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The rules governing real estate VAT Cyprus transactions changed fundamentally in 2026, and developers who have not updated their contracts, pricing schedules and invoicing workflows face immediate financial and compliance risk. Stamp duty on immovable property contracts was abolished with effect from 1 January 2026 as part of the broader Cyprus tax reform package, while critical VAT amendments, introducing use-based tests and a clarified definition of when a building is considered “new”, take effect on 1 September 2026. These parallel reforms require every active development project to be re-assessed against transitional cut-off dates, and every template agreement to be redlined before the next unit is sold.
This guide provides the step-by-step compliance playbook that developers, in-house counsel, project accountants and contractors need right now.
Before diving into the detail, here is a six-line summary of the position as at May 2026:
| Date | Change | Source |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Stamp duty on immovable property contracts abolished | Cyprus tax reform legislation |
| 1 January 2026 | Corporate income tax rate increased to 15% | Cyprus tax reform legislation |
| 1 July 2026 | Rent payments for Cyprus-situated immovable property must be made exclusively via bank transfer or electronic payment | Cyprus tax reform legislation |
| 1 September 2026 | VAT amendments to immovable property treatment take effect (use-based rules; “new building” clarification) | Amending decree under VAT Law 95(I)/2000 |
The 2026 legislative package touches multiple taxes simultaneously. Developers must map each reform against their project pipeline to determine which regime applies to each unit or phase. The timeline table below consolidates the key milestones.
| Effective Date | Reform | Practical Effect for Developers |
|---|---|---|
| 1 Jan 2026 | Stamp duty abolished on property contracts | Remove all stamp duty references from contracts; update closing-cost tables communicated to buyers; no stamp duty payments or filings required for contracts executed from this date |
| 1 Jan 2026 | Corporate income tax increased to 15% | Recalculate project profitability models; review JV and SPV structures; update financial projections for lender reporting |
| 1 Jan 2026 | Deemed-dividend-distribution (DDD) rules abolished for profits earned from 1 January 2026 onwards | Review dividend policies and shareholder loan structures within developer groups |
| 1 Jul 2026 | Mandatory electronic/bank-transfer payment for rent | Update rental management templates and tenant communications for income-producing assets held by developer entities |
| 1 Sep 2026 | VAT amendments: use-based tests and clarified “new building” definition | Determine whether each project qualifies under old or new VAT regime; update contracts, price schedules and VAT invoices accordingly |
The Cyprus VAT changes 2026 do not apply identically to every project. A critical transitional provision means that projects where the developer submitted a planning permit application before 31 October 2023 may continue to be treated under the previous VAT rules for certain supplies. Developers must verify the exact submission date of their planning permit with the relevant town planning authority and retain documentary proof. Projects that do not meet this cut-off fall entirely under the new regime from 1 September 2026. Where a project straddles both regimes, for example, phase one with a pre-cut-off permit and phase two with a post-cut-off permit, each phase must be treated independently for VAT purposes.
Until 31 December 2025, stamp duty was payable on contracts relating to the transfer of immovable property. The rate varied depending on the contract value. From 1 January 2026, stamp duty has been abolished entirely on such contracts as part of the Cyprus tax reform 2026 package. Industry observers expect this measure to simplify transaction mechanics and marginally reduce buyer acquisition costs, although the practical effect will depend on how developers adjust headline pricing.
For developers, the immediate impact is operational. Every sale agreement, reservation agreement and related contract template must be updated to remove stamp duty provisions, recalculate closing-cost schedules, and clearly communicate the change to buyers.
Developers should instruct legal counsel to push the following redlines to all active sale agreement templates:
Off-plan sales in Cyprus typically involve a two-stage process: a reservation agreement followed by a full sale contract. The abolition of stamp duty requires adjustments at both stages:
The most consequential element of the 2026 reforms for developers is the package of amendments to the VAT treatment of immovable property under VAT Law 95(I)/2000. The standard rate of VAT on property Cyprus transactions remains 19%, charged on the first supply of new, unused properties by VAT-registered developers. The reduced 5% rate continues to apply where the buyer meets the conditions for a primary-residence acquisition. What changes from 1 September 2026 is how the law determines whether a supply is VATable, and specifically when a building is considered “new.”
Under the amended rules, the VAT treatment of a property supply turns on two interrelated tests:
These tests require developers to maintain rigorous records of the construction timeline, occupancy status, and any interim use of each unit. Early indications suggest that the Tax Department will expect contemporaneous documentation, completion certificates, utility connection dates, and tenancy records, as evidence supporting the VAT treatment applied.
Consider a developer selling an off-plan apartment for a headline price of €300,000 (excluding VAT). The buyer does not qualify for the reduced 5% rate.
| Item | Under Previous Rules (Before 1 Sep 2026) | Under Amended Rules (From 1 Sep 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Headline price (excl. VAT) | €300,000 | €300,000 |
| VAT at 19% | €57,000 | €57,000 (provided the unit qualifies as “new” under the clarified definition) |
| Stamp duty | Applicable (varied by value) | €0 (abolished 1 Jan 2026) |
| Total buyer outlay | €357,000 + stamp duty | €357,000 (subject to new-building test being satisfied) |
| Developer risk | Low, clear first-supply rules | Must document that unit was never occupied; if unit was used for short-term let or show-home purposes, VAT treatment could be challenged |
The key takeaway is that the financial exposure lies not in the rate itself but in whether the supply qualifies as taxable at all. A developer who cannot demonstrate that a unit meets the “new building” test risks having VAT denied on recovery of input tax, or facing an unexpected exempt classification that disrupts the project’s VAT position.
