Our Expert in Cyprus
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Last updated: 26 June 2026
The rules governing foreign ownership in Cyprus underwent their most significant overhaul in over a decade when a cluster of decrees and implementing measures took effect in May 2026. Developers marketing residential units to non‑resident and non‑EU purchasers now face new pre‑sale certification requirements, project‑level ownership quotas, and enhanced due‑diligence obligations. At the same time, the abolition of stamp duty from 1 January 2026 under Law 239(I)/2025 has altered transaction‑cost calculations for every party in the chain. This guide sets out the practical compliance steps that developers, in‑house counsel, overseas buyers and investor advisors need to follow, with checklists, model contract language and a risk matrix, so that no deal falls through on a procedural gap.
The May 2026 decree package introduces three headline obligations that affect anyone involved in selling to foreigners in Cyprus:
Bottom line: Every developer with unsold foreign‑allocated inventory and every foreign buyer with a pending reservation should instruct local counsel immediately to audit contracts and permit status against the new Cyprus foreign buyer rules.
The following nine‑step checklist covers the core developer obligations when selling to foreign buyers under the 2026 regime. Developers should work through each item before exchanging contracts on any unit earmarked for a non‑resident or non‑EU purchaser.
| Permit / Certificate | Responsible Party |
|---|---|
| Preliminary Building Division Certificate | Developer (pre‑marketing) |
| Cap.109 Purchase Permission | Foreign buyer (developer assists) |
| Tax Clearance Certificate | Developer |
| AML / KYC File | Developer (enhanced due diligence) |
| SPA Filing at Lands Office | Developer’s solicitor |
The Cyprus property purchase restrictions vary significantly depending on the buyer’s nationality, residency status and corporate structure. Understanding the correct category determines whether a permit is required, how many units may be acquired and which procedural track applies.
EU and EEA citizens can freely acquire property, including land and real estate, without requiring any permission from authorities. There is no unit‑count restriction for individual residential purchases by EU nationals.
Non‑EU citizens face a more structured regime. They must obtain permission under Cap.109 before property can be registered in their name. In practice, Cap.109 restricts non‑EU individual buyers to one residential unit per person, typically an apartment or a house, plus a parcel of land not exceeding a prescribed area.
Where a company with foreign shareholders or beneficial owners acquires residential property, the corporate entity itself must apply for Cap.109 permission. Full beneficial‑ownership disclosure is required, and the company must provide incorporation documents, a register of members and directors, and a certificate of good standing.
| Buyer Type | Permit Required? | Maximum Units (Residential) |
|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA national (individual) | No | No statutory cap |
| Non‑EU national (individual) | Yes, Cap.109 | One residential unit |
| Foreign interest company | Yes, Cap.109 (corporate) | Subject to case‑by‑case review |
Industry observers expect that the 80 % project‑level quota for development zones will prompt developers to allocate foreign‑buyer slots more strategically, potentially reserving a portion of inventory for local purchasers from the outset of any non‑resident property purchase Cyprus marketing campaign.
A sale of residential property to a foreign buyer in Cyprus now follows a defined sequence. Missing or misordering any step can delay completion by months or, in the worst case, render the transaction unenforceable. The following workflow applies to a standard developer‑to‑buyer transaction under the May 2026 decree Cyprus framework.
Before any reservation agreement is signed, the developer must confirm that a Preliminary Building Division Certificate has been issued for the project. Simultaneously, the developer should run AML/KYC checks on the prospective buyer and verify the project’s foreign‑ownership quota position.
The buyer signs a reservation agreement and pays a deposit. Under current best practice, this deposit should be held in a solicitor’s escrow account, not released to the developer, until the Cap.109 permission is granted and all conditions precedent are satisfied.
The buyer’s solicitor prepares and lodges the application for permission to buy property in Cyprus with the Ministry of Interior through the relevant District Administration office. Required documents include the buyer’s passport, a declaration of intended use, evidence of financial resources, and, for corporate buyers, full beneficial‑ownership documentation.
