Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 56 minutes ago
Understanding how to transfer a trust to Cyprus in 2026 is now a priority for trustees, family office managers and high-net-worth individuals responding to the country’s updated tax framework and enduring structural advantages. Trust migration Cyprus, whether it involves a full change of governing law or the simpler re-seating of trustees and administration, requires careful sequencing of legal, regulatory and tax steps. The 2026 Cyprus tax reform introduced material changes to the non-domicile regime and the Special Defence Contribution (SDC), directly affecting the tax outcomes of migrated trusts.
This guide sets out the complete procedure: eligibility checks, a numbered step-by-step process, the documents needed for trust migration, realistic timelines, costs and the specific 2026 regulatory changes that every settlor and trustee must address before assets move.
Trust migration Cyprus refers to the process of relocating a trust’s centre of administration, its trustees, or its governing law to Cyprus. The term covers two distinct exercises that are frequently confused. The first is re-seating the governing law: the trust deed is amended (or a deed schedule executed) so that Cyprus law replaces the original governing law, and Cyprus courts acquire jurisdiction. The second is re-locating trustees and administration: the existing governing law remains unchanged, but one or more trustees are replaced by Cyprus-resident individuals or entities, and day-to-day management shifts to Cyprus. Both models can deliver favourable outcomes under the Cyprus International Trusts framework, but each triggers different registration, tax and compliance obligations.
The process applies to family trusts (wealth preservation, succession planning, asset protection) and commercial or trading trusts (holding company shares, investment portfolios, intellectual property). It is relevant whenever settlors or beneficiaries seek access to the Cyprus non-dom SDC exemption regime, want proximity to a robust EU legal system, or need to restructure following the 2026 reforms. In every scenario, trustees must register with the appropriate Cyprus registries, the Ultimate Beneficial Owners (UBO) Register maintained by the Department of Registrar of Companies via the Ariadne portal, and the Cyprus Trusts Beneficial Owners Registry (CyTBOR) administered by CySEC, and make the correct tax elections with the Cyprus Tax Department.
Readers planning a Cyprus immigration and relocation of family or business interests should treat trust migration as a parallel workstream.
Before any migration can proceed, the trust instrument itself must permit the change. Key trust-level requirements include:
The residency for trustees is the single most important factor linking a trust to Cyprus for tax purposes. At least one trustee must be tax-resident in Cyprus during the relevant tax period for the trust to benefit from Cyprus tax treatment. Where a corporate trustee is used, it must be incorporated and managed in Cyprus. Professional trustees providing services to the public must hold the appropriate licence or operate as a regulated Administrative Service Provider (ASP) under CySEC supervision. Every incoming trustee must complete full AML/KYC due diligence and accept fiduciary duties under Cyprus law, including compliance with CyTBOR registration obligations.
Cyprus International Trusts historically required that at least one beneficiary be non-resident in Cyprus. Practitioners should verify current requirements against the applicable trust legislation. Specific asset types carry additional registration needs: immovable property in Cyprus requires conveyancing through the District Lands Office; company shares must be transferred via the relevant share registers; securities require custodian account updates; and crypto-assets may need additional compliance documentation depending on the classification of the digital asset. Those transferring real property should review the rules on mortgages for foreigners in Cyprus and foreclosures and property procedures in Cyprus as part of asset-level planning.
The following numbered steps set out the procedure to migrate a trust to Cyprus. Each step identifies the responsible party and a typical duration. The consolidated timeline table at the end of this section provides a single reference view.
Engage lead counsel in both the originating jurisdiction and Cyprus, together with an international tax adviser. This diagnostic confirms whether the trust deed permits a governing-law change, identifies the correct migration model, reviews AML/KYC requirements and establishes that the settlor is solvent. Counsel should also confirm that no pending creditor claims or litigation would be affected. Allow 1–2 weeks for this assessment.
Decide whether to migrate the trust to Cyprus by re-seating its governing law (full migration) or by re-locating trustees and administration only (partial migration). If a Cyprus trustee company is needed, initiate the Cyprus company registration process at this stage. The plan should address asset-transfer sequencing, banking arrangements, tax election timing and registry filings. This decision-making phase typically takes 1–3 weeks.
Draft the trustee appointment minute or board resolution for the new Cyprus trustee. If the governing law is changing, prepare a deed of variation or supplemental schedule amending the proper law clause. Execute the settlor solvency declaration. Ensure all documents are notarised or apostilled where required by the originating jurisdiction. This documentation phase runs 2–6 weeks depending on complexity and the number of parties involved.
Execute the formal transfer of trust assets Cyprus, including share transfer forms for company holdings, bank wire instructions for cash and portfolio assets, and conveyancing instruments for immovable property. Update share registers, custodian accounts and land registry records. The duration varies significantly by asset type: liquid assets may move within days, while property conveyancing can take 4–8 weeks. Asset-specific professionals (notaries, land registry officers, bank relationship managers) must be instructed in parallel to avoid bottlenecks.
