Our Expert in Cyprus
No results available
Last updated: 13 May 2026
Car insurance for seniors in Cyprus changed fundamentally in early 2026 when Parliament voted to prohibit insurers from using a driver’s age as the sole ground for refusing or cancelling motor cover. Before the reform, many drivers over 70 faced outright refusals, steep premium hikes or non-renewal notices with no explanation, a practice widely criticised as age discrimination in insurance in Cyprus. This guide explains exactly what the 2026 insurance law in Cyprus now requires, sets out the rights every older driver and their family should know, and provides a step-by-step workflow, including sample wording and complaint channels, for anyone who needs to challenge an insurance refusal in Cyprus.
The 2026 insurance law in Cyprus introduced two core obligations for motor insurers: they can no longer treat age alone as a sufficient underwriting reason to decline cover, and they must provide a written justification whenever they refuse or cancel a policy. Below is a short timeline of how the reform reached the statute book and what each milestone means in practice.
| Date | Event | Practical Effect for Seniors & Brokers |
|---|---|---|
| 5 March 2026 | Parliament bans age discrimination in vehicle insurance (reported by KNews / Kathimerini). | The legislative intent is clear: insurers may no longer use age alone to deny cover. Brokers should begin flagging underwriting changes to clients immediately. |
| 30 March 2026 | MPs back further tweaks to the law regulating car insurance for seniors (reported by Cyprus Mail). | Amendments clarify the interplay between driving-licence renewal, medical-certificate requirements and underwriting decisions. Insurers must align their processes. |
| 7 April 2026 | Industry and advisory bodies publish consumer-facing guidance on the new rules (DigiCare Insurance guide). | Insurers and brokers begin updating internal procedures. Consumers can now compare their treatment against published standards. |
The amendments to Cyprus’s motor-insurance legislation create two enforceable obligations that directly affect every motor insurance refusal in Cyprus:
Age Platform Europe has noted that Cyprus’s reform places it among a small but growing number of EU member states that have enacted specific protections for elderly drivers in the insurance market, reinforcing the principle that age-based underwriting must be proportionate and evidence-driven.
No, not on the basis of age alone. Under the 2026 rules, age discrimination in insurance in Cyprus is unlawful where a driver’s age is the sole or primary reason for refusal. However, insurers retain the right to assess risk using legitimate, objective criteria.
If you are a competent, licensed driver and the only reason an insurer gives, or implies, for refusing your application is your date of birth, that refusal is now unlawful under Cyprus law. The reform does not guarantee every applicant a policy, but it does guarantee that any refusal must rest on individually assessed, evidence-based risk factors rather than on a blanket age threshold.
The 2026 changes do not remove an insurer’s right to underwrite risk. The following factors remain legitimate underwriting criteria:
Age discrimination in insurance in Cyprus can be direct or indirect:
Both forms are now challengeable. Industry observers expect regulators to scrutinise indirect practices more closely as enforcement matures over the coming months.
Under the 2026 rules, insurers must explain refusal decisions in writing. This obligation applies whether the insurer declines an initial application, refuses to renew an existing policy, or cancels mid-term.
The written justification must include, at a minimum:
If you receive a refusal or non-renewal notice that lacks the detail required above, send the following request without delay. The wording below can be adapted for email or printed letter:
“Dear [Insurer Name / Underwriting Department],
I refer to your decision dated [date] to refuse / not renew my motor insurance policy (policy number [X] / application reference [X]).
Under the amendments to the Motor Insurance legislation adopted by the House of Representatives in March 2026, I am entitled to a written explanation that identifies the specific risk factors and evidence relied upon in reaching this decision.
Please provide, within 14 days of this letter:
I reserve all rights, including the right to refer this matter to the relevant supervisory authority should a satisfactory response not be received.
Yours faithfully, [Your Name]”
This letter should be sent by recorded delivery or traceable email so that you can prove the date of receipt.