Processing times for Cap.109 applications typically range from two to six weeks for straightforward individual applications. Corporate or higher‑value transactions may take longer. The approval is granted routinely for genuine buyers, it is an administrative step rather than a discretionary refusal mechanism.
Once Cap.109 permission is received, the parties execute the full contract of sale. The SPA should incorporate the model clauses discussed below, including the permit condition precedent, deposit‑return triggers and developer warranties.
The executed SPA must be filed at the District Lands Office. Filing protects the buyer’s interest through specific performance rights and prevents the developer from selling the same unit twice or encumbering the property.
Both parties obtain tax clearance. Transfer fees are payable to the Department of Lands and Surveys based on the property value. Note that stamp duty is no longer applicable to instruments executed from 1 January 2026 onward, following the abolition under Law 239(I)/2025.
Upon completion of construction and final building approvals, the developer applies for individual title deeds. The buyer’s title is then registered at the Land Registry, completing the transfer of foreign ownership in Cyprus.
| Step | Estimated Duration |
|---|---|
| Pre‑contract checks + reservation | 1–2 weeks |
| Cap.109 application and approval | 2–6 weeks |
| SPA execution and filing | 1–2 weeks |
| Tax clearance + transfer fees | 1–3 weeks |
| Title‑deed issuance (post‑construction) | Variable (months to years) |
A standard developer sale contract in Cyprus is heavily seller‑friendly. The May 2026 changes make it essential for foreign buyers and their counsel to negotiate protective language, and for developers to build compliant clauses into their templates from the outset. Below are the five critical clause categories and three model clause snippets for immediate use.
Every SPA involving a non‑EU buyer must include a condition precedent making the sale contingent on the grant of Cap.109 permission. Without this, the buyer risks paying a deposit with no contractual right of return if permission is refused.
Model Clause 1 (Permit Condition Precedent): “This Agreement is conditional upon the Buyer obtaining Cap.109 purchase permission within 90 days of execution. If permission is refused, either party may rescind and the deposit shall be returned in full.”
Deposits should be held in a regulated escrow account, not in the developer’s operating account. Return triggers should cover permit refusal, developer insolvency, failure to deliver the Preliminary Building Division Certificate and material breach of warranty.
Model Clause 2 (Deposit Escrow): “All sums paid prior to satisfaction of the Conditions Precedent shall be held by [Solicitor] in a designated client account and shall not be released to the Seller without the Buyer’s written consent.”
The developer should warrant that the project holds a valid Preliminary Building Division Certificate, that the foreign‑ownership quota has not been exceeded and that there are no encumbrances, charges or pending litigation affecting the unit.
Both parties benefit from clearly defined termination rights. The buyer should have the right to rescind if the developer fails to deliver the unit within a defined long‑stop date. The developer’s liability for delay should be capped, but the buyer’s right to a full deposit refund on rescission should remain uncapped.
Model Clause 3 (Rescission and Refund): “If the Seller fails to deliver the Unit with individual title deed by the Long‑Stop Date, the Buyer may rescind this Agreement by written notice and shall be entitled to a full refund of all sums paid, without deduction.”
Where a buyer intends to assign the contract to a related company or nominee, the SPA should require the assignee to satisfy the same Cap.109 and AML requirements. Developers should include a right to approve assignments to prevent circumvention of the quota or permit regime.
| Clause Category | Developer Preference | Buyer Protection |
|---|---|---|
| Permit condition precedent | Time‑limited (e.g., 90 days) | Full deposit refund on refusal |
| Deposit handling | Release on SPA signing | Escrow until all CPs satisfied |
| Developer warranties | Minimal / “as is” | Certificate validity, quota compliance, clean title |
| Termination / long‑stop | Extended timeline, limited liability | Rescission + full refund, no deduction |
| Assignment | Right to refuse | Permitted to related entities subject to same CP compliance |
The 2026 framework imposes obligations on developers that extend well beyond the moment a contract is signed. These developer obligations for foreign buyers can be grouped into pre‑sale, at‑sale and post‑sale categories.
