Introduction
Value Added Tax (VAT) is a central feature of commercial activity in Cyprus. For local companies it is not only a matter of compliance but also a matter of financial planning and legal certainty. Misinterpretation of VAT rules can result in penalties and double taxation, while correct application enables smooth cross-border operations and efficient recovery of input tax.
This guide explains when a Cyprus company must register for VAT, how the rules on place of supply apply to goods and services, and how B2B and B2C transactions are treated when the customer is located in Cyprus, the EU or outside the EU. It also covers VAT rates, VIES, OSS and IOSS registration, domestic reverse charge provisions, use & enjoyment rules, and compliance deadlines, with practical examples and summary tables.
1. VAT Registration in Cyprus
A Cyprus company is required to register for VAT when its taxable turnover exceeds €15,600 in any rolling 12-month period, or when this threshold is expected to be exceeded in the next 30 days.
Other mandatory registration triggers include:
- Intra-EU acquisitions of goods: exceeding €10,251.61 in a calendar year.
- Receipt of services from abroad: where the place of supply is Cyprus under the B2B rule, the recipient must apply the reverse charge, which may oblige registration.
- Non-resident suppliers: must register from the first euro of taxable supplies in Cyprus (no threshold).
Importantly, voluntary registration is possible. Companies below the threshold may register in order to recover input VAT (for example, on start-up expenses) or to appear as VAT-registered counterparties when contracting with EU or local businesses.
For intra-Community supplies of goods or services, the company must also register for VIES before carrying out the first transaction. Similarly, companies making B2C sales to EU consumers may opt into the Union OSS scheme in Cyprus, avoiding multiple registrations across Member States.
2. VAT Rates in Cyprus
Cyprus currently applies four VAT rates:
- Standard rate: 19%
- Reduced rates: 9% and 5%, applicable to specific goods and services (e.g. foodstuffs, medicines, hotel accommodation, passenger transport).
- Super-reduced rate: 3%, applicable to a very limited range of goods and services (such as certain books, printed materials, cultural event tickets, waste collection and some equipment for persons with disabilities).
- Zero rate: 0%, for exports, intra-Community supplies and certain international services.
3. Place of Supply of Services
The place of supply rules determine which country has the right to charge VAT.
- B2B general rule: The place of supply is where the customer is established. Cyprus suppliers invoicing VAT-registered customers abroad generally do not charge Cyprus VAT; the customer self-accounts via reverse charge.
- B2C general rule: The place of supply is where the supplier is established. A Cyprus supplier providing services to private consumers must normally charge Cyprus VAT, unless a special rule applies.
Special rules for services
- Digital/TBE services to EU consumers: VAT is due in the consumer’s Member State. Cyprus suppliers must monitor the €10,000 EU-wide threshold and use Union OSS once exceeded.
- Land-related services: taxed where the property is located.
- Passenger transport: taxed proportionally to the journey.
- Restaurant and catering: taxed where performed.
- Short-term hire of means of transport: taxed where the vehicle is placed at the consumer’s disposal.
- Work on movable tangible goods / valuations: taxed where physically carried out.
- Virtual and hybrid events (2025 update):
- B2B: place of supply is the customer’s location (reverse charge).
- B2C: place of supply is the consumer’s location; reportable via OSS.
Use & enjoyment rules
Cyprus applies use and enjoyment provisions to certain services (e.g. telecommunications, broadcasting and electronic services) where services supplied to non-EU customers but effectively used in Cyprus are subject to Cyprus VAT.
4. Place of Supply of Goods
For goods, VAT treatment depends on the destination and status of the customer.
- Domestic sales: goods sold and delivered within Cyprus are subject to Cyprus VAT.
- Intra-Community supplies (B2B): sales to VAT-registered customers in other EU countries are zero-rated if the customer’s VAT ID is valid and transport evidence is kept. Must be reported in VIES.
- Exports to non-EU countries: zero-rated, subject to customs evidence.
- Distance sales to EU consumers (B2C): once annual EU-wide B2C sales exceed €10,000, VAT must be charged in the consumer’s country. Companies can use Union OSS in Cyprus to declare and pay the VAT centrally.
- Imports ≤ €150 (B2C): VAT is charged at checkout using the Import OSS (IOSS).
- Goods with installation/assembly: the place of supply is where installation takes place. If a German supplier installs machinery in Nicosia, the place of supply is Cyprus and the Cypriot customer accounts for VAT under the domestic reverse charge.
