Country Overview
Cyprus is a highly attractive destination for relocation and international business, offering a warm Mediterranean climate, a rich cultural heritage, a safe and relaxed lifestyle, and a thriving expat community. The island combines European standards of living with one of the most favourable tax regimes in the EU and a strategic location at the crossroads of Europe, Asia, and Africa.
As an EU member state, Cyprus offers a skilled, English-speaking workforce with deep expertise across Financial Services, Shipping, ICT, Forex, Professional Services, and Tourism. Around one-fifth of residents are foreign-born, so international teams integrate naturally. Cyprus operates a dual immigration system: EU/EEA/Swiss nationals enjoy freedom of movement, while non-EU nationals require work authorisation, typically employer-sponsored.
*This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and should not be viewed as legal or tax advice. The information discussed may change frequently, and Access Financial cannot guarantee that all content remains current at all times.
2026 Key Legislative Updates
Comprehensive tax reform effective from 1 January 2026: personal income tax-free threshold raised to €22,000; SDC on dividends reduced from 17% to 5%; SDC on rental income and the deemed dividend distribution rule abolished. Minimum wage rises to €1,088/month (after 6 months). Mandatory electronic submission of individual tax returns via TAXISnet. Cyprus targeting Schengen Area accession in 2026.
Contracts
Cypriot employment contracts define the terms of engagement — type, duration, notice, pay, and benefits. All employees are entitled to a written statement of employment particulars within one month of starting work, in line with EU Directive 2019/1152.
Contract Types
| Contract Type | Duration | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| Open-Ended (Permanent) | Indefinite | Most common; full statutory rights; typically 6-month probation |
| Fixed-Term | Specified end date / project | Must be in writing; renewal beyond ~30 months may convert to permanent |
| Part-Time | Indefinite or fixed | Pro-rata rights; no less favourable treatment than full-time staff |
| Self-Employment (Contracting) | Per service agreement | Sole trader or via limited company; contractor handles own tax and SI |
Fixed-Term to Permanent — 30-Month Rule
Under the Fixed-Term Employees Law (aligned with EU Directive 1999/70/EC), where successive fixed-term contracts exceed 30 months in total, the relationship is presumed to be of indefinite duration — unless the employer can demonstrate objective reasons justifying continued temporary status. Many employers convert contractors to permanent staff earlier to retain talent.
What Your Contract Must Include
Mandatory Particulars
- Job title and description of duties
- Start date and contract duration (if fixed-term)
- Salary, pay frequency, and method of payment
- Working hours and place of work
- Annual leave entitlement
- Notice period (both parties)
- Probation period (if applicable)
- Reference to social insurance and GESY
Common Additional Clauses
- Confidentiality / NDA provisions
- Intellectual property assignment
- Restrictive covenants (non-compete, non-solicit)
- 13th-month salary (Christmas bonus)
- Bonus and commission structure
- Relocation and housing allowance
- Disciplinary and grievance procedure reference
Access Financial drafts compliant Cypriot employment contracts and manages onboarding for EOR, self-employed, and limited-company engagements.
Working Hours & Overtime
Cypriot working time rules are aligned with EU Directive 2003/88/EC. The standard full-time workweek is 40 hours, generally spread Monday to Friday. Overtime arrangements are largely set by contract or collective agreement.
| Parameter | Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard full-time hours | 40 hrs/week | Typically 8 hrs/day, Monday to Friday |
| Maximum weekly hours | 48 hrs/week avg | Calculated over 4-month reference period |
| Daily rest | 11 consecutive hrs | Per 24-hour period — mandatory |
| Rest break (>6 hrs) | At least 15 min | Uninterrupted; required for shifts over 6 hours |
| Weekly rest | 24 hrs | Per 7-day period |
| Overtime rate | No statutory rate | Market norm: 150% on weekdays, 200% on Sundays/public holidays |
Transparent and Predictable Working Conditions
Cyprus has implemented EU Directive 2019/1152 — employees must receive written terms covering working hours, training rights, probation, and parallel employment within strict deadlines. Employers must review documentation now to remain compliant.