| Obligation | Developer | Individual Foreign Buyer | Foreign Corporate Purchaser |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preliminary Building Division Certificate | Must obtain before marketing | n/a | n/a |
| Cap.109 purchase permission | Assist buyer; include as SPA condition precedent | Must apply and obtain (non‑EU) | Must apply at corporate level with full BO disclosure |
| AML / KYC | Perform enhanced due diligence | Provide identity and source‑of‑funds docs | Provide corporate docs + beneficial owners |
| Title‑deed issuance | Submit final docs to Land Registry | Sign transfer docs; confirm tax clearance | Provide incorporation and BO docs |
| Quota monitoring | Maintain foreign‑buyer register per project | n/a | n/a |
Non‑compliance with the 2026 regime exposes developers, buyers and their advisors to material risk. The following matrix identifies the most common failure points and the practical steps to mitigate each one.
| Risk | Likelihood | Practical Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Sale void / unenforceable for lack of Cap.109 permission | Medium–High (if CP omitted) | Include permit CP in every SPA; hold deposit in escrow until permission granted |
| Quota breach, more than 80 % of units sold to foreigners | Medium (multi‑phase projects) | Maintain real‑time foreign‑buyer register; halt foreign sales when threshold approached |
| Deposit irrecoverable on developer insolvency | Low–Medium | Escrow all pre‑completion deposits in solicitor’s client account; obtain developer warranty of solvency |
| Regulatory fine or licence suspension for missing Preliminary Building Division Certificate | Medium | Obtain certificate before marketing; calendar‑flag renewal dates |
| Delayed title‑deed issuance | High (structural in Cyprus market) | Insert long‑stop date with rescission right and full refund clause in SPA |
| AML reporting failure | Low–Medium | Implement internal compliance programme; train sales staff; appoint MLRO |
Early indications suggest that the Ministry of Interior is taking a more proactive enforcement posture on quota compliance and certificate requirements than was the case under the previous regime. Developers should treat these obligations as substantive rather than procedural.
The table below summarises the critical dates that practitioners need to track. Developers and advisors should update internal compliance calendars accordingly.
| Date | Instrument / Action | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Stamp duty abolished, Law 239(I)/2025 published in Official Gazette on 31 December 2025 | No stamp duty on instruments executed from this date. Update closing checklists and cost estimates. |
| May 2026 (decree cluster) | May 2026 decree(s) including Decree‑Law 63/2026 | New pre‑sale certificates, foreign‑ownership quotas (80 % cap in development zones), enhanced Cap.109 procedures. Developers must verify compliance before any further sales to foreign buyers. |
| Ongoing 2026 | Ministry of Interior procedural guidance updates | Monitor the Ministry’s Purchasing Property page and the Official Gazette for updated forms and processing requirements. |
For a broader view of the tax changes accompanying this regulatory shift, see the Cyprus tax reform 2026 guide published by Global Law Experts.
Foreign buyers and their solicitors should prepare the following documentation before lodging a Cap.109 application with the Ministry of Interior through the relevant District Administration office.
Applications are typically submitted by the buyer’s Cypriot solicitor, who can also coordinate with the developer’s legal team to provide supporting project documentation. Processing times run from approximately two weeks for straightforward individual applications up to six weeks or longer for corporate structures.
The May 2026 decree package has fundamentally changed the compliance landscape for foreign ownership in Cyprus. Neither developers nor buyers can rely on pre‑2026 assumptions about residential development permitting. The following five actions should be treated as urgent.
Navigating the 2026 rules demands specialist knowledge of both the regulatory framework and the practical realities of the Cyprus property market. Developers and buyers seeking qualified legal guidance can search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with experienced Cyprus real‑estate counsel.
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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