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Springboard injunctions in Cyprus have emerged as one of the most powerful tools available to businesses that need to neutralise a competitor’s unfair head‑start gained through misuse of confidential information, trade secrets or breach of fiduciary duties. Cyprus courts have shown an increased willingness to grant this form of interlocutory relief during 2025–2026, reflecting a broader trend identified in the Chambers Global Practice Guides, Litigation 2026 (Cyprus) chapter. This guide provides a step‑by‑step procedure for obtaining an interim injunction in Cyprus, covering the legal tests the court applies, the evidence you must assemble, ex‑parte filing mechanics, enforcement routes and the practical costs involved.
Whether you are senior in‑house counsel, a business owner or a general counsel deciding whether to instruct local litigation counsel, the checklist‑driven approach below is designed to move you from decision to court filing as quickly as possible.
A springboard injunction is an equitable remedy that prevents a party from exploiting an unfair advantage, or “springboard”, obtained through unlawful conduct such as breach of confidence, misappropriation of trade secrets or breach of a fiduciary or contractual duty. As defined in the LexisNexis legal glossary, the relief aims to place the claimant back in the position it would have occupied had the wrongful conduct not occurred, by restraining the respondent for the period during which its illicit head‑start persists.
In the Cyprus context, the remedy draws on principles inherited from English equity jurisprudence and is applied by the District Courts under the Courts of Justice Law. Local case reporting confirms that Cyprus courts have granted ex‑parte springboard injunctions where claimants demonstrated that former employees or competitors had systematically extracted confidential client lists, pricing models or proprietary data before resignation or during a corporate separation.
Cyprus courts injunctions of any kind are governed by well‑established principles of interim relief in commercial disputes. For a springboard injunction specifically, the applicant must satisfy several overlapping tests. Industry observers expect that the following framework, which draws on Chambers 2026 practice commentary and local firm guidance, will continue to govern applications through 2026 and beyond.
| Remedy | When Used | Typical Evidence & Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Springboard injunction | To remove an unfair head‑start gained by misuse of confidential information or breach of duties | Proof of misuse + evidence of commercial advantage; short duration until disadvantage removed or trial (weeks–months) |
| Prohibitory / interim injunction | To stop ongoing wrongful acts (e.g., breach of contract, trespass) | Proof of ongoing breach and balance of convenience; often similar evidence to a springboard application |
| Freezing (Mareva) order | To prevent dissipation of assets pending judgment | Evidence of risk of dissipation + impecuniosity risk; may require greater disclosure and security from the applicant |
Understanding where the springboard injunction sits relative to other forms of interlocutory relief in Cyprus helps counsel select, or combine, the right procedural tools. In practice, claimants frequently pair a springboard injunction with a Norwich Pharmacal disclosure order (to identify the extent of misuse) or with a freezing order where there is a risk the respondent may dissipate the profits of its wrongful conduct.
Local reporting by Economou & Co describes the successful issuance of an ex‑parte springboard injunction in which the Cyprus court restrained former employees from using client databases extracted before their departure. That case underscored the importance of presenting forensic evidence of data extraction alongside sworn affidavits. Separately, commentary by Diogenous Law highlights interim injunctions granted to protect business trade secrets in Cyprus, noting that courts placed significant weight on the applicant’s ability to demonstrate a clear chain of custody for the misappropriated material.
The strength of a springboard injunction application in Cyprus depends almost entirely on the quality and organisation of the supporting evidence. Below is a practical checklist that in‑house counsel should use when instructing local litigation lawyers.
A well‑drafted affidavit in support of a springboard injunction application in Cyprus typically follows this structure:
Sample paragraph: “On [date], the respondent, while still employed by the applicant as [role], downloaded approximately [number] client records from the applicant’s CRM system onto a personal USB device. This is evidenced by the forensic report of [expert name], annexed hereto as Exhibit D, which records the file transfer at [time] on [date] from device [identifier].”
WIPO’s Guide on Trade Secrets and Innovation sets out the internationally recognised elements for proving misappropriation: (i) the information must have commercial value because it is secret; (ii) reasonable steps must have been taken to keep it secret; and (iii) it must have been acquired, used or disclosed without consent. The EU Study on Trade Secrets and Parasitic Copying adds that quantifying the “head‑start” often requires showing the time and investment the respondent saved by using the misappropriated material, for example, the months of product development or customer‑relationship building that were bypassed.