Probation Period
Probation is contractual rather than statutory in Cyprus. The market standard is six months, during which the Termination of Employment Law’s notice and unfair dismissal protections do not apply in the same way.
| Parameter | Standard practice | Legal notes |
|---|---|---|
| Typical duration | 6 months | Up to 24 months may be agreed in writing but rare in practice |
| Notice during probation | Minimal / contractual | Statutory notice period applies only after 26 weeks of service |
| Termination protection | Limited | Unfair dismissal claims generally not available within first 26 weeks |
| Day-one statutory rights | Apply from day one | Social insurance, GESY, annual leave accrual, anti-discrimination |
Immigration & Work Visas
Cyprus operates a dual immigration system. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens enjoy freedom of movement; non-EU nationals require work authorisation, typically sponsored by a Cypriot employer. UK nationals are treated as third-country nationals following Brexit.
Schengen Accession Targeted in 2026
Cyprus is targeting Schengen Area accession in 2026, subject to final EU Council approval. Once joined, internal border checks with other Schengen states will be removed, simplifying business travel and mobility for residents.
EU vs. Non-EU Pathways
EU/EEA/Swiss nationals staying over 90 days must apply for a Registration Certificate (the “Yellow Slip”) at the Civil Registry and Migration Department. UK and other non-EU nationals require an employer-sponsored work permit, an entry visa (Category D), and a Temporary Residence and Employment Permit (the “Pink Slip”) after arrival.
| Visa / Permit Route | Min. Salary | Sponsor? | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU Yellow Slip (MEU1) | No minimum | No | Indefinite (no expiry) |
| General Employment Permit | Sector-dependent | Yes | Up to 4 years; renewable |
| EU Blue Card | ~€43,632/yr | Yes | 2 years; renewable |
| Intra-Company Transfer (ICT) | Sector-dependent | Yes (group entity) | Up to 3 years (1 yr for trainees) |
| Digital Nomad Visa | €3,500/mo | No (foreign employer) | 1 year; renewable for 2 more |
| Startup Visa | No minimum | Innovation criteria | 2 years; renewable |
| Category F (Independent Means) | Sufficient income | No | Long-term; no work rights |
Medical Requirements
Non-EU applicants must provide certified medical certificates as part of the visa process, including tests for HIV, syphilis, Hepatitis B and C, and a chest X-ray for tuberculosis. Tests must be conducted in a government-approved laboratory. There are no general health checks for EU nationals.
AF’s Cyprus immigration team has relocated thousands of contractors and professionals to the island. We handle Yellow Slips, work permits, Digital Nomad visas, Blue cards and full right-to-work compliance.
Leave Entitlements
Cypriot statutory leave entitlements are comprehensive and aligned with EU directives. Many professional employers offer enhanced benefits above the statutory floor, particularly in financial services, ICT, and shipping.
Annual Leave
| Parameter | Entitlement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory minimum | 20 working days/yr | 5-day week; pro-rata for part-time staff |
| Market standard (professional) | 21–25 days | Plus public holidays observed separately |
| Holiday pay rate | Normal remuneration | Must include regular allowances and commission |
| Carry-over | Limited | Usually within Q1 of following year; check company policy |
Parental Leave
| Leave type | Duration | Pay | From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternity (1st child) | 22 weeks | ~72% of insurable earnings via Social Insurance | Day one |
| Maternity (2nd child) | 22 weeks | ~72% of insurable earnings via Social Insurance | Day one |
| Maternity (3rd+ child) | 26 weeks | ~72% of insurable earnings via Social Insurance | Day one |
| Paternity | 2 consecutive weeks | Social Insurance allowance | Within 16 weeks of birth |
| Parental (unpaid) | Up to 18 weeks per child | Unpaid | After 6 months of service; until child turns 8 |
Sick Leave
| Parameter | Rule |
|---|---|
| Statutory employer-paid sick days | Not automatic; per contract or collective agreement |
| Social Insurance Sickness Benefit | From day 4 of illness (3-day waiting period) |
| Maximum duration | Up to 156 days (extendable to 312 days) |
| Medical certificate | Required to claim sickness benefit |
Public Holidays 2026
Cyprus observes 14 official public holidays in 2026. Where a holiday falls on a weekend, it is generally not moved to the next working day. Employees required to work on a public holiday are typically paid at double the standard rate.