5. Domestic Reverse Charge in Cyprus
Cyprus imposes a domestic reverse charge to mitigate fraud in high-risk sectors:
- Construction services (Article 11B VAT Law).
- Specific high-risk goods, such as scrap metals and selected electronics.
- Transfers of immovable property connected to loan restructurings or forced transfers.
In these cases, suppliers issue invoices without VAT, and the VAT-registered recipient self-accounts for the tax.
6. Purchases from Abroad and Reverse Charge
When a Cyprus company buys services from a non-Cyprus supplier, the general B2B rule applies: the place of supply is Cyprus. The Cyprus company must apply the reverse charge, declaring VAT on the purchase and reclaiming it (if deductible).
This mechanism can oblige a company to register for VAT even if its domestic sales are minimal.
7. Compliance Obligations
Cyprus companies must comply with strict filing and invoicing deadlines:
- VAT returns: normally filed quarterly, due by the 10th day of the second month following the end of the period.
- VIES returns: filed monthly, due by the 15th of the following month, covering intra-Community supplies.
- OSS returns: filed quarterly, due by the end of the month following the quarter.
- Invoices: generally issued within 30 days of the tax point; for intra-Community supplies and reverse charge services, invoices must be issued by the 15th of the following month.
- Record-keeping: books and records must be kept for at least six years.
- Bad-debt relief: available where an invoice remains unpaid for 12 months, provided VAT has been accounted for and recovery steps taken. Claims must be made within four years.
- Partial exemption: businesses with both taxable and exempt activities must apply pro-rata to input VAT recovery.
8. Practical Examples
- A Cyprus SaaS company invoices a German VAT-registered business. No Cyprus VAT is charged; the German customer applies reverse charge.
- A Cyprus digital platform supplies streaming services to French consumers. Once EU-wide sales exceed €10,000, French VAT applies via OSS.
- A Cyprus e-shop sells clothing to Italian consumers. Below €10,000, Cyprus VAT applies; above this, Italian VAT is due, declared via OSS.
- A Cyprus manufacturer supplies machinery to a Polish VAT-registered customer. Zero-rated intra-Community supply with valid VAT ID and VIES reporting.
- A German supplier delivers and installs equipment in Nicosia. The place of supply is Cyprus; the Cypriot VAT-registered customer self-accounts under the reverse charge.
- A Cyprus company buys IT development services from a US contractor. Place of supply is Cyprus; the company applies the reverse charge.
9. Summary Tables
Services
| Customer | Location | VAT Treatment |
| Consumer (B2C) | Cyprus | Cyprus VAT |
| Consumer (B2C) | EU (non-CY) | Cyprus VAT (unless TBE → VAT in consumer country via OSS) |
| Consumer (B2C) | Non-EU | Cyprus VAT (unless exception e.g. land services) |
| Business (B2B) | Cyprus | Cyprus VAT |
| Business (B2B) | EU (non-CY) | No Cyprus VAT – reverse charge by customer |
| Business (B2B) | Non-EU | Outside scope of Cyprus VAT |
Goods
| Customer | Destination | VAT Treatment |
| Consumer (B2C) | Cyprus | Cyprus VAT |
| Consumer (B2C) | EU (non-CY) | Cyprus VAT if < €10,000 EU-wide; above threshold, VAT in consumer’s country via OSS |
| Consumer (B2C) | Non-EU | Zero-rated export |
| Business (B2B) | Cyprus | Cyprus VAT |
| Business (B2B) | EU (non-CY) | Zero-rated intra-Community supply (VIES + transport evidence) |
| Business (B2B) | Non-EU | Zero-rated export |
Conclusion
Cyprus VAT compliance requires precise application of the rules on registration, place of supply, and cross-border reporting. Businesses must ensure timely VAT and VIES filings, correct use of OSS/IOSS, and proper invoicing practices. The availability of voluntary registration, bad-debt relief, and domestic reverse charge provisions means that VAT is not only a tax but also a strategic element of financial management.
At Polycarpos Philippou & Associates LLC, we guide clients through the complexities of VAT in Cyprus, from registration and structuring cross-border transactions, to ensuring OSS/IOSS compliance and drafting VAT-protective clauses in contracts. A well-structured VAT strategy reduces risk, optimises compliance, and supports growth in Cyprus and abroad.
1. What is the VAT registration threshold in Cyprus?
The VAT registration threshold in Cyprus is €15,600 in any rolling 12-month period. Once this threshold is exceeded – or expected to be exceeded within 30 days – VAT registration becomes mandatory. Non-resident businesses making taxable supplies in Cyprus must register from the first euro, as no threshold applies.