File trust and beneficial-ownership details with the relevant Cyprus registries. For express trusts and similar legal arrangements, submit to the CySEC Trusts Beneficial Owners Registry (CyTBOR). Where the trust holds interests in Cyprus-registered companies, file UBO information with the Department of Registrar of Companies via the Ariadne portal. Filing must occur promptly following the trust creation or migration event, the applicable notification window is typically within 15 days. Ensure submissions identify the settlor, all trustees, protectors and beneficiaries as required under the anti-money-laundering framework. Allow 15–30 days to complete all filings and receive acknowledgements.
Open new bank accounts in Cyprus in the name of the trustee or the trust (depending on bank policy). Provide Cyprus banks with the full KYC/AML documentation pack, board resolutions and the amended trust deed. Close or re-designate accounts in the originating jurisdiction. Nominee structures should be updated. Bank onboarding typically takes 1–4 weeks, though enhanced due diligence for complex trusts may extend this window.
This step is critical under the 2026 framework. If the settlor, trustees or beneficiaries intend to rely on the non-dom SDC exemption, confirm eligibility and submit the appropriate election. The Form TD631 (Application for the Alternative Method of Imposing the Special Defence Contribution) must be filed with the Cyprus Tax Department where the alternative SDC method is elected. Confirm the tax-residency status of each trustee and verify whether the trust itself will be treated as Cyprus tax-resident. Model distributions and investment income flows to identify any SDC exposure before finalising elections. Allow 2–8 weeks for this compliance phase, including potential correspondence with the Tax Department.
Once the trust migration Cyprus procedure is complete, implement ongoing governance. This includes scheduling regular trustee meetings (at least annually), maintaining proper minutes, filing annual returns with the Registrar and CySEC as required, and engaging a Cyprus audit firm for trust accounts. Trustees duties Cyprus include continuous compliance with AML reporting, UBO updates when beneficial ownership changes, and responding to Tax Department queries or audit requests. This phase is ongoing and should be built into the annual compliance calendar.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary legal & tax diagnostic | Lead counsel + international tax adviser | 1–2 weeks |
| Choose migration model & draft plan | Settlor + trustees + counsel | 1–3 weeks |
| Prepare trustee appointments, amend deed or create deed schedule | Trustee counsel + settlor | 2–6 weeks |
| Transfer assets (shares, bank funds, property) | Trustees + asset-specific professionals (notary / land registry / banks) | 1–8 weeks (asset-dependent) |
| Register UBO / Trust in CyTBOR / Registrar systems | Trustee / registered agent (via Ariadne / CyTBOR) | 15–30 days |
| Bank onboarding (Cyprus banks) | Trustees + banks (KYC/AML) | 1–4 weeks |
| Tax elections / non-dom filings | Tax adviser + settlor / trustee | 2–8 weeks |
| Post-migration governance & reporting | Trustees | Ongoing (annual filings) |
The documents needed for trust migration fall into four categories: settlor documents, trustee documents, beneficiary documents and asset-specific transfer instruments. The table below lists each required document with practical notes on who issues it, the expected format and key validity considerations. Every document involving a foreign jurisdiction should be apostilled or legalised for use in Cyprus.
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity) |
|---|---|
| Original Trust Deed and all amendments | Issued by settlor / existing trustee, certified copy required; confirms powers to change governing law and appoint new trustees |
| Trustee appointment minute / board resolution | Issued by incoming trustee entity or individual trustee, must be signed and notarised where required by originating jurisdiction |
| Settlor solvency declaration | Signed by settlor, demonstrates no fraudulent-transfer intent; witness or notary attestation recommended |
| Trustee acceptance letter and KYC pack | Issued by incoming trustee, passport, proof of address, CV; for corporate trustees: certificate of incorporation, directors list, certificate of good standing |
| Beneficiary ID and KYC documentation | Passport copies, proof of address, subject to privacy law considerations in the relevant jurisdiction |
| Asset transfer instruments | Share transfer forms (certified), deeds of transfer for immovable property (via District Lands Office), custodian re-registration forms for securities, stamp duty paid where applicable |
| Bank instructions and account-opening documents | Closing-account letters for originating banks, opening-account forms for Cyprus banks, board resolutions authorising signatories |
| UBO / Trust registry submission materials | Information on settlor, trustees, protectors, beneficiaries per Registrar / CySEC requirements, submit via Ariadne portal or CySEC CyTBOR system |
| Tax forms, non-dom / SDC alternative method | Form TD631 and related forms from the Cyprus Tax Department, required where alternative SDC method is elected under 2026 rules |
For trusts holding company shares in Cyprus-registered entities, ensure that updated registers of members and directors are filed with the Department of Registrar of Companies. Trusts holding assets in multiple jurisdictions should coordinate document production to avoid delays in cross-border apostille or legalisation processes. Those managing employment of third-country nationals in Cyprus through trust-held entities should also confirm immigration documentation is aligned with the new trustee appointments.