Challenging an insurance refusal in Cyprus is a structured process. Acting quickly, keeping records, and escalating through the correct channels gives you the strongest position. The workflow below covers every stage from initial document-gathering through to court proceedings.
Before contacting the insurer, assemble the following:
Use the sample letter in the previous section. Send it within seven days of the refusal. Although the 2026 legislation does not prescribe a fixed response deadline for insurers, a 14-day deadline in your letter is reasonable and consistent with standard regulatory expectations. If the insurer fails to respond within that period, note the date and proceed to Step 2.
Every insurer authorised in Cyprus is required to maintain an internal complaints procedure. Your formal complaint should:
Keep copies of everything. If the insurer rejects your complaint or fails to respond, you are entitled to escalate.
The supervisory framework in Cyprus provides several escalation routes. The table below summarises whom to contact, what each body can do, and the likely outcome.
| Body | What They Can Do | Expected Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Superintendent of Insurance (Ministry of Finance) | Investigate breaches of motor-insurance legislation; issue directives to insurers; impose administrative penalties. | The insurer may be directed to reconsider the decision or correct its underwriting practices. Systemic breaches could lead to fines. |
| Financial Ombudsman (where applicable) | Mediate individual disputes between consumers and financial-services providers; issue non-binding recommendations. | A recommendation to the insurer to offer cover or pay compensation. High compliance rate in practice, though recommendations are not legally binding. |
| Commissioner for Administration and the Protection of Human Rights (Ombudsman) | Investigate complaints of discrimination, including age discrimination in the provision of services. | A finding of discrimination can be used as evidence in subsequent court proceedings and applies reputational pressure on the insurer. |
Submit your complaint in writing, attaching copies (not originals) of all correspondence and evidence. Clearly reference the 2026 amendments and the insurer’s failure to comply.
If the regulatory route does not resolve the matter, or if you need urgent cover (for example, because your existing policy is about to expire), consider the following pre-action steps:
Litigation is the last resort but is sometimes necessary. A court can:
Early indications suggest that the courts are likely to take a robust approach to enforcement, given the clear parliamentary intent behind the 2026 reform. The practical threshold for litigation is discussed in the section below.
Prevention is better than cure. The following practical steps can reduce the risk of a motor insurance refusal in Cyprus and strengthen your position if a dispute arises.
Brokers have a professional duty to act in the client’s best interest. Under the new rules, brokers placing car insurance for seniors in Cyprus should:
If no insurer in the open market will offer you a policy despite the 2026 changes, the following alternatives may be available:
The 2026 reforms do not introduce a cap on premiums. Insurers remain free to price risk according to actuarial data, provided the premium is not set at a level designed to deter older drivers from accepting cover in a way that amounts to constructive refusal. Industry observers expect the Superintendent of Insurance to monitor premium patterns and intervene if evidence emerges that insurers are circumventing the ban on age-based refusals by imposing disproportionate pricing.
Not every refusal warrants legal proceedings. The following guidance helps readers decide when instructing an insurance lawyer is proportionate and what to expect.
Consider engaging a lawyer if any of the following apply:
A lawyer will need the document pack described in Step 0 above, plus copies of all complaints and responses. Expect a pre-action letter to be sent within one to two weeks of instruction. If mediation follows, resolution is typically achievable within four to eight weeks. Court proceedings in Cyprus can take longer, six months to over a year for a contested hearing, but interim relief can be obtained much sooner where urgency is demonstrated.
Car insurance for seniors in Cyprus is now governed by clear rules: insurers must justify refusals with evidence, and age alone is no longer an acceptable ground for denial. Drivers, families and brokers who understand the 2026 framework, and follow the structured challenge process set out above, are well placed to enforce these rights. Where a refusal persists or an insurer fails to comply, professional legal advice is the next step.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Christos Voniatis at C. Voniatis & Co LLC, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 2 minutes ago
posted 27 minutes ago
posted 44 minutes ago
posted 47 minutes ago
posted 51 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message