Bulgaria's 10% corporate tax is lower than Cyprus on paper. But the real comparison goes beyond the headline rate to residency, treaties, dividends and structure. Here is how the two compare.

Many founders compare Cyprus and Bulgaria on one number: the corporate tax rate. Bulgaria's 10% is lower than Cyprus at 15%, so the decision looks simple. It is not. The real comparison is about tax residency, the treaty network, how dividends are treated and the legal structure around the company. Here is how the two compare once you look past the headline rate.
| Tax | Bulgaria | Cyprus |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate income tax | 10% | 15% |
| Dividend tax | 5% | 0% withholding to non-residents; 0% for non-dom residents |
| Personal income tax | 10% flat | Progressive, with non-dom exemptions on dividends and interest |
| Capital gains on share sale | Generally taxed | Exempt (unless Cyprus real estate) |
| Double tax treaties | Smaller network | 60+ treaties |
Bulgaria has the lowest headline corporate tax in the EU at 10%, a 10% flat personal income tax, and a 5% tax on dividends. For a simple, locally focused business, the arithmetic is attractive and the compliance burden is light.
The limits show up when the business is international. Bulgaria's treaty network is smaller than Cyprus, the dividend tax is a real second layer, and the holding-company framework is less developed. For a founder whose income flows across borders, the headline 10% does not tell the whole story.
Cyprus charges 15% corporate tax, but the structure around it is built for international business:
For an international group, the dividend treatment and treaty network usually matter more than five percentage points on the corporate rate. A 5% dividend tax on every distribution can outweigh the lower headline rate over time.
Our corporate and tax team can model both structures against your actual income flows. Book a consultation to compare them properly.
If the business is small, local and simple, Bulgaria's flat 10% is hard to beat on cost. If income crosses borders, if you plan to hold subsidiaries, or if an eventual sale is on the horizon, Cyprus usually produces a cleaner result because of its treaty network, dividend treatment and capital gains exemption.
The right answer depends on your income flows, your tax residency and your long-term plan. To see how a Cyprus holding structure works, read why Cyprus works as a holding company jurisdiction, or contact us to compare the two for your business.
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Partner
Partner specializing in corporate and tax law. Member of both the Cyprus Bar Association and the Athens Bar Association, bringing expertise across both jurisdictions.
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