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Property Playbook · Cyprus

Holiday Home Ownership in Cyprus: A Guide for International Buyers

Updated 2026-06-136 min readBy Global Investments Property Team

Cyprus punches well above its weight as a holiday property destination. As a small island with year-round sunshine, EU membership, English as a widely spoken language, outstanding beaches, excellent cuisine, a well-developed property market, and a distinctly friendly welcome to international buyers, it offers a comprehensive package that is difficult to match. This guide covers the practical dimensions of Cyprus holiday home ownership — what you can earn, what it costs, and what makes it work.

The Cyprus Holiday Home Market

Cyprus receives approximately 3–4 million international tourists annually — a remarkable figure for an island with a resident population of just 1.3 million. The primary markets are:

  • Paphos and the west coast: The most established holiday property area; large British, German, and Scandinavian visitor market; well-developed short-term rental infrastructure; extensive golf; Aphrodite Hills and the Coral Bay area
  • Limassol and the south coast: More sophisticated, cosmopolitan market; increasing short-term rental activity driven by corporate visitors and leisure tourism; Governors Beach and Pissouri are popular holiday areas
  • Ayia Napa and Protaras (east coast): Younger tourism demographic; strong July–August beach tourism; well-known DJ and club culture; some higher-end resort development in Protaras
  • Larnaca: Growing as an investment and holiday market; closer to the international airport; attractive old town and beaches

Non-resident buyers purchase on a freehold basis in Cyprus with no nationality restrictions. The legal process involves a notarised sale contract registered at the Land Registry, an independent lawyer, and payment of transfer fees to the Land Registry.

Short-Term Rental in Cyprus

Cyprus's short-term rental market operates under a registration framework run by the Deputy Ministry of Tourism (which absorbed the functions of the former Cyprus Tourism Organisation). All self-service holiday accommodation must be registered and assigned a registration number before it can be advertised or let. Key requirements:

  • Registration with the Deputy Ministry of Tourism: Short-term rental properties (self-catering villas, houses and apartments) must be registered and obtain a registration number, which must be displayed in all advertisements and listings
  • Compliance standards: Minimum furnishing, fire safety, pool fencing, and health and safety standards must be met
  • Ongoing compliance: Registered properties must maintain the required standards and keep their registration current

In practice, the registration process is well-established and manageable. Many management companies handle the registration on behalf of property owners. Operating without registration is an offence — enforcement has tightened, and conviction can carry fines of up to €5,000 or imprisonment.

Note: The classification of a property for tourism-registration purposes may carry implications for local taxes and charges. Confirm the position with your lawyer.

Financial Performance

Cyprus's short-term rental market benefits from a relatively broad season compared to northern Mediterranean destinations:

  • High season: June to September (peak beach tourism)
  • Shoulder season: April–May and October–November (golf season; walking and cycling tourism; fewer but discerning visitors)
  • Winter: December–March is the quietest period for tourism, though Cyprus's mild winters attract snowbirds from Northern Europe and some golf tourism; Limassol and the cities retain activity year-round

Indicative gross rental revenue (2026):

Property Type Peak Week Rate Annual Gross Revenue
Studio/1-bed apartment (Paphos, standard) €500–900 €10,000–18,000
2-bed apartment (Paphos, pool, good complex) €900–1,500 €18,000–30,000
3-bed villa (private pool, Paphos area) €1,500–3,000 €25,000–50,000
4-bed villa (Aphrodite Hills area, quality) €2,500–5,000 €40,000–75,000
Limassol 2-bed apartment (urban, year-round) €90–180/night €20,000–40,000
Ayia Napa 2-bed apartment (seasonal) €1,000–1,800/week €15,000–28,000

Management and operating costs:

  • Management fee: 15–22% of gross revenue (lower than some Mediterranean markets due to Paphos's established management infrastructure)
  • Cleaning per booking: typically included in management fee or charged separately (€60–120 per clean)
  • Pool maintenance: €1,200–2,500/year
  • Garden maintenance: €800–1,500/year
  • Annual maintenance reserve: 1–1.5% of property value

Net yields: A €250,000 two-bedroom villa in Paphos achieving €32,000 gross, with €12,000 total costs, produces €20,000 net = 8% net yield. Cyprus compares favourably with Greek and Spanish holiday markets on this metric, particularly at accessible entry prices.