The end-to-end timeline to migrate a trust to Cyprus typically ranges from 8 to 20 weeks, depending on the complexity of the trust structure, the number and type of assets, and banking due-diligence timescales. Simple trusts holding liquid assets with cooperative originating-jurisdiction counsel can complete the process in as few as 6–8 weeks. Complex multi-jurisdictional trusts with immovable property may take 16–20 weeks or longer.
| Deadline / Milestone | Timeframe |
|---|---|
| UBO / CyTBOR registry notification after trust creation or migration event | Within 15 days of the triggering event (verify per current CySEC / Registrar directives) |
| Form TD631 filing for alternative SDC method election | Per Tax Department deadlines, typically within the tax year of election; confirm exact deadline with Tax Department |
| Annual trust accounts and filings | Within the annual filing cycle set by the Registrar and Tax Department |
| UBO updates upon change of beneficial ownership | Promptly, within the notification period prescribed by AML regulations |
Missing a statutory filing deadline, particularly for UBO or trust registry submissions, can trigger administrative penalties and, in serious cases, criminal liability under Cyprus anti-money-laundering legislation. Trustees should treat registry filings as a priority task immediately following each migration step.
The costs of migrating a trust to Cyprus depend on the migration model chosen, the number and type of assets, and whether a professional corporate trustee is appointed. The table below provides guideline ranges.
| Item | Typical Amount (EUR, Guideline) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Legal fees (migration planning & deed amendment) | 5,000 – 30,000+ | Depends on complexity; commercial / multi-jurisdictional trusts at higher end |
| Trustee appointment & onboarding (professional trustee) | 3,000 – 15,000 (initial) + annual retainer 5,000 – 50,000 | Corporate professional trustees charge onboarding fees plus annual retainer |
| UBO / Trust registry filing costs | Low or no direct fee to Registrar / CySEC | Administrative and system fees may apply; costs are primarily professional rather than statutory |
| Transfer tax / stamp duty (immovable property) | Varies by property value | Standard conveyancing duties apply; verify current rates with District Lands Office |
| Bank onboarding / account fees | Bank dependent | Due-diligence charges, notarisation and apostille costs may add EUR 500 – 3,000 |
| Tax advisory (SDC modelling, non-dom election) | 3,000 – 10,000+ | Essential for pre-migration distribution modelling and Form TD631 filing |
| SDC alternative method payment | Fixed sums per Tax Department guidance | Payable if electing alternative SDC method; confirm amounts and deadlines with Tax Department |
The Cyprus trust tax 2026 landscape is shaped by two interlocking regimes. First, the non-domicile (non-dom) regime historically exempted qualifying individuals from the Special Defence Contribution on dividends, interest and rental income. The 2026 tax reform adjusted these rules, including introducing an alternative method for imposing the SDC, and trustees and settlors must now verify whether the non-dom trust Cyprus exemption applies to their specific structure and whether any election is required. Second, trustee tax residency directly affects whether the trust itself is treated as Cyprus tax-resident. If the trustee (or, in the case of multiple trustees, the majority) is tax-resident in Cyprus, the trust may become subject to Cyprus income tax and SDC on its worldwide income.
Pre-migration modelling of distributions, dividend flows and interest income is therefore essential. The GLE lawyer directory can connect trustees with Cyprus-based tax specialists experienced in these elections.
The 2026 Cyprus tax reform, published by the Ministry of Finance and the Tax Department, introduced several changes that directly affect anyone planning to migrate a trust to Cyprus. The most significant are:
The likely practical effect of these changes is that trustees cannot simply assume historical non-dom eligibility continues after migration. Industry observers expect stricter enforcement of filing obligations and more frequent audits of trust registry data. Before initiating any trust migration in 2026, verify entitlement to the non-dom SDC exemption by reviewing the Tax Department’s residency and domicile guidance and completing the relevant Form TD631 where the alternative SDC method is elected.
Understanding how to transfer a trust to Cyprus in 2026 requires a disciplined, multi-step approach that integrates legal structuring, asset logistics, regulatory compliance and tax planning. The 2026 reforms have raised the stakes: the non-dom SDC regime, the CyTBOR registry and the alternative-method election procedure all demand attention before, during and after migration. Trustees and settlors who follow the procedure outlined in this guide, diagnostic, model selection, documentation, asset transfer, registration, banking, tax elections and ongoing governance, will position their structures for the advantages Cyprus continues to offer as a trust jurisdiction. Those who do not may face penalties, unexpected tax liabilities or invalid migrations. Professional legal and tax advice is indispensable at every stage of the process.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Evi Papacleovoulou at Law Chambers Nicos Papacleovoulou, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Member
No results available
posted 33 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.