| Date | Day | Holiday |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January | Thursday | New Year’s Day |
| 6 January | Tuesday | Epiphany |
| 23 February | Monday | Green Monday (Clean Monday) |
| 25 March | Wednesday | Greek Independence Day |
| 1 April | Wednesday | Cyprus National Day (EOKA Day) |
| 10 April | Friday | Orthodox Good Friday |
| 13 April | Monday | Orthodox Easter Monday |
| 1 May | Friday | Labour Day |
| 1 June | Monday | Pentecost Monday (Kataklysmos) |
| 15 August | Saturday | Assumption of the Virgin Mary |
| 1 October | Thursday | Cyprus Independence Day |
| 28 October | Wednesday | Ochi Day (Greek National Day) |
| 25 December | Friday | Christmas Day |
| 26 December | Saturday | Boxing Day (Synaxis of the Virgin Mary) |
Notice Periods
The Termination of Employment Law sets statutory minimum notice based on length of service. Most professional contracts in Cyprus specify longer notice periods, particularly for managerial and specialist roles.
| Length of service | Employer notice (statutory) | Employee notice |
|---|---|---|
| Under 26 weeks | None | None |
| 26 weeks – under 1 year | 1 week | 1 week |
| 1 year – under 2 years | 2 weeks | 1 week |
| 2 – under 5 years | 4 weeks | 2 weeks |
| 5 – under 10 years | 5 weeks | 2 weeks |
| 10 – under 15 years | 6 weeks | 3 weeks |
| 15 – under 20 years | 7 weeks | 3 weeks |
| 20+ years | 8 weeks | 3 weeks |
Termination & Redundancy
Cypriot employment law provides significant protection against unfair dismissal after 26 weeks of service. Redundancy payments are funded by the state Redundancy Fund, financed through employer contributions.
| Years of service | Redundancy entitlement |
|---|---|
| Up to 4 years | 2 weeks’ wages per year of service |
| 5 – 10 years | 2.5 weeks’ wages per year of service |
| 11 – 15 years | 3 weeks’ wages per year of service |
| 16 – 20 years | 3.5 weeks’ wages per year of service |
| Beyond 20 years | 4 weeks’ wages per year of service |
| Overall cap | 75 weeks’ wages total |
Unfair Dismissal Protection from 26 Weeks
Once an employee passes the 26-week service threshold, dismissals must follow a fair procedure and have a valid reason. Wrongful termination can result in significant compensation orders from the Industrial Disputes Court — AF can advise on compliant processes.
Income Tax
The Cypriot tax year is the calendar year. Employees are taxed via PAYE — employers withhold tax at source through monthly payroll. Cyprus offers one of the most competitive personal tax regimes in the EU, particularly for relocating professionals.
Income Tax Bands 2026
| Band | Annual Income | Rate 2026 | Rate 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax-free allowance | Up to €22,000 | 0% | 0% (up to €19,500) |
| Lower Rate | €22,001 – €32,000 | 20% | 20% |
| Mid Rate | €32,001 – €42,000 | 25% | 25% |
| Higher Rate | €42,001 – €72,000 | 30% | 30% |
| Top Rate | Above €72,000 | 35% | 35% (above €60,000) |
Expat Tax Incentives — Among the EU’s Most Generous
50% exemption on employment income for relocating high earners (salary > €55,000) for up to 17 years. 20% exemption (up to €8,550/yr) for mid-earners for 7 years. Non-domicile status exempts qualifying residents from SDC on dividends, interest, and rental income for up to 17 years.
Special Defence Contribution (SDC)
| Income type | SDC rate 2026 | SDC rate pre-2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Dividends (Cyprus tax residents, domiciled) | 5% | 17% |
| Bank deposit interest | 17% | 30% |
| Rental income | Abolished | 3% (on 75% of gross) |
| Deemed dividend distribution | Abolished | 17% |
| Non-domiciled residents | 0% on all categories | 0% |
VAT
| Rate | % | Applies to |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 19% | Most goods and services |
| Reduced | 9% | Hotel accommodation, catering, passenger transport |
| Lower reduced | 5% | Books, newspapers, primary residence sales (first 130m²) |
| Zero | 0% | Exports, international transport, supplies to vessels/aircraft |
| Registration threshold | €15,600 | Annual turnover above which VAT registration is mandatory |
Let Access Financial handle your Cyprus payroll — seamlessly and compliantly, with local specialists managing PAYE, GESY, social insurance, and the 50% expat exemption.