The Permanent Residency Route

For buyers spending €300,000+ on a new-build property, Cyprus's Permanent Residency programme (Category F) provides lifetime residency. This is relevant for holiday home buyers in two ways:

  1. Primary use case: If you plan to spend increasing time in Cyprus — first as a holiday home, then as a retirement or semi-retirement base — the PR provides a stable residency anchor from day one
  2. Investment synergy: A holiday home at the PR threshold serves both the rental income objective and the residency objective simultaneously

The PR does not affect short-term rental operation. A PR property can be rented out; there is no requirement for the property to be the owner's primary residence after the initial registration.

The Non-Dom Tax Advantage for Cyprus Residents

For owners who transition to becoming Cyprus tax residents (spending 60+ days per year in Cyprus under the "60-day rule"), the Non-Dom regime is highly advantageous:

  • No tax on dividend income worldwide
  • No tax on interest income worldwide
  • Capital gains from overseas assets untaxed in Cyprus
  • Foreign pension income taxed at a flat 5% (above €3,420/year)

This regime — available for 17 years — makes Cyprus tax residence extraordinarily efficient for HNW individuals with passive income from multiple jurisdictions. The Non-Dom regime is increasingly cited by financial advisers as a key driver of Cyprus property demand from wealthy international buyers.

Practical Running Costs

Annual costs to budget for a Cyprus holiday home:

Cost Typical Range
Immovable Property Tax (abolished; now subsumed) N/A (IPC abolished 2017)
Municipal charges (sewage, refuse) €300–800/year
Communal/HOA fees (apartments) €120–350/month
Tourism registration (Deputy Ministry of Tourism) €200–500 one-off/periodic
Insurance (holiday home, public liability) €600–1,500/year
Pool heating (optional, off-season) €500–1,200/year
Utilities standing charges €800–1,800/year

Transfer fees on purchase: 3–8% of the registered property value (variable). Transfer fees are waived where the purchase is subject to VAT — new-builds are subject to 19% VAT at the standard rate, reduced to 5% on the first 130 sqm for a qualifying primary residence (holiday homes typically pay the full 19%). Confirm the applicable rate with your lawyer.

Capital gains tax on sale: 20% for non-Cyprus tax residents on gains arising from the disposal of Cyprus property. An inflation adjustment is available. CGT planning before sale is advisable.

Title Deeds — A Critical Point

As noted in other Cyprus guides, Cyprus has a historical issue with title deed issuance following the rapid development of the 2000s. The 2015 Title Deeds Law addressed some of these issues but did not resolve all cases.

For holiday homes — where investment security over time matters — a clear, individually issued title deed is essential. Do not accept a purchase contract alone as your legal protection. Verify through your independent lawyer that the title deed either exists already or has a clear legal pathway to issuance.

Access and Connectivity

  • Paphos International Airport: Direct flights from UK (British Airways, easyJet, Jet2, Ryanair), Germany (Condor, Eurowings), Netherlands, Scandinavia, and many other European cities. Year-round scheduled and seasonal charter services
  • Larnaca International Airport: Handles a broader range of connections; the main hub for Eastern European and Middle Eastern routes
  • Drive times: Most western and southern holiday locations are within 30–45 minutes of Paphos airport; eastern Cyprus within 30 minutes of Larnaca

Property values can fall as well as rise. Rental income is variable. Cyprus tax and residency regulations may change. This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice.

How Global Investments Can Help

Cyprus is one of our strongest and most established markets. We advise clients on property selection across Paphos, Limassol, Larnaca, and Ayia Napa, coordinate tourism-registration due diligence, introduce specialist holiday property management companies, facilitate Permanent Residency applications, and advise on the Non-Dom tax framework. Contact us for a personalised Cyprus holiday home consultation.

This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal or tax advice. Programme rules, prices and tax rates change; verify current requirements with a qualified adviser before acting.

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