holding architectures and to accelerate the use of regulated alternative‑investment‑fund vehicles for larger PRS Cyprus platforms.
| Tax item | Pre‑2026 position | Post‑2026 position (effective 1 Jan 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax rate | 12.5 % | Increased rate under the reform package (developers should verify exact rate with tax counsel and refer to PwC Cyprus and Koufettas Law analyses) |
| Special Defence Contribution (SDC) on rental income | 3 % on gross rental income for qualifying Cyprus‑domiciled shareholders | Adjusted rate and broadened/narrowed scope depending on shareholder residency and domicile, re‑evaluate SPV‑level impact |
| Withholding tax on outbound dividends/interest | Nil in most cases (extensive treaty network) | Selective introduction of withholding obligations on payments to low‑ or no‑tax jurisdictions, restructure repatriation flows |
The practical effect for a build‑to‑rent Cyprus SPV can be illustrated with a simplified scenario. A company generating €1 million in gross annual rent previously retained approximately €875,000 after corporate tax (at 12.5 %). Under the reformed rate, the retention is lower, and developers must factor the higher tax burden into rental‑yield modelling. Where SDC also applies, the combined effective rate rises further, making it essential to confirm domicile status and treaty‑relief availability before committing capital.
The supply of new residential property in Cyprus is generally subject to VAT at the standard rate, although a reduced rate may apply in specific circumstances (for example, first‑residence acquisitions meeting prescribed criteria). For build‑to‑rent developers, the critical question is whether to opt to tax the rental supply. Residential lettings are, by default, exempt from VAT, meaning input VAT incurred during construction cannot be recovered. A developer that elects to tax the rental income can reclaim construction‑phase input VAT, but must then charge VAT on rents, potentially reducing competitiveness in the residential letting market.
This trade‑off must be modelled project‑by‑project. Where the developer retains units in a completed rental pool rather than selling off‑plan, the irrecoverable input‑VAT cost becomes a permanent drag on returns unless the opt‑to‑tax election is made. Developers should also consider the reverse‑charge mechanism for construction services procured from non‑established subcontractors and ensure that the VAT grouping of related entities is structured to minimise cash‑flow leakage.
The 2026 reform introduced a targeted withholding‑tax obligation on certain outbound payments, dividends and interest, directed to jurisdictions that do not meet minimum substance or tax‑rate thresholds. For international investor groups holding BTR assets through Cyprus SPVs, this change may trigger withholding where none previously existed. The likely practical effect will be a migration of holding structures toward jurisdictions covered by Cyprus’s double‑tax‑treaty network that continue to enjoy full relief. Developer financing Cyprus arrangements, particularly mezzanine loans from offshore vehicles, should be reviewed urgently to confirm treaty eligibility and to avoid unexpected withholding on interest payments.
Institutional leasing for developers requires a fundamentally different approach from the informal tenancy agreements common in Cyprus’s traditional rental market. A BTR portfolio must generate predictable, inflation‑linked cash flows, accommodate large‑scale property‑management operations, and satisfy lender covenants, all while complying with the incoming electronic‑payment mandate and existing tenant‑protection legislation.
The core objectives of an institutional BTR lease in Cyprus should include the following:
The following model clause snippets are provided for illustrative purposes only. Developers should obtain jurisdiction‑specific legal advice before incorporating them into binding agreements.
From 1 July 2026, all rent payments exceeding €500 per month in Cyprus must be made through traceable electronic channels. This rent payment law Cyprus obligation, part of the broader push toward fiscal transparency and anti‑money‑laundering compliance, eliminates the long‑standing practice of cash‑based rent collection in the residential and commercial sectors.
For build‑to‑rent developers and their property‑management agents, the rule requires the following operational steps:
Early indications suggest that compliance with the electronic‑payment mandate will also serve as a de facto enforcement tool for the Tax Department, enabling automated cross‑referencing of declared rental income against bank‑transaction data. Developers who fail to implement compliant systems risk both regulatory penalties and adverse attention during tax audits.
Law 132(I)/2023 introduced a comprehensive framework of off‑plan buyer protections in Cyprus, requiring developers to provide escrow arrangements, financial guarantees and prescribed disclosure documentation before accepting deposits on uncompleted properties. The law applies to all residential developments sold off‑plan, regardless of whether the developer ultimately intends to retain some units for the build‑to‑rent pool.