Benefits
Cypriot statutory benefits are comprehensive and underpinned by Social Insurance and GESY. Competitive employers in financial services, ICT, and shipping layer supplemental benefits to attract and retain professional talent.
Mandatory Statutory Benefits
| Benefit | Rate / Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| GESY Healthcare | 2.65% employee + 2.90% employer | Universal public healthcare; small co-payments |
| Social Insurance Pension | 8.8% employee + 8.8% employer | Retirement age 65; min. 15 years of contributions |
| Sickness Benefit (SI) | From day 4 of illness | Up to 156 days (extendable to 312 days) |
| Maternity Allowance | ~72% of insurable earnings | 22–26 weeks via Social Insurance Fund |
| Annual Leave | 20 working days/yr | Pro-rata for part-time staff |
| Redundancy Pay | Up to 75 weeks’ wages | After 104 weeks of continuous service |
| Minimum Wage | €1,088/month (after 6 months) | €979/month for the first 6 months (2026) |
Market-Standard Supplemental Benefits
| Benefit | Prevalence | Typical provision |
|---|---|---|
| 13th-Month Salary (Christmas bonus) | Very common | One extra month’s pay, paid in December |
| Provident Fund | Common in larger employers | Employer + employee contributions, typically 5%–10% |
| Private Medical Insurance | Common in professional sectors | Bupa Global, Cyprialife, Generali, EuroLife |
| Life Assurance | Common (large employers) | 2–4× annual salary (Death in Service) |
| Meal Allowance / Vouchers | Sector-dependent | Daily allowance or subsidised canteen |
| Company Car / Car Allowance | Common for managerial roles | Especially in shipping, sales, and consulting |
| Housing Allowance (relocation) | Common for expat hires | Particularly in Limassol’s international sectors |
| Remote / Hybrid Working | Standard post-2021 | Especially in ICT, forex, and professional services |
Pension System
The Cypriot pension system is built on the state Social Insurance pension, often supplemented by occupational provident funds and private pension arrangements. There is no mandatory occupational pension auto-enrolment in Cyprus.
| Parameter | 2026 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory retirement age | 65 | Early retirement at 63 possible with full contribution record |
| Minimum qualifying period | 15 years of contributions | Required for any state pension entitlement |
| Basic pension formula | 60% × basic insurable earnings × insurance points | Weekly basic insurable amount ~€220 |
| Supplementary pension | 1.5% of total adjusted insurable earnings | Career-average based |
| SI contribution rate (employee) | 8.8% | Capped at €68,904/yr insurable earnings |
| SI contribution rate (employer) | 8.8% | Same cap applies |
| GESY on pensions | 2.65% | Applied to pension income above thresholds |
Insurances
Mandatory and recommended insurances for employers, employees, and contractors in Cyprus.
| Insurance | Cover | Required by |
|---|---|---|
| Employer’s Liability Insurance | Min. €160,000 per employee / €3.4M per event | Safety and Health at Work Law |
| Motor Insurance | Third-party minimum | Motor Vehicles (Third-Party Insurance) Law |
| GESY (Public Health) | Universal — funded by contributions | General Healthcare System Law |
Professional Indemnity Insurance — Contractors
Often contractually required by end-clients in Cyprus, particularly in forex, investment services, ICT, and consulting. Standard minimum cover is €1M; financial services and technology roles typically require €2M+. AF can advise on appropriate cover for your sector.