In Cyprus, courts will scrutinise whether the applicant genuinely treated the information as secret. Simply labelling data as “confidential” is insufficient if, in practice, it was widely shared or left unprotected. This is why evidence of access restrictions, password protections and confidentiality training can be decisive.
Counsel should prepare a concise financial schedule comparing two scenarios: (a) the time and cost the respondent would have needed to develop the relevant capability legitimately; and (b) the accelerated timeline actually achieved by using the misappropriated material. The difference represents the “springboard period”, the window during which the injunction should remain in force. Courts find this analysis persuasive because it directly ties the remedy to the quantifiable harm.
Obtaining interim relief in Cyprus follows a structured procedural path. The steps below apply to both ex‑parte (emergency) and inter‑partes (on notice) applications, with the key differences noted.
| Step | Typical Timing (Working Days) | What to Prepare |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency ex‑parte filing | Same day – 3 days | Affidavit + exhibits, undertaking in damages, counsel availability |
| Return (inter partes) hearing | 7 – 21 days after ex‑parte order | Updated evidence, witness statements, forensic reports |
| Interim order period | Varies (weeks – months) | Court order compliance monitoring; enforcement plan |
Early engagement with the court registry is advisable. Counsel should confirm the duty judge’s availability for ex‑parte hearings and ensure all documents are filed in Greek (or with certified translations where the court permits). Providing a clean, paginated bundle with a tabbed index significantly improves the court’s ability to assess the application quickly, a practical detail that can make the difference between a same‑day hearing and a delayed listing.
An ex parte injunction in Cyprus is reserved for cases where giving notice to the respondent would defeat the purpose of the relief, typically because there is a real risk that the respondent will destroy evidence, dissipate assets or accelerate the exploitation of the misappropriated material. The urgency threshold is high, and applicants should be aware of the risks.
An applicant seeking urgent injunction relief in Cyprus without notice must make full and frank disclosure of all material facts, including those that are adverse to its case. Failure to comply with this duty is treated seriously: the court may discharge the injunction entirely, even if the underlying claim is strong, and may order the applicant to pay costs on an indemnity basis. This means counsel must proactively identify and disclose any weaknesses, such as a delay in discovering the breach, ambiguity in contractual terms or the existence of a legitimate defence.
Once a springboard injunction is granted, the order must be served personally on the respondent together with a penal notice warning that breach may constitute contempt of court. Enforcement in Cyprus follows several possible routes, and counsel should have an enforcement plan prepared before the order is granted.
The following one‑page action list is designed for in‑house counsel and business owners who suspect that confidential information has been misappropriated and need to move quickly to protect trade secrets in Cyprus.
Businesses with operations spanning multiple jurisdictions should also consider how to protect intellectual property across borders, as evidence gathered outside Cyprus may need to be authenticated before it is admissible.
Legal costs for an interim injunction application in Cyprus vary depending on the complexity of the case, the volume of evidence and whether the application is contested. As a general indication, applicants should budget for counsel fees, forensic expert fees, court filing fees and the cost of preparing the affidavit bundle. The undertaking in damages is a financial commitment, not merely a formality: if the injunction is later discharged and the respondent has suffered loss, the applicant may be ordered to compensate. In some cases, the court may require the applicant to fortify the undertaking by providing a bank guarantee or deposit.
Trade secrets commentary on Lexology notes that Cyprus courts may, in limited circumstances, allow a respondent to continue using the information on provision of adequate security, though this outcome is uncommon in springboard cases where the information is genuinely confidential.
Springboard injunctions in Cyprus offer decisive protection for businesses that have lost confidential information to departing employees, competitors or former partners. The three immediate priorities for any company facing this situation are clear: first, preserve all evidence by securing devices, accounts and logs before anything is deleted; second, instruct experienced Cyprus litigation counsel who can file an application within days, or hours, of the breach being discovered; and third, prepare a concise board memo summarising the breach, the proposed relief and the estimated costs, so that internal approvals do not delay the filing. Companies operating in Cyprus through a local entity should also ensure their corporate structure is optimised, our guide on company registration in Cyprus covers the practical considerations.
Speed, evidence quality and expert litigation counsel are the three factors that determine whether a springboard injunction application succeeds or fails.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Panayotis Yannakas at Law Office of Panayotis Yannakas, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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