Company Formation
Opening a corporate bank account is the most underestimated challenge in Cyprus company formation. This guide covers every bank option — Bank of Cyprus, Eurobank Limited, Alpha Bank Cyprus, EMIs — requirements for non-residents, realistic timelines, and how to avoid rejection.14 min read · By Nexora Cyprus editorial team · Reviewed by an ICPAC-registered Cyprus tax adviser engaged by Nexora
Key Takeaway
Opening a Cyprus corporate bank account takes 4–12 weeks and is the most common bottleneck in company formation. Non-residents face stricter KYC requirements. EMI accounts (Wise Business, Revolut Business) can bridge the gap while waiting for a traditional bank account.
Cyprus company incorporation at the Registrar of Companies takes 10–15 working days on the fast process (3–6 months on the slow standard route). Opening a corporate bank account takes 4–12 weeks — and for high-risk industries or non-EU applicants, rejections are common. This disconnect is the single most frequently underestimated aspect of Cyprus company formation.
The reason is regulatory: Cyprus banks implemented stringent Anti-Money Laundering (AML) due diligence after the 2012-2013 banking crisis and subsequent de-risking pressure from EU regulators. Today, Cyprus bank compliance teams require extensive documentation, conduct enhanced due diligence for non-EU clients, and impose ongoing monitoring requirements. The compliance burden is real, but manageable with the right preparation.
This guide covers every available banking option for Cyprus companies in 2026, with honest assessments of timelines, requirements, and the best routes for different business types.
There are three systemic banks and several smaller options for Cyprus corporate accounts. Each has different risk appetites, timelines, and industry preferences.
Cyprus Banks — Corporate Account Comparison
| Bank | Timeline | Non-Resident Friendly | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank of Cyprus | 6–12 weeks | Moderate | Established businesses, property, trading |
| Eurobank Limited | 4–10 weeks | Moderate | Tech, services, professional firms |
| Alpha Bank Cyprus | 4–8 weeks | Higher | SMEs, non-EU directors, new companies |
| RCB Bank | Closed May 2023 | N/A | Fully closed — no longer accepting accounts |
| Ancoria Bank | 6–10 weeks | Moderate | Retail, local businesses |
Bank of Cyprus is the largest bank by assets and has the most extensive branch network. For Cyprus companies, it offers a full range of corporate banking products including multi-currency accounts, trade finance, and online banking. However, its compliance department is among the most rigorous — account opening for newly incorporated companies with non-EU beneficial owners frequently takes 10–12 weeks and requires detailed business plans and source of funds documentation.
Bank of Cyprus is best suited to companies with: (a) a clear, established business model; (b) Cyprus-resident directors; (c) existing professional relationships (accountant, lawyer) who can introduce the application; (d) anticipated monthly turnover above €10,000. Cold applications from newly incorporated companies with no Cyprus connections frequently stall.
Eurobank Limited — formerly Hellenic Bank — became Cyprus's second-largest bank after Eurobank Group (Greece) completed a full acquisition of Hellenic Bank in May 2025. The rebrand to Eurobank Limited took effect on 1 September 2025. With total assets exceeding €28 billion, it is now the largest financial institution in Cyprus by assets. Its 52-branch network and strong SME focus carry over from the Hellenic Bank era.
For Cyprus companies, Eurobank Limited offers full corporate banking: multi-currency accounts, SEPA/SWIFT payments, online banking, and trade finance. Its corporate banking team actively handles tech companies, professional services firms, and foreign-owned businesses. Timeline for non-resident applications is typically 6–10 weeks. The bank is particularly well-connected in the Israeli and Greek business communities.
Alpha Bank Cyprus — formerly AstroBank — became Cyprus's third-largest bank after Alpha Bank Group (Greece) completed acquisition of AstroBank in October 2025 for €205 million. The combined entity has total assets exceeding €6.6 billion. Alpha Bank Cyprus retains the SME-friendly approach that made AstroBank attractive to international businesses.
Alpha Bank Cyprus is a strong option for: newly incorporated companies with non-EU shareholders; companies in digital services, e-commerce, or consulting; and structures where the beneficial owner cannot easily visit Cyprus. Account opening for non-EU beneficial owners is typically 4–8 weeks — faster than the two larger banks. Video KYC capabilities reduce the in-person requirement.
Electronic Money Institutions (EMIs) licensed by the Central Bank of Cyprus or other EU regulators provide IBANs and payment accounts that function like bank accounts for most operational purposes. For Cyprus companies, the most useful options are Wise Business and Revolut Business.
Wise Business provides a multi-currency account with a Cyprus IBAN (or UK/EU IBAN depending on configuration), very competitive FX rates, and fast SEPA and SWIFT payments. Account opening typically takes 1–5 business days with full online KYC. Wise Business is ideal as a bridging solution while waiting for a traditional bank account, and many service-based businesses operate primarily on Wise indefinitely.
Revolut Business similarly provides fast account opening, multi-currency wallets, corporate cards, and spending controls. For companies transacting primarily in EUR and GBP, Revolut covers most needs. Note: EMI accounts are not full bank accounts — they do not provide lending, trade finance, or full settlement services. Some counterparties require a 'real' bank account rather than an EMI IBAN.
Recommendation: Open a Wise or Revolut Business account immediately after incorporation to enable operations. Apply for a traditional Cyprus bank account simultaneously. Once the traditional account opens, use it for incoming payments and keep the EMI for multi-currency operations.
Cyprus banks require comprehensive KYC documentation for all corporate accounts. The exact list varies by bank and by the nationality/profile of the beneficial owners, but the standard package is:
Cyprus is an EU member state subject to the EU Anti-Money Laundering Directive (AMLD). For beneficial owners from certain jurisdictions — including Russia, Belarus, and FATF grey-listed countries — Cyprus banks apply Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) regardless of the nature of the business. Since 2022, Cyprus banks have also applied heightened scrutiny to Russian and Belarusian nationals following EU sanctions.
For non-EU nationals from non-sanctioned countries (US, UK, Israel, India, UAE, etc.), the process is standard enhanced due diligence: more detailed source of funds, potentially a video interview with a compliance officer, and longer processing time. This is normal and not indicative of a problem — it simply requires more patience and more thorough documentation.
Practical tip: engage a Cyprus corporate services firm with existing bank relationships. Banks respond faster to known introducers, and a good introducer can flag potential issues early and guide the application to the right relationship manager.
Understanding why accounts are rejected helps you avoid the pitfalls. The most common reasons Cyprus bank applications are rejected or delayed:
A realistic timeline for a straightforward Cyprus company with a non-EU beneficial owner, well-documented KYC, and professional introduction:
Banking Timeline — Best Case to Realistic
| Stage | Best Case | Realistic (Non-EU UBO) |
|---|---|---|
| Company incorporation | 10–15 working days | 10–15 working days |
| KYC document preparation | 3–5 days | 1–2 weeks |
| Bank application submission | Day 0 | Day 0 |
| Initial compliance review | 1–2 weeks | 2–4 weeks |
| Enhanced due diligence / queries | 0–1 week | 2–4 weeks |
| Account approval and IBAN issuance | 4–6 weeks total | 6–12 weeks total |
EMI account (Wise/Revolut): 1–5 business days. Recommended to open in parallel as bridging solution.
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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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