This section provides the practical contract-drafting and pricing toolkit that developers need to implement the 2026 changes. Every developer operating in Cyprus should treat this as an urgent compliance exercise.
The following sample clauses are designed to be adapted to the developer’s standard sale and reservation agreements. They should be reviewed by qualified legal counsel before adoption.
The Cyprus VAT changes 2026 demand that developers move away from ambiguous pricing. Marketing materials, website listings and printed price schedules should now follow a clear format:
The 2026 reforms affect not only the developer-to-buyer relationship but also the developer-to-contractor and contractor-to-subcontractor chain. Developers must ensure that their construction contracts and subcontractor agreements are aligned with the new VAT framework.
VAT is charged at 19% on construction services provided by VAT-registered contractors and subcontractors. Where a subcontractor is not registered for VAT, typically because turnover falls below the registration threshold, the developer cannot recover input VAT on those services. The following table illustrates the invoicing flow for a typical development project.
| Party | Invoice Issued To | VAT Charged? | Input VAT Recoverable? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subcontractor (VAT-registered) | Main contractor | Yes, 19% | Yes, by main contractor on next VAT return |
| Subcontractor (not VAT-registered) | Main contractor | No | No, cost absorbed by main contractor |
| Main contractor (VAT-registered) | Developer | Yes, 19% | Yes, by developer (where the ultimate supply is taxable) |
| Developer (VAT-registered) | Buyer | Yes, 19% or 5% | N/A, output VAT collected |
Developers should include the following requirements in their subcontractor onboarding process:
Each VAT-compliant subcontractor invoice should include the following minimum information:
Beyond the VAT and stamp duty changes, the 2026 tax reform package introduces measures that directly affect developer profitability and entity structuring. The increase in the corporate income tax rate to 15%, introduced to align Cyprus with the OECD/G20 Pillar Two global minimum tax framework, applies to profits earned from 1 January 2026. For developers operating through corporate SPVs, this translates into a direct increase in the effective tax burden on project profits.
The abolition of the deemed-dividend-distribution (DDD) rules for profits earned from 1 January 2026 is a further structural change. Previously, undistributed profits of Cyprus tax-resident companies were subject to a deemed distribution and corresponding defence contribution. The removal of this rule gives developers greater flexibility in profit retention and reinvestment, but also requires a review of existing shareholder loan arrangements and dividend policies.
Industry observers expect the combined effect of these changes to prompt many developers to re-evaluate their corporate structures. Three red-flag scenarios should trigger an immediate review:
The following plan allocates tasks across legal, commercial and accounting teams. Use it as an executive dashboard to track compliance readiness before the 1 September 2026 VAT deadline.
| Timeframe | Team | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Legal | Push redlines to all sale, reservation and construction contract templates; insert VAT representation, price-adjustment, stamp-duty confirmation and invoice-timing clauses |
| Days 1–30 | Commercial | Update all price lists, marketing materials and website listings to show VAT-exclusive pricing and new closing-cost tables |
| Days 1–30 | Accounting | Confirm each project’s transitional status (planning permit date); update ERP/invoicing templates; brief finance team on new invoice requirements |
| Days 31–60 | Legal | Complete subcontractor onboarding audit, verify VAT registration status and update construction contracts with compliant invoice requirements |
| Days 31–60 | Commercial | Issue updated buyer communications for all pending reservations and incomplete sales; retrain sales team on new pricing presentation |
| Days 31–60 | Accounting | Run profitability re-modelling for active projects incorporating 15% corporate tax rate and updated VAT assumptions; report to board |
| Days 61–90 | Legal | Final review of all executed contracts for outstanding stamp duty deposits (arrange refunds); confirm all templates are compliant before 1 September 2026 deadline |
| Days 61–90 | Commercial | Verify all published price lists and third-party portal listings reflect the correct VAT and cost information |
| Days 61–90 | Accounting | Dry-run first VAT return under new rules; confirm input-tax recovery position for each project; file any outstanding reduced-rate (5%) applications |
| Item | Before 1 Jan 2026 / Before 1 Sep 2026 | After 1 Jan 2026 / After 1 Sep 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Stamp duty on sale contracts | Stamp duty applied at graduated rates depending on contract value | Stamp duty abolished from 1 January 2026, no charge on contracts executed from this date |
| VAT treatment of property transfers | Previous rules in force; projects with pre-cut-off planning permits may continue under old regime | Amended VAT rules (use-based tests and clarified “new” building definition) effective 1 September 2026 |
| Corporate income tax rate | 12.5% | 15% (from 1 January 2026) |
| Developer pricing practice | Varied, VAT-exclusive or VAT-inclusive depending on buyer type and incentive structure | Developers must show VAT treatment clearly in all pricing; include VAT adjustment clauses in contracts |
| Deemed dividend distribution | DDD rules applied to undistributed profits | DDD rules abolished for profits earned from 1 January 2026 onward |
The 2026 reforms represent the most significant change to real estate VAT Cyprus rules in over a decade. Stamp duty is already gone. The corporate tax rate is already higher. And in less than four months, the amended VAT rules will change how every new-build transaction is classified and invoiced. Developers who delay updating their contracts, pricing and operational workflows risk financial exposure, from misclassified VAT on sales to irrecoverable input tax on construction costs. The checklist and sample clauses in this guide are designed to be implemented immediately. For project-specific advice on transitional rules, entity restructuring or contract redrafting, consult a qualified Cyprus real estate development lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
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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