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Cyprus transfer pricing documentation requirements carry concrete deadlines that every tax‑resident entity and permanent establishment with related‑party transactions must now track carefully. Since June 2022, the Cyprus Income Tax Law (ITL) has mandated formal documentation obligations aligned with Chapter V of the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, and for tax years beginning on or after 1 January 2022 these rules are fully enforceable. Circular 6/2023, issued by the Cyprus Tax Department, further clarified simplified documentation measures, materiality thresholds and the critical 60‑day window within which a taxpayer must produce its Local File upon request.
With the Tax Department now conducting quality reviews and the first wave of formal requests reaching taxpayers, the compliance question facing CFOs and in‑house tax managers in 2026 is no longer whether to prepare but how quickly they can respond.
The statutory foundation for transfer pricing in Cyprus sits within the ITL, as amended in June 2022 by the Cyprus Parliament. The amendments introduced a dedicated arm’s‑length principle for controlled transactions between related parties and set out documentation requirements that follow the three‑tiered approach recommended by the OECD: a Master File, a Local File and, for qualifying multinational enterprise (MNE) groups, a Country‑by‑Country (CbC) Report. The ITL provisions apply to Cyprus tax residents and permanent establishments of non‑resident persons that engage in transactions with related parties.
Circular 6/2023, published by the Cyprus Tax Department, introduced simplification measures for entities whose related‑party transactions fall below prescribed materiality thresholds. Entities meeting these lower thresholds are permitted to satisfy their obligations through a minimum simplified transfer pricing documentation package rather than the full Local File. The Circular sets out the specific thresholds per transaction category and the content expected under the simplified regime. Circular 6/2023 also confirmed the operational mechanics of the 60‑day on‑request window that governs how and when the Tax Department may demand production of the documentation file.
Cyprus’s documentation framework explicitly follows Chapter V of the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines. This means the Master File should contain standardised information about the MNE group’s global operations, while the Local File focuses on the specific controlled transactions of the Cyprus entity. Alignment with the OECD framework is significant for cross‑border groups because it ensures Cyprus documentation can be leveraged for compliance in other jurisdictions and supports mutual agreement procedures (MAP) and advance pricing agreements (APAs). For broader context on Cyprus tax reform in 2026, readers may also wish to review the companion guide on this site.
Not every related‑party transaction triggers the full documentation burden. The Cyprus transfer pricing threshold system operates on a per‑transaction‑category basis, meaning a taxpayer must assess its aggregate volume of controlled transactions within each category against the applicable materiality threshold. Where the threshold is exceeded for any category, the corresponding documentation obligation is activated.
The following table consolidates the materiality thresholds by transaction category, as set out in the Cyprus transfer pricing legislation and clarified by Circular 6/2023. Entities whose transactions in a given category remain below the threshold may rely on the simplified documentation regime rather than preparing a full Local File for that category.
| Transaction Category | Materiality Threshold (Annual, Per Category) | Documentation Required if Threshold Exceeded |
|---|---|---|
| Sale / purchase of goods | €750,000 | Summary Information Table + Local File |
| Provision / receipt of services | €250,000 | Local File; SIT if multiple categories apply |
| Royalties and intellectual‑property payments | €250,000 | Local File + Master File (if group MNE threshold met) |
| Financial transactions (loans, guarantees, cash pooling) | €750,000 | Local File + transfer pricing study |
| Any other controlled transaction | €250,000 | Local File |
Entities that fall below all applicable thresholds are still required to prepare a Summary Information Table (SIT) and to meet the minimum simplified transfer pricing documentation requirements outlined in paragraph 4 of Circular 6/2023. In practice, this means no entity with related‑party transactions is entirely exempt from documentation, the level of effort scales with the volume and nature of transactions.
