This page provides a source-backed explanation of what the reform changes and where readers still need to check legislation or payroll facts.
2026 Salary Tax Reform: EUR 22,000 Threshold
A practical review of the personal income tax changes effective from January 1, 2026, with emphasis on payroll interpretation, filing scope and documentation.
Back to Briefing HubWhat changed from January 1, 2026
Rule summary
The Ministry of Finance reform package states that the personal income tax changes apply from January 1, 2026. The tax-free threshold rises to EUR 22,000 and the progressive bands move to EUR 32,000, EUR 42,000 and EUR 72,000 before the 35% top bracket applies.
The same reform package also widens the annual filing obligation. Current official business guidance indicates that Cyprus tax residents aged 25 to 71 are expected to file an annual return even when income is nil, subject to the detailed administrative guidance and exclusions that follow.
- Tax-free threshold increases from EUR 19,500 to EUR 22,000.
- The 20% band now runs to EUR 32,000 and the 25% band to EUR 42,000.
- The 30% band extends to EUR 72,000 before the 35% rate applies.
What employees and payroll teams should document
Practical application
Most confusion on salary estimates comes from mixing annual tax bands with monthly payroll deductions. Employers should annualise pay first, apply social insurance and GESY separately, and then check whether any TD59 deductions or first-employment relief assumptions are being used.
If deductions are claimed through payroll or modelled for budgeting, keep support files by employee. The reform support material and TD59 documents should be read together so payroll teams do not treat every possible deduction as automatic.
- Confirm annual gross pay before comparing 2025 and 2026 scenarios.
- Keep deduction support for children, housing, rent and green claims.
- Check whether the employee may fall within the first-employment exemption rules.
How to use the site calculator responsibly
Estimator boundary
The calculator on the homepage is useful for quick directional comparisons between 2025 and 2026. It is not a substitute for payroll setup, the tax return or legal interpretation. The result depends heavily on whether the correct deduction assumptions and payroll-year facts are entered.
If a salary offer, relocation or bonus decision is material, use the calculator as a first pass and then reconcile the result to payroll advice, contract terms and the latest tax guidance.
A better workflow for salary decisions
Decision sequence
When an employee or employer is making a real decision, the order matters. Start with residency and filing scope, then annualise pay, then apply social deductions, then test whether any relief or deduction is actually supported. That sequence is slower than jumping straight to net pay, but it avoids most bad assumptions.
- Step 1: confirm whether the taxpayer is Cyprus resident and likely to file.
- Step 2: annualise salary, bonus and any fixed allowances.
- Step 3: calculate SI and GESY separately from income tax.
- Step 4: only add deductions or reliefs that are documented and currently available.
Compare the reform years quickly, then validate the result against payroll facts and source documents.
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