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Cyprus crypto tax obligations changed fundamentally on 1 January 2026, when Article 20E of the Income Tax Law introduced a dedicated 8 % flat tax on net profits from disposals of crypto-assets. The amendment, published in the Official Gazette on 31 December 2025, applies to both individuals and companies that are Cyprus tax residents, replacing what had been an ambiguous patchwork of general income-tax principles. For CFOs, founders, Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) and private investors, the new regime creates clear compliance obligations around calculation methodology, loss-offset rules, CASP registration and annual reporting. This guide sets out the full legal framework, provides worked numerical examples, and delivers step-by-step checklists so that every stakeholder can act with confidence.
At a glance:
Article 20E was inserted into the Cyprus Income Tax Law (as amended) by legislative amendments published in the Official Gazette on 31 December 2025, with an effective date of 1 January 2026. The article creates a standalone taxing provision for gains derived from the disposal of crypto-assets, sitting alongside, but separate from, the existing capital-gains and corporate-income provisions. By ring-fencing crypto disposals into their own article, the legislature signalled that earlier debates over whether crypto profits fell under general income, capital gains or no tax at all are now resolved for Cyprus tax residents.
The amendments were gazetted on 31 December 2025, as confirmed by legal bulletins referencing the Official Gazette publication. Article 20E forms part of the broader 2025/2026 tax-reform package that also addressed other areas of Cyprus direct taxation. The Cyprus Tax Department, operating under the Ministry of Finance, administers the provision through existing self-assessment and filing infrastructure.
Article 20E covers the following taxable events (collectively termed “disposals”):
Certain receipts are not taxed under Article 20E but may fall under ordinary income-tax rules:
Both individuals and companies that are Cyprus tax residents fall within the scope of the 8 % crypto tax. Non-residents are generally outside the charge unless they have a permanent establishment in Cyprus through which the disposal occurs.
The 8 % flat tax under Article 20E applies to the net taxable gain from each tax year’s crypto-asset disposals. The core formula is straightforward:
Net Taxable Gain = Disposal Proceeds − Acquisition Cost − Allowable Crypto-Related Expenses
Disposal proceeds are measured at fair market value on the date of the transaction. Acquisition cost includes the original purchase price plus any directly attributable transaction fees (exchange commissions, blockchain gas fees). Allowable expenses cover costs that are exclusively and necessarily incurred in connection with the disposal, for example, advisory fees or platform withdrawal charges.
| Example Scenario | Calculation Steps | Tax Due (8 %) |
|---|---|---|
| Individual, sale to fiat. Buys 1 BTC for €30,000 (incl. €150 exchange fee). Sells for €50,000 (incl. €200 fee). | Proceeds: €50,000 − Acquisition cost: €30,150 − Expenses: €200 = €19,650 | €19,650 × 8 % = €1,572 |
| Crypto-to-crypto swap. Swaps 10 ETH (acquired at €2,000 each = €20,000) for BTC worth €28,000 on swap date. | Proceeds: €28,000 − Acquisition cost: €20,000 − Fees: €100 = €7,900 | €7,900 × 8 % = €632 |
| Payment for goods. Company pays a supplier €12,000 in stablecoins acquired at €11,500. | Proceeds (value of goods): €12,000 − Cost: €11,500 − Fees: €50 = €450 | €450 × 8 % = €36 |
| Company disposal. Cyprus Ltd sells altcoin portfolio for €100,000; total cost basis €65,000; expenses €2,000. | Proceeds: €100,000 − Cost: €65,000 − Expenses: €2,000 = €33,000 | €33,000 × 8 % = €2,640 |
Where an individual and a company both realise the same nominal gain, the tax charge under Article 20E is identical, 8 %. The difference lies in what happens next: company profits may be subject to additional considerations when distributed as dividends (see the corporate-interaction section below).
Article 20E ring-fences crypto losses: a loss on one crypto disposal can offset a gain on another crypto disposal only within the same tax year. Losses cannot be carried forward to future tax years and cannot be set against non-crypto income. This makes accurate same-year record-keeping critical. Taxpayers should consider the timing of disposals carefully, realising gains and losses in the same calendar year maximises the benefit of the offset.
Not every crypto-related receipt triggers the 8 % flat tax. Article 20E targets disposals, so the initial receipt of crypto-assets through mining, staking, airdrops or hard forks is generally treated under the ordinary income-tax rules rather than the flat-rate regime.
The two-step tax treatment, ordinary income on receipt, then Article 20E on disposal, requires meticulous record-keeping. Taxpayers must capture the date, fair market value and source of every receipt and map it to the cost basis used in any later disposal. Industry observers expect the Cyprus Tax Department to scrutinise cost-basis claims closely, given the potential for double-counting or understating income at the receipt stage.
For Cyprus companies, the 8 % crypto tax under Article 20E applies to realised gains on crypto-asset disposals as a separate charge. Operational income earned by a crypto business, exchange commissions, custody fees, consultancy revenue, remains subject to the standard corporate income-tax rate of 12.5 %. This distinction means a company’s tax position requires careful segregation of crypto disposal gains (8 %) from business income (12.5 %).
Key interactions to consider:
Cyprus non-domiciled (non-dom) individuals benefit from exemptions on dividend and interest income. Where a Cyprus company realises a crypto disposal gain at 8 % and later distributes the after-tax profit as a dividend, a non-dom shareholder should not face additional Cyprus income tax on that dividend. This makes the effective tax rate on crypto gains channelled through a Cyprus company potentially as low as 8 % at the entity level with no further charge at the shareholder level for qualifying non-doms. Early indications suggest this structure is attracting significant interest from international founders relocating to Cyprus.