Private Health Insurance
GESY provides universal coverage, but many professional employers and individuals supplement with private health insurance for faster specialist access, broader treatment options, and international cover.
| Provider | Typical monthly cost | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Bupa Global | €80–€200 (individual) | International comprehensive |
| Cyprialife | €60–€150 (individual) | Local comprehensive |
| Generali / EuroLife | €60–€160 (individual) | Comprehensive |
| IMG (via AF partner) | From €50 (individual) | International expatriate plans |
AF Solutions
Access Financial is headquartered in the region and has operated in Cyprus for over two decades, supporting end-clients, recruitment agencies, and contractors across employment, self-employment, and limited-company solutions.
For End-Clients
Managing a contingent workforce in Cyprus can be complex. Our solutions streamline workforce management, making it simple, compliant, and cost-effective.
For Recruiters
We offer a complete suite of services, allowing you to simply, compliantly, and efficiently place your candidates in Cyprus and internationally, with minimum fuss.
For Contractors
Focus on what you do best and let us take care of your payroll, tax compliance, social insurance, GESY, and immigration needs in Cyprus.

Free Consultation
FAQ
Find answers to our most frequently asked questions below.
What solutions do you offer in Cyprus?
In Cyprus, Access Financial provides three compliant engagement models:
Employed/EOR (umbrella): We become the legal employer of your employees in Cyprus. Your business retains full control of the day-to-day work and deliverables, while we carry the employment, payroll, and tax liability.
Self-employment: Where an engagement genuinely meets the criteria for self-employed status, we register the contractor compliantly, manage their filing obligations throughout the contract term, and deregister them at the end of the assignment.
Limited company (PSC): We support engagements with contractors operating through their own limited company (personal service company). Where a contractor does not yet have a PSC but the engagement warrants one, we can handle company formation and ongoing administration on their behalf.
When should a company consider using an EOR?
An EOR is especially useful in a range of scenarios. It is the most efficient route when you want to convert existing contractors into compliant employees and reduce misclassification risk, or when you need to hire talent in a country where you do not have a local entity. It also allows you to onboard quickly without going through a lengthy and complex company registration process, while ensuring full compliance with local employment law, payroll, and tax regulations. Beyond these core use cases, an EOR is equally valuable when you are testing a new market before committing to a long-term investment, or when you simply need temporary or project-based hires abroad.
Can we hire both local nationals and foreign employees through an EOR or AOR?
Yes. Our EOR and AOR services cover both local nationals and foreign hires. For foreign nationals, additional visa or work permit requirements apply, and we can support the application process end-to-end — including sponsorship in jurisdictions where we hold the relevant licence.
Is permanent establishment (PE) risk avoided?
An EOR is a third-party business that legally employs international workers on your behalf, creating a clear layer of separation between your company and the staff based in other countries. The EOR becomes the legal employer for those workers, so although the employees continue to deliver services to your business, the legal distancing helps mitigate many common PE risks. That said, PE is determined by the facts on the ground (the nature of the activity, contract-signing authority, where revenue is generated, and so on), not solely by who issues the payslip. We therefore recommend reviewing each engagement with our specialists to confirm the appropriate structure.
Is contractor misclassification a high risk under an AOR engagement?
Misclassification typically occurs when contractors are treated as employees in practice — fixed hours, integration into the team, no right of substitution, direct supervision, and so on. Prevention requires clear engagement frameworks, standardised processes, documented evidence of independence, and recurring audits. Accountability and the right technology are key to staying compliant at scale, particularly as tax authorities increasingly use data analytics and algorithmic checks to flag suspect arrangements.
At Access Financial, we help our clients minimise this risk by designing tailored classification frameworks, onboarding checklists, contractual safeguards, and recurring compliance audits.
What is your pricing model?
Our standard management fee is 5% of the contract value, with a minimum of €550. We also offer volume discounts on bulk engagements. To discuss pricing for your specific scenario, please get in touch with our team here: https://accessfinancial.com/#get-started.
Social Insurance
Social Insurance (SI) contributions fund pensions, unemployment benefits, maternity allowance, sickness benefit, and other social benefits. Both employees and employers contribute, with separate contributions to the General Healthcare System (GESY).
Insurable Earnings Ceiling 2026
Social Insurance contributions are capped at insurable earnings of €1,325 per week (€5,742/month, €68,904/year). Earnings above this ceiling do not attract further SI contributions but remain subject to GESY (within its own cap).
Employer Contributions
Employee Contributions