The SIT is a standardised table that every entity with controlled transactions must be prepared to file with its income tax return. It captures the nature, value and counterparty details of each related‑party transaction. Below is a representative SIT extract showing the format the Tax Department expects:
| Row | Related Party Name | Jurisdiction | Transaction Type | Annual Value (€) | TP Method Applied |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Parent Co Ltd | United Kingdom | Management fees received | 180,000 | TNMM |
| 2 | Parent Co Ltd | United Kingdom | Intercompany loan interest paid | 95,000 | CUP |
| 3 | Subsidiary A GmbH | Germany | Sale of goods | 820,000 | RPM |
| 4 | Subsidiary B SARL | France | Royalty payments | 60,000 | CUP |
| 5 | Subsidiary C Inc | United States | IT support services | 275,000 | TNMM |
| 6 | Parent Co Ltd | United Kingdom | Guarantee fee paid | 40,000 | CUP |
The Master File is to be prepared by the income tax return submission deadline for the respective tax year. After the preparation deadline the Master File must be made available to the Tax Department within 60 days of a formal request. The content follows Chapter V of the OECD guidelines and should include:
The Local File must be ready by the tax return filing deadline and submitted to the Tax Department on request within 60 days. Its content must cover:
The SIT must be submitted together with the corporate income tax return. It is not a replacement for the Local File but serves as the Tax Department’s screening tool. Entries should match the entity’s audited financial statements and be reconcilable to the Local File. Each row should identify the related party, the jurisdiction, the transaction type, the aggregate annual value and the transfer pricing method applied. Industry observers expect the Tax Department to use SIT data analytics to prioritise audit targets, making accuracy essential.
The 60‑day on‑request rule is arguably the most operationally challenging element of the Cyprus transfer pricing documentation requirements. When the Tax Commissioner issues a written request for the TP documentation file, the taxpayer has exactly 60 calendar days from the date of notification to make the documentation available. Failure to do so within this window triggers automatic penalties.
It is important to distinguish this 60‑day documentation rule from the separate 60‑day and 183‑day tax residency rules that apply to individuals in Cyprus. The TP 60‑day rule relates exclusively to the production of transfer pricing documentation and has no connection to residency status.
The ITL requires taxpayers to have documentation ready by the tax return filing deadline and to make it available within 60 days upon request. In practice, this means the documentation should already exist in a finalised state before any request arrives. Maintaining a clearly dated, version‑controlled document repository, ideally with a third‑party timestamp or auditor’s confirmation of the preparation date, provides the best defence in the event of a dispute over timeliness. If an extension is needed, early and proactive communication with the Tax Department is advisable, although there is no statutory right to an extension.
Non‑compliance with Cyprus transfer pricing documentation obligations carries significant financial penalties. The penalty regime is structured to escalate depending on the nature and severity of the breach.
| Offence | Default Penalty | Aggravating Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to produce documentation within 60 days of request | €5,000 | Higher penalties for repeated non‑compliance; potential criminal prosecution for wilful obstruction |
| Failure to prepare or maintain a Local File | €5,000 | Additional penalties per transaction category where documentation is absent |
| Late or incomplete SIT filing | €500 per return | Cumulative for each year of non‑filing |
| Filing a false or misleading SIT / documentation file | Up to €20,000 | Tax adjustments, back‑taxes, interest and potential referral for criminal investigation |
Entities that discover gaps in their documentation should consider making a voluntary disclosure to the Tax Department before a formal request is issued. While there is no guaranteed penalty amnesty, early corrective action and demonstrable good faith are widely understood to influence enforcement outcomes. Documentation should be retained for a minimum of seven years. Taxpayers engaged in international commercial transactions should also coordinate TP documentation with transfer pricing positions taken in counterparty jurisdictions to reduce double‑taxation risk and strengthen MAP eligibility.
A Cyprus‑registered software company pays €120,000 in management fees to its UK parent and charges €80,000 for IT support services to a German sister company. Neither transaction category breaches the applicable materiality threshold. The company’s compliance obligations are:
A Cyprus holding company within a multinational group has €900,000 in goods purchases from a related manufacturer, €300,000 in intra‑group service fees received, and an €800,000 intercompany loan. Two categories, goods and financial transactions, exceed their respective thresholds. The company must:
The following rolling calendar helps in‑house teams prepare transfer pricing documentation well ahead of the tax return filing deadline and any potential 60‑day request.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rafaella Dionysiou at Dionysiou Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Proactive preparation is the most effective way to manage the transfer pricing documentation requirements Cyprus deadline framework imposes. Entities that are uncertain whether their controlled transactions breach the applicable thresholds, or that need to build audit‑readiness capacity ahead of a potential 60‑day request, should seek specialist guidance promptly. To connect with a qualified international tax professional, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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