A Cyprus Ltd realises a €100,000 net crypto gain. Article 20E tax at 8 % = €8,000. The remaining €92,000 is available for distribution. If the shareholder is a Cyprus non-dom individual, the dividend is exempt from further income tax and from Special Defence Contribution. The total effective rate is therefore 8 %. If the shareholder is domiciled in Cyprus, Special Defence Contribution of 17 % may apply to the dividend, increasing the combined effective rate. Structuring advice is essential to ensure the correct treatment.
Crypto-Asset Service Providers operating in or from Cyprus face both regulatory and tax obligations. CASP registration in Cyprus is governed by anti-money-laundering legislation, which requires providers of exchange, custodial and transfer services for crypto-assets to register with the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) or the relevant competent authority. As of May 2026, the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) is also shaping the licensing landscape at the European level, and CASPs should monitor its interaction with national registration requirements.
From a tax perspective, a CASP that holds proprietary crypto positions and disposes of them is subject to Article 20E on any gains, just like any other taxpayer. However, CASPs also bear additional compliance responsibilities relating to their clients’ reporting and AML/KYC documentation.
CASPs should maintain comprehensive records of all client transactions to support both their own Article 20E computations and any future regulatory requests from the Tax Department or CySEC. Required documentation includes client onboarding files, transaction records, wallet addresses, KYC verification and source-of-funds evidence.
| CASP Activity | Primary Regulatory Check | Tax Reporting Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Exchange services (fiat ↔ crypto) | CASP registration; AML/KYC onboarding | Report proprietary disposal gains under Article 20E; maintain client transaction logs |
| Custody / wallet services | CASP registration; asset-segregation requirements | Document any proprietary positions separately; client assets not taxable to CASP |
| Transfer / payment services | CASP registration; transaction-monitoring obligations | Disposal by CASP of own-held assets triggers Article 20E; client transfers not taxable to CASP |
| Advisory / portfolio management | Potential additional licensing (investment-services overlay) | Service fees taxed as business income at 12.5 %; any proprietary disposals at 8 % |
Compliance under Article 20E begins with disciplined record-keeping throughout the tax year, not at year-end. The Cyprus Tax Department administers the provision through the existing self-assessment system, and taxpayers are expected to report crypto disposal gains in their annual income-tax return.
Recommended filing practices:
Crypto-asset valuations must be converted to EUR at the prevailing exchange rate on the date of disposal. Taxpayers should use a consistent, reputable pricing source (such as a major exchange’s quoted rate at the time of the transaction). Where multiple exchanges show different prices, the Tax Department may query significant discrepancies. Retaining screenshots or API data from the pricing source protects against audit challenges.
The 8 % flat rate under Article 20E is competitive, but effective tax planning requires attention to structure, timing and classification. Short-term operational measures every taxpayer should implement include:
The choice between holding crypto personally or through a Cyprus company depends on several factors:
All structuring should be conducted within the boundaries of Cyprus AML legislation and applicable regulatory requirements. Aggressive tax arbitrage that lacks commercial substance is likely to be challenged.
The following ten-point checklist provides a concrete action plan for CFOs, founders and compliance officers to implement within the next 90 days:
The 8 % flat rate makes Cyprus one of the most competitive jurisdictions in Europe for crypto-asset taxation. The table below provides a high-level comparison with two frequently considered alternatives.
| Jurisdiction | Key Crypto Tax Rule | When It Is Preferable |
|---|---|---|
| Cyprus | 8 % flat tax on disposal gains (Article 20E); non-dom dividend exemption available | Investors and companies seeking a low, predictable flat rate within an EU member state with strong legal infrastructure |
| Malta | Crypto gains may be taxed at up to 35 % personal rate; potential for refund structures via companies | Corporates that can access the Malta refund system; less attractive for individual holders |
| UAE (Dubai) | 0 % personal income tax; 9 % federal corporate tax on profits above AED 375,000 | Individuals with no need for EU residency or passporting; companies below the corporate-tax threshold |
Industry observers expect Cyprus to attract a growing share of crypto-focused founders and investment funds looking for an EU-regulated, English-speaking jurisdiction with a clear and competitive tax regime.
| Entity Type | Tax Treatment Under Article 20E (8 %) | Registration / Licensing & Primary Compliance Steps |
|---|---|---|
| Individual (Cyprus tax resident) | 8 % on realised disposal gains (sales, swaps, payments) | Maintain trade logs; include gains in annual personal tax return; no CASP registration unless offering services |
| Cyprus company | 8 % on realised disposal gains; operational income taxed at 12.5 % corporate rate | Company accounts; board minutes for disposals; consider CASP registration if operating exchange or custody services |
| CASP (exchange, custodian) | 8 % on proprietary trading / disposal profits; client-asset segregation and AML duties separate | CASP registration / licensing with CySEC; AML/KYC programme; report transactions to Tax Department if required |
Article 20E has brought welcome clarity to the Cyprus crypto tax landscape: a single 8 % flat rate on disposal gains, defined loss-offset rules and a clear demarcation between disposal income and ordinary income from mining or staking. For investors, the regime offers one of the lowest effective crypto-tax rates in the EU. For companies and CASPs, it introduces discrete compliance obligations, from cost-basis record-keeping and provisional tax provisioning to CASP registration and AML programme maintenance. The 90-day checklist above provides a practical starting point. For tailored structuring, registration support or cross-border planning, engaging a qualified Cyprus blockchain and financial-regulation lawyer is the recommended next step.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Charalambos Papasavvas at Papasavvas and Liskavidou LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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