For BTR developers, the practical implications arise in two scenarios:
Developers should also update standard reservation and sale‑and‑purchase contracts to reflect the escrow and guarantee requirements, and ensure that marketing materials accurately represent the status of each unit. Where off‑plan buyer protections intersect with BTR financing, for example, where lender security includes an assignment of sale proceeds, the developer must coordinate the release of guarantees with the lender’s step‑in rights.
Developer financing Cyprus for BTR projects differs materially from traditional development finance. Lenders underwriting a build‑to‑rent facility are lending against a long‑term income stream rather than a single exit through unit sales. This shifts the security package, the covenant framework and the risk‑allocation model.
A typical lender request list for a BTR SPV facility in Cyprus includes:
Lenders should also confirm the interplay between their security package and the off‑plan buyer protections under Law 132(I)/2023, particularly where the facility funds a mixed sale‑and‑rental scheme. Coordination between the escrow agent, the lender’s facility agent and the developer’s legal team is essential to avoid conflicting claims on pre‑sale deposits.
Developers budgeting for BTR projects must account for the following transaction costs, which apply on acquisition or transfer of the underlying real estate:
| Cost item | Rate / basis | Typically borne by |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer fees (Land Registry) | 3 % on the first €85,000; 5 % on €85,001–€170,000; 8 % above €170,000 (50 % reduction may apply on certain transactions) | Buyer / acquiring SPV |
| Stamp duty | 0.15 % on the first €170,860 of contract value; 0.20 % on the excess (capped at €20,000) | Buyer / acquiring SPV |
| Legal fees (conveyancing) | Typically 1 %–1.5 % of transaction value (negotiable for institutional deals) | Each party bears own costs |
| VAT on new property | 19 % standard rate (reduced rate may apply for qualifying first residences) | Buyer, but developer accounts for VAT on supply |
| Capital‑gains tax on disposal | 20 % on gains arising from disposal of immovable property in Cyprus (with inflation adjustments and allowable deductions) | Seller / disposing entity |
In a typical institutional BTR transaction, the acquiring SPV bears transfer fees, stamp duty and VAT. Developers should model these costs into the project appraisal at the outset and confirm whether the 50 % transfer‑fee reduction is available for the specific transaction structure.
Once a BTR project is operational, the developer or asset manager must maintain continuous compliance across tax, regulatory and operational dimensions. The following annual compliance calendar highlights the key recurring obligations:
| Obligation | SPV (asset‑holding company) | Holding company | Property manager / agent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corporate‑tax return and payment | Annual (by 31 March of the following year for online filings) | Annual | Annual (if separate entity) |
| SDC / GHS contributions on rental income | Quarterly / semi‑annual self‑assessment | As applicable on dividends received | N/A (unless receiving rental income directly) |
| Electronic‑payment audit trail | Continuous (from 1 July 2026) | N/A | Continuous, must maintain digital receipts and reconciliation reports |
| Lease renewals and rent reviews | Per lease anniversary | N/A | Per lease anniversary, trigger indexation and compliance review |
| AML/KYC tenant checks | On onboarding + periodic refresh | N/A | On onboarding + periodic refresh (at least annually for high‑value tenancies) |
| Lender reporting (covenants) | Quarterly (occupancy, rent collection, cash sweep) | As required by facility agreement | Input to SPV reporting |
| Date | Measure | Developer action required |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 (Law 132(I)/2023) | Off‑plan buyer protections enacted | Ensure escrow/guarantees in all off‑plan contracts; review buyer communication and refund/termination procedures. |
| 1 January 2026 | Cyprus Tax Reform, corporate tax, SDC, withholding‑tax changes come into effect | Re‑model SPV tax flows; review holding/repayment schedules; update pro forma IRR; confirm treaty eligibility for outbound payments. |
| 1 July 2026 | Mandatory traceable electronic rent payments for rents exceeding €500 per month | Update lease payment clauses; set up bank/e‑payment infrastructure; notify tenants; align AR/AP systems and AML procedures. |
Developers and institutional investors active in the PRS Cyprus market should treat the remainder of 2026 as a restructuring window. The following six steps provide a practical roadmap:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Olga Pshenichnaya at Olga L. Pshenichnaya & Co LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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