The Golden Rule: Do not treat a visitor stay as open-ended. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens who remain in Cyprus for more than 3 months must apply for registration within 4 months of arrival. Non-EU citizens should confirm the correct visa or residence route before arrival and submit the residence application within the time limit that applies to their category. Do not let your permitted stay expire while waiting to prepare documents.
Detailed Route Guides
Use this page to compare routes, then open the dedicated guide for the route that fits your situation.
Cyprus Residency Pathways at a Glance
| Permit Type | EU Citizen (Yellow Slip) | Non-EU Visitor (Pink Slip) | Digital Nomad Visa | Permanent Resident (Investor) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who is it for? | EU/EEA/Swiss citizens staying over 90 days. | Non-EU nationals wishing to reside without working (e.g., retirees, financially independent). | Non-EU nationals working remotely for companies outside Cyprus. | Non-EU investors making a significant financial contribution. |
| Right to Work? | Yes, full rights. | No right to work in Cyprus. | No. Work must be strictly for foreign entities. | No local employment, but can be a Director of the invested company. |
| Key Requirement | Proof of employment, self-employment, or funds & health insurance. | Proof of annual income from abroad, commonly at least EUR 24,000 for the main applicant plus dependents. | Proof of stable net monthly income of at least EUR 3,500, plus dependents. | Minimum EUR 300,000 qualifying investment plus secured annual income, normally at least EUR 50,000 plus dependents. |
| Validity | Indefinite (5 years for self-employed/students). | 1 year, renewable annually. | 1 year, renewable for up to two more years. | Permanent (for life), provided you visit every 2 years. |
| Application Form | MEU1 | Visitor temporary residence application / VIS route | MVIS8 / Digital Nomad route | MIP2 |
Note: The table focuses on common relocation routes. Employment routes such as the EU Blue Card, company-of-foreign-interest permits and other work permits have separate eligibility rules and document checklists.
Detailed Breakdown of Each Permit
1. EU/EEA/Swiss Citizens: Registration Certificate / Yellow Slip (MEU1)
EU, EEA and Swiss citizens may enter Cyprus with a valid passport or national identity card. If you stay for more than 3 months, you must apply for a registration certificate, commonly called the Yellow Slip, within 4 months of arrival.
- Who applies: EU/EEA/Swiss workers, self-employed persons, students, retirees and financially self-sufficient residents.
- Main evidence: Employment or self-employment documents, or proof of sufficient funds and comprehensive health insurance if you are not working.
- Family members: EU family members generally use MEU1; non-EU family members of EU citizens use the relevant family-member residence card route.
- Fee: The official residence-card page lists EUR 20 for MEU1.
- Permanent residence: After 5 years of legal residence, eligible EU citizens and family members can apply for permanent residence (MEU3).
Read the detailed Yellow Slip / MEU1 guide or, for non-EU family members of EU citizens, open the MEU2 residence card guide.
2. Non-EU Visitors: Temporary Residence / Pink Slip
The Pink Slip is the common temporary residence route for non-EU citizens who want to live in Cyprus without taking local employment. It is often used by retirees, financially independent people and dependants.
- Income requirement: The visitor-policy threshold commonly used in 2026 is at least EUR 24,000 annual income for the main applicant, increased by 20% for a spouse or partner and by 15% for each dependent child.
- Work restriction: A visitor permit does not give the right to work or provide services in Cyprus.
- Typical documents: Valid passport, proof of accommodation, Cyprus bank evidence, overseas income evidence, health insurance, medical tests and criminal-record certificate where required by the checklist.
- Validity: Usually issued for 1 year and renewable annually, provided the conditions continue to be met.
- Longer-term option: After sufficient lawful residence, some applicants may explore long-term resident status, but eligibility depends on the exact residence history and category.
3. Remote Workers: Cyprus Digital Nomad Visa
The Cyprus Digital Nomad Visa is for non-EU/non-EEA nationals who can work remotely using telecommunications technology for an employer, company or clients located outside Cyprus. The Migration Department states that applications are again being accepted and that the overall ceiling remains 500 permits.
- Income: At least EUR 3,500 net monthly income after deductions. The required amount increases by 20% for a spouse or partner and by 15% for each child.
- Work restriction: The applicant and family members must not provide work, services or projects to employers or clients established in Cyprus.
- Typical documents: Remote-work contract or service contracts, evidence of stable income and bank statements, criminal-record certificate, medical tests, health insurance and accommodation evidence.
- Validity: Residence for 1 year, renewable for a further 2 years.
- Tax note: A digital nomad who spends more than 183 days in Cyprus in a tax year may become Cyprus tax resident, provided they are not tax resident elsewhere.
Read the detailed Digital Nomad Visa guide.
4. Investors: Permanent Residence by Investment (Regulation 6(2))
The expedited investor route allows qualifying non-EU applicants to apply for an Immigration Permit when they make a qualifying investment and meet the quality criteria. It is a serious application with source-of-funds scrutiny and should be prepared carefully.
- Investment: At least EUR 300,000 in one eligible category: new residential property, other real estate, share capital of a Cyprus company with real operations and at least 5 employees, or units of a qualifying Cyprus investment fund.
- Income requirement: Secured annual income is normally at least EUR 50,000 for the applicant, increased by EUR 15,000 for the spouse and EUR 10,000 for each minor child. Additional rules apply for adult children.
- Funds: Investment funds must be proven to come from abroad and be linked to the investment. Domestic borrowing does not satisfy the policy.
- Forms and fees: The current official forms page lists Form MIP2. The official information page lists a EUR 500 application fee and EUR 70 ARC fee where an Alien Registration Certificate is needed.
- Maintenance: The permit may cease to be valid if the holder fails to acquire residence in Cyprus within 1 year of approval, acquires permanent residence abroad, or is absent from Cyprus for 2 years.
Read the detailed Permanent Residency by Investment guide.
5. Highly Qualified Workers: EU Blue Card
Cyprus began accepting EU Blue Card applications on 7 July 2025. This route is for highly qualified non-EU/EEA workers and is currently limited in Cyprus to specific sectors announced by the Migration Department.
- Current Cyprus sectors: Information and Communication Technologies (ICT), pharmaceuticals for research purposes only, and shipping excluding ship captains and crew.
- Salary threshold: The official 2025 announcement set the minimum gross annual salary at EUR 43,632.
- Rights: Residence and access to highly qualified employment in Cyprus, equal-treatment rights in specified areas, and family reunification with permits linked to the Blue Card duration.
- Form: The official route uses Form MBCEU1 and the relevant document checklists.
A Note on Short-Stay Visas and Schengen
A Cyprus short-stay visa is for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. Cyprus visas and residence permits currently apply to the Republic of Cyprus only. The official visa page notes that after Cyprus fully joins the Schengen acquis, Cyprus-issued visas and residence permits will give short-stay movement rights in the rest of the Schengen area.
Official Resources (2026 Verified)
- Ministry of Interior - Residence Cards / MEU1, MEU2, MEU3
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Visas
- Migration Department - Visitors / Pink Slip route
- Migration Department - Digital Nomads and Family Members
- Migration Department - Immigration Permits
- Migration Department - Investor forms and document lists
- Migration Department - EU Blue Card announcement
Last reviewed: May 2, 2026. Government procedures can change. Always confirm the latest checklist, fees and appointment process before submitting an application.
