Cyprus: Timeframes for registration of Cyprus international trusts

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Cyprus: Timeframes for registration of Cyprus international trusts

michaelides.jpg

Antonis Michaelides

The Law Regulating Companies Providing Administrative Services and Related Matters, Law 196(I)/2012 (the Fiduciaries Law) was enacted in December 2012 establishing a licensing and supervisory body for corporate and fiduciary services providers as per Directive 2005/ 60/EC of the EU. Pursuant to Cyprus's commitment to transparency and enhanced regulations, on September 9 2013 Law 109(I)/2013 amended the Fiduciaries Law in respect to the disclosure of information on Cypriot international trusts.

More precisely, Section 3(7) of the Fiduciaries Law (as amended) provides that trustees and service providers will need to identify and verify to their respective supervisory body (that is Cyprus Bar Association, Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission and the Institute of Certified Public Accountants of Cyprus) the name of the trusts, the trustees' names at all times, the date of creation and termination of trusts and the date of any change in the law governing the trusts.

The timeframe for disclosing the above information to the competent authority for trusts established on or after September 9 2013 is 15 days from their establishment or the adoption of Cyprus law as the governing law of the trust. As for trusts already in existence on September 9 2013, the relevant information must be submitted within six months of the entry into force of the amending law, that is to say, before March 9 2014. A notification on any subsequent changes in any of the information mentioned above must be also submitted within 15 days from the date the change took place.

Failure to do so within the above timeframes constitutes a criminal offence that entails a sentence of imprisonment for up to five years, a fine of up to €350,000 ($483,000) or both.

It should be highlighted that the trust register maintained by the competent authority is not available to the public but may only be available for inspection by other competent authorities if requested. The authorities are exploring the adoption of an electronic submission system so as to expedite the process.

This development is certainly a serious step towards Cyprus's commitment to keep up with the global developments in regards to anti-money laundering compliance and enhanced transparency in an era when strict confidentiality is increasingly combated. However, Cypriot trustees and service providers must be henceforth very careful in complying with the above requirements within the provided deadlines so as to operate within the requirements of the law and of course avoid any potential fines/liability.

Antonis Michaelides (antonis.michaelides@eurofast.eu)

Eurofast, Cyprus Office

Tel: +357 22 699 222

Website: www.eurofast.eu

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

HMRC’s push for unified tax adviser registration won’t prevent every instance of improper conduct, but it is good for taxpayers and the UK’s reputation
Elsewhere, the UAE’s tax office has issued an update on registration penalties and two firms have been busy making lateral hires
The case sits within a context of Brazil signalling that it is replacing informal discretion and ambiguity with structures that reward analytical rigour, one expert tells ITR
Jeff Soar lifts the lid on WTS UK’s ambitious recruitment plans, the firm's positioning against the big four, and why tax is the perfect profession for AI
The move reinforces Milan’s role as a key European hub for international business, the firm said
Australia’s government has also announced that it will implement the pillar two side-by-side agreement
Sara Morgan is due to join Joseph Hage Aaronson & Bremen as a partner in London, ITR understands
The newly combined tax team has already worked on thousands of joint client matters, leaders from McDermott Will & Schulte tell ITR
As AI becomes increasingly intuitive and idiot-proof, its tax applicability is becoming impossible to overstate
New data on public CbCR showed uneven adoption, as Singapore advanced pillar two compliance and firms expanded their tax capabilities
Gift this article