2. Can a company register for VAT in Cyprus voluntarily?
Yes. Voluntary VAT registration is permitted even if turnover is below €15,600. This may be beneficial for start-ups or companies with significant input VAT, allowing them to recover VAT on expenses and to appear as VAT-registered when dealing with counterparties.
3. What are the current VAT rates in Cyprus (2025)?
Cyprus applies four VAT rates:
19% standard rate (most goods and services).
9% reduced rate (e.g. accommodation, restaurants, passenger transport).
5% reduced rate (e.g. foodstuffs, medicines, books).
3% super-reduced rate (very limited goods/services, such as certain cultural events, printed matter, equipment for disabled persons).
0% zero rate (exports, intra-Community supplies, international transport).
4. When does a Cyprus company need to register for VIES?
A Cyprus company must register for VIES (EC Sales List) before making its first intra-Community supply of goods or services to a VAT-registered customer in another EU Member State. VIES returns are filed monthly, by the 15th of the following month.
5. How does the OSS (One-Stop Shop) work for Cyprus companies?
The Union OSS scheme allows Cyprus businesses selling B2C goods or digital services to EU consumers to declare all VAT due in the EU via a single quarterly return in Cyprus. Once the €10,000 EU-wide threshold is exceeded, VAT must be charged in the customer’s country of residence, and reported through OSS.
6. What is IOSS and when is it used?
The Import One-Stop Shop (IOSS) applies to B2C imports of goods valued at €150 or less. Using IOSS, Cyprus companies can charge VAT at checkout and declare it via a monthly IOSS return, simplifying customs clearance for EU consumers.
7. How is VAT treated on services provided by Cyprus companies?
B2B services: VAT is due where the customer is established (reverse charge applies).
B2C services: VAT is due where the supplier is established (Cyprus), unless a specific exception applies (e.g. digital services, real estate, transport).
8. How is VAT treated on goods sold by Cyprus companies?
Domestic sales: Cyprus VAT applies.
Intra-Community supplies (B2B): zero-rated if the customer has a valid VAT ID and transport evidence is retained.
Exports to non-EU countries: zero-rated with customs evidence.
Distance sales to EU consumers (B2C): below €10,000 → Cyprus VAT; above €10,000 → VAT of the consumer’s country via OSS.
9. What are the VAT compliance deadlines in Cyprus?
VAT returns: quarterly, due by the 10th day of the second month after the period end.
VIES returns: monthly, due by the 15th of the following month.
OSS returns: quarterly, due by the end of the month following the quarter.
Invoices: generally within 30 days of the tax point; for intra-Community supplies and reverse charge services, by the 15th of the following month.
10. Is bad-debt relief available under Cyprus VAT law?
Yes. A company can claim bad-debt relief if:
The debt remains unpaid for 12 months.
VAT has already been accounted for and paid.
Reasonable collection steps were taken.
Relief must be claimed within four years of the relevant period.
11. Does Cyprus apply use and enjoyment rules for VAT?
Yes. Cyprus applies use & enjoyment provisions for telecommunications, broadcasting and electronic (TBE) services supplied to non-EU non-taxable persons (consumers). If these services are effectively used and enjoyed in Cyprus, they become subject to Cyprus VAT even if the customer is outside the EU.
12. What are the penalties for late VAT or VIES filings in Cyprus?
Late VAT returns: penalty of €100 per return plus interest on unpaid tax.
Late VIES returns: penalty of €50 per return. Incorrect or missing corrections within one month may incur an additional €15 penalty.
13. How are goods supplied with installation/assembly treated?
Where goods are supplied with installation or assembly, the place of supply is where the installation takes place. For example, if a German supplier installs machinery in Cyprus, the supply is subject to Cyprus VAT. If the Cypriot customer is VAT-registered, the domestic reverse charge applies.
14. How does the domestic reverse charge work in Cyprus?
In Cyprus, the domestic reverse charge applies to:
Construction services.
Specific high-risk goods (e.g. scrap metals, selected electronics).
Transfers of immovable property related to loan restructurings.
In such cases, the supplier does not charge VAT, and the VAT-registered recipient self-accounts for it.
15. What records must Cyprus companies keep for VAT purposes?
Companies must keep proper VAT books and records for at least six years, including invoices, VIES evidence, transport documentation for intra-Community supplies, and proof of use for OSS/IOSS declarations.