| Status | Enacted Law |
| Law | On 12 December 2024, the Cyprus House of Representatives voted to approve local legislation to implement Pillar 2. The Law was published in the Official Government Gazette on December 18, 2024. Draft Law of October 18, 2024 Ministry of Finance announcement on OECD Safe Harbours |
| Effective Date | Accounting periods beginning on or after December 31, 2023 |
| IIR | Yes (2024) |
| UTPR | Yes (2025) |
| QDMTT | Yes (2025) |
| Filing Deadlines | Standard |
| Safe Harbours | On July 24, 2024, the Ministry of Finance announced the domestic application of all OECD Safe Harbours as provided in the Safe Harbours & Penalty Relief Guidance and other Administrative Guidance. |
On 12 December 2024, the Cyprus House of Representatives voted to approve local legislation to implement Pillar 2. The Law was published in the Official Government Gazette on December 18, 2024.
On October 18, 2024, a bill was tabled in Parliament to introduce the mandatory Income Inclusion Rule (IIR) for fiscal years beginning from December 31, 2023, and the Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR) for fiscal years starting from December 31, 2024.
A DMTT will be implemented for fiscal years beginning December 31, 2024.
The IIR, which should have been approved by the end of 2023, will apply retroactively from December 31, 2023.
On July 24, 2024, the Ministry of Finance announced the domestic application of all OECD Safe Harbours as provided in the Safe Harbours & Penalty Relief Guidance and other Administrative Guidance.
On October 3, 2023, the Cyprus Ministry of Finance issued the ‘Ensuring a Global Minimum Level of Taxation of Multinational Enterprise Groups and Large-Scale Domestic Groups in the Union Law of 2023’ to implement the Pillar Two GloBE rules/EU Minimum Tax Directive.
As expected, the Law closely follows the EU Directive. There are very few options given to member states in the EU Directive in terms of flexibility over national implementation.
As noted below, many aspects of the First Set of OECD Administrative Guidance are included in the Law, however, none of the Second, Third or Fourth (or January 2025) OECD Administrative Guidance is included (aside from Safe Harbours).
Section 59 of the Law states that in implementing the provisions of the Law, the OECD Guidelines are to be used as a ‘source of example or interpretation’, to the extent that there is no inconsistency in the application of the Law or EU Minimum Tax Directive.
The OECD Guidelines includes the:
-OECD Consolidated Commentary;
-June 2024 OECD Administrative Guidance;
-December 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance;
-July 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance;
-February 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance;
-OECD Examples;
-OECD Safe Harbours and Penalty Relief Guidance;
-OECD GloBE Information Return Guidance; and
-Subsequent documents published by the OECD, as defined by Ministerial Decree.
Administrative Guidance
Aspects of the First Set of OECD Administrative Guidance included in the Law are:
-Sovereign wealth funds and the definition of Ultimate Parent Entity (it also excludes the National Investment Fund from the UPE definition) (Article 1.4)
-Clarifying the definition of ‘Excluded Entity’ (Article 1.5)
-Forex hedge election (Article 2.2)
-Excluded Dividends – Asymmetric treatment of dividends and distributions (Article 2.3)
-Debt release election (Article 2.4)
-Accrued pension expenses (Article 2.6)
-Excess negative tax carry-forward guidance (Article 2.7)
-Substitute loss carry forwards (Article 2.8)
-Equity gain or loss inclusion election (Article 2.9)
-The extension of the taxable distribution method election to insurance investment entities (Article 3.1)
-Exclusion of Insurance Investment Entities from the definition of Intermediate Parent Entity and Partially-Owned Parent Entity (Article 3.2)
-Liabilities related to Excluded Dividends and Excluded Equity Gain or Loss from securities held on behalf of policyholders (Article 3.4)
-Portfolio shareholding election (Article 3.5)
None of the provisions of the Second Set of OECD Administrative Guidance are included in the Law (aside from Safe Harbours).
As such, the following are not included in the Law:
-Blended controlled foreign company regimes;
-Transferable tax credits;
-Meaning of “ancillary” for Non-Profit Organisations;
-The extension of the tax transparency election to mutual insurance companies
-Additional rules (such as the deemed 50% requirement where employees perform work outside the employer’s jurisdiction for the SBIE).
No aspects of the December 2023, June 2024 or January 2025 OECD Administrative Guidance are included (aside from Safe Harbours).
Safe Harbour and Penalty Relief Guidance
The Law provides for the application of OECD Safe Harbours.
This includes the Transitional CbCR Safe Harbour, the QDMTT Safe Harbour and Transitional UTPR Safe Harbours.
The approach to Safe Harbours differs in the Law from some other jurisdictions.
In particular, the applicability of safe harbours is determined by a decree of the Minister of Finance. Section 33 of the Law does provide that there will be no top-up tax for entities that meet the requirements of an ‘acceptable international safe harbour agreement’.
This is defined as an ‘international set of rules and conditions to which all the member states of the EU have agreed’.
Although applying the safe harbours by a Ministry Decree may reduce Parliamentary oversight it does significantly ease the introduction of new safe harbours.
On July 24, 2024, the Ministry of Finance announced the domestic application of all OECD Safe Harbours as provided in the Safe Harbours & Penalty Relief Guidance and other Administrative Guidance.
Section 12(3) of the Law also applies the EU QDMTT safe harbour.
Elections in the OECD Model Rules
All of the elections included in the OECD Model Rules and the EU Minimum Tax Directive are provided in the Law, including:
-Excluded Entity Election (Section 4(4) of the Law)
-Stock-Based Compensation Election (Section 17(3) of the Law)
-Election to use the Realization Method (Section 17(6) of the Law)
-Election to Spread Capital Gains (Section 17(7) of the Law)
-Consolidation Election (Section 17(9) of the Law)
-Unclaimed Accrual Election (Section 23(1b) of the Law)
-GloBE Loss Election (Section 24(1) of the Law)
-Prior Year Adjustment Election (Section 26(1) of the Law)
-De minimis Election (Section 31(1) of the Law)
-Substance-Based Income Exclusion Election (Section 29(2) of the Law)
-Deemed Disposal of Assets Election (Section 36(5) of the Law)
-Taxable Distribution Election (Section 44 of the Law)
-Tax Transparency Election (Section 43 of the Law)
-Distribution Tax Regime Election (Section 41(1) