In mid-September 2025, Cyprus became a focal point for Europe’s evolving tax policy agenda. A delegation from the European Parliament’s Subcommittee on Tax Matters (FISC) undertook a two-day mission to Nicosia — and their message was clear: reforms are underway, but enforcement, transparency, and alignment with EU benchmarks remain under scrutiny. For Savva & Associates, this underscores the importance of advising on compliance-ready structures and staying closely aligned with the evolving regulatory climate.
The FISC Mission: Who, What, Why
From 16 to 17 September 2025, the European Parliament’s FISC team, led by MEP Kira Marie Peter-Hansen, visited Cyprus. Members included Michalis Hadjipantela and representatives from parties across Europe. Their meetings covered a broad sweep of institutions: the House of Representatives, the Tax Department, the Ministry of Finance, as well as stakeholder bodies such as accountants, industry groups, and bar associations.
Agenda priorities included implementation of OECD Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 reforms, EU tax rules on anti-abuse measures and transparency, simplification of tax regimes and reduction of compliance burdens, tax incentives and digital taxation, energy tax regimes, and addressing misuse of tax residency rules and golden visas.
Key Takeaways & Public Messaging
Reform is underway—but enforcement must match ambition. The FISC Chair described Cyprus’ reforms as “very interesting,” but cautioned that legislative promises mean little without robust enforcement mechanisms. Cyprus has long been in the spotlight for facilitating complex corporate structures used for tax avoidance, but recent political will suggests a shift.
A notable point of tension was residency via minimal presence and the golden visa scheme, where concerns about misuse remain. From the local side, House President Annita Demetriou welcomed the delegation, emphasizing that Cyprus seeks guidance, input, and cooperation rather than external imposition. She stressed that reforms should not penalize businesses or undermine stability. MEP Hadjipantela, earlier lead of a European Parliament report on tax simplification, affirmed that points raised in Cyprus would be elevated in EU policy forums.
Broader EU Context & Implications for Cyprus
The Cyprus visit is not isolated. Europe is under increasing pressure to deliver a more coherent, less fragmented tax system, especially in light of Pillar 2 and the global minimum tax, the need for greater administrative cooperation and transparency, and the drive to harmonize and simplify compliance for businesses. In this context, Cyprus’ reforms are being watched closely: can the island reconcile its competitiveness as a favorable jurisdiction with the credibility demanded by EU partners?
What It Means for Tax Optimization & Compliance Advisory
For Savva & Associates, this moment is a signal to clients: tax optimization must be future-proof. Structures that may have been viable in yesterday’s regime are now under scrutiny. We advise adopting robust substance over shell by enhancing economic activity, presence, documentation, and transparency. Clients must stress test structures under new EU and OECD regimes, simulate how anti-abuse and enforcement tools may challenge existing positions, and stay engaged with consultations and legislative drafts. Just as importantly, businesses should educate their teams and complement advisory with compliance reviews to ensure readiness for algorithm-driven audits and evolving enforcement practices.
Outlook & Risks to Monitor
There are risks of legislative slippage, resource constraints, and political resistance that may slow reform. EU pressure, however, is unlikely to diminish. Continued scrutiny could lead to further action from Brussels if reforms are not delivered credibly. If Cyprus implements reforms effectively, it could bolster its standing as a responsible EU jurisdiction — and that reputation is an asset for firms like Savva & Associates who promote legal, resilient optimization.
Please get in touch with our team at:
Charles Savva Managing Director BA, MBA, TEP, CA [email protected] +357 22516671 | Mina Pieri Senior Manager FCCA, MBA [email protected] +357 22510207 | Makis Pavlou Account Manager FCCA [email protected] +357 22510257 |