Company Formation
US founders can fully own and operate a Cyprus company. This guide covers FBAR, FATCA, and PFIC reporting requirements, the impact of the US-Cyprus tax treaty (currently suspended), CFC rules, and how to structure a Cyprus entity correctly as a US person.14 min read · By Nexora Cyprus editorial team · Reviewed by an ICPAC-registered Cyprus tax adviser engaged by Nexora
Key Point for US Persons
US citizens and green card holders are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. A Cyprus company can still deliver significant tax efficiency — but the structure must account for US CFC rules, FBAR/FATCA reporting, and (where applicable) PFIC rules. Get proper US and Cyprus tax advice before structuring.
Already mapped your American position and want the conversion-shaped version of this guide? See the **American founders’ Cyprus playbook →** — a dedicated landing page with a Day 0 → Day 90 transition timeline, the side-by-side ‘compared to staying in the US’ table, treaty + legal callouts, and American-specific FAQ. The article below is the deep-dive reference; the playbook is the action plan.
Yes — there are no restrictions on US citizens or US residents owning or directing a Cyprus company. Cyprus imposes no foreign ownership limitations on private limited companies (Ltd). A US citizen can be the sole shareholder, sole director, or both, of a Cyprus company formed under the Cyprus Companies Law, Cap. 113.
However, owning a foreign company as a US person comes with specific US federal tax reporting obligations that must be managed carefully. The most important are: Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) rules under Subpart F of the IRC; FBAR (FinCEN 114) reporting for foreign bank accounts; FATCA (Form 8938) reporting for specified foreign financial assets; and potentially PFIC rules if the company holds passive assets. This guide explains each obligation and how Cyprus structures can be designed to manage them.
The original US-Cyprus income tax treaty (1984) was terminated by the United States in 1997 due to concerns about its use in aggressive tax planning. As of 2026, there is no operative bilateral income tax treaty between the US and Cyprus. A new treaty has been under negotiation for many years but has not been concluded.
The absence of a treaty means: (1) the reduced withholding tax rates a treaty would provide do not apply; (2) treaty-based dispute resolution mechanisms are unavailable; (3) US persons cannot claim treaty-based exemptions from Cyprus tax. In practice, this primarily affects US persons with dual Cyprus-US income — most founders simply use Cyprus for their non-US business activities, where the treaty absence is largely irrelevant.
Cyprus does have a strong network of 65+ tax treaties with non-US jurisdictions, which remains fully operative. For business flows not involving the US directly, Cyprus's treaty network continues to function as normal.
Practical Impact
For most US founders using Cyprus for non-US business (EU customers, digital products, IP holding), the absence of a US-Cyprus treaty has minimal operational impact. The CFC rules are the more significant consideration — see below.
If a Cyprus company is owned more than 50% by US shareholders (by vote or value), it is a Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) for US tax purposes. As a US shareholder who owns 10% or more of a CFC, you may be subject to Subpart F income inclusion — meaning certain passive income (dividends, interest, royalties, certain services income) earned by the Cyprus company is taxed in your hands in the current year, even if not distributed.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act 2017 introduced the Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) regime, which imposes a minimum tax on a deemed return on the foreign tangible assets of a CFC. For US founders of Cyprus companies, GILTI is typically the most significant US tax consideration. However, eligible US C-corporations may deduct 50% of GILTI, reducing the effective rate; individual US shareholders can make a Section 962 election to be taxed at corporate rates and claim a foreign tax credit.
The impact of CFC/GILTI depends heavily on the nature of your Cyprus company's income and your personal US tax situation. A qualified US international tax adviser should be consulted before establishing a Cyprus holding or operating structure.
CFC Rules — Quick Reference for US Founders
| Issue | Relevance | Planning Consideration |
|---|---|---|
| CFC classification | Yes, if >50% US-owned by 10%+ shareholders | Structure ownership to understand the US tax profile |
| Subpart F income | Passive income included currently | Minimise passive income in Cyprus entity; ensure active business |
| GILTI | Annual deemed inclusion on excess returns | Foreign tax credits from Cyprus CIT may partially offset |
| Section 962 election | Individuals can elect to be taxed at corporate rates | Allows foreign tax credit; beneficial in many cases |
| PFIC rules | Applies if holding company holds mostly passive assets | Operating companies with active income generally avoid PFIC |
US persons with a financial interest in or signature authority over foreign bank accounts exceeding $10,000 in aggregate at any point during the year must file FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) annually by April 15 (extended to October 15 automatically). A Cyprus company bank account in which you have signature authority — even if not beneficially owned by you personally — may trigger FBAR reporting.
FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) requires US persons to file Form 8938 if their total specified foreign financial assets exceed threshold amounts ($50,000 for single filers in the US; higher thresholds apply for overseas taxpayers). A Cyprus company is a specified foreign financial asset if it is a foreign corporation, foreign partnership, or foreign trust in which you hold an interest. Interests valued above the threshold trigger Form 8938 reporting with your annual US tax return.
Non-compliance with FBAR and FATCA carries severe penalties. FBAR penalties for non-willful violations can be up to $10,000 per account per year; willful violations can be up to the greater of $100,000 or 50% of the account balance. Ensure your US tax adviser is aware of your Cyprus structure.
Reporting Deadlines
FBAR (FinCEN 114): April 15, auto-extended to October 15. Form 8938 (FATCA): filed with your US federal tax return (April 15 or extended October deadline). Both are annual obligations.
Opening a bank account for a Cyprus company with US shareholders requires some preparation. Cyprus banks are FATCA-compliant and will identify US persons through the Know Your Customer (KYC) and account opening process. US-connected accounts may receive additional due diligence scrutiny, and some international banks restrict services to US persons due to FATCA compliance costs.
Practical approaches: (1) Use a Cyprus EMI (Electronic Money Institution) such as Revolut Business or Wise Business — these are often more accommodating for international founders; (2) Work with a Cyprus bank that has established FATCA compliance infrastructure; (3) Ensure complete and accurate FATCA documentation (W-9 or W-8BEN-E) is provided at account opening.
EU-based fintech providers (Airwallex, Wise, Paysend) are increasingly used by founders who do not require traditional banking. For businesses with significant transaction volumes or credit requirements, a traditional Cyprus bank relationship is advisable.
Despite the US tax complexity, Cyprus remains valuable for US founders in specific situations: (1) non-US business operations — if you have European or international customers and employees, a Cyprus company provides a legitimate EU legal and tax base that is largely US-tax-neutral at the entity level; (2) IP holding — while GILTI applies, Cyprus's ~3% IP Box rate creates a foreign tax credit base that can reduce the US GILTI liability; (3) relocation — US founders who are considering renouncing US citizenship (expatriation) or who hold non-US passports can use Cyprus without CFC complications.
The optimal structure for a US founder often involves: a US entity (C-corp or LLC) for US-facing operations; a Cyprus company for EU and international operations, with a genuine active business presence; careful management of intercompany pricing under OECD transfer pricing rules.
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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Tax laws change frequently. Consult a qualified Cyprus adviser for guidance specific to your situation. The information on this page is general guidance only and does not constitute legal, tax, accounting, immigration or financial advice. Specific advice should be obtained based on the facts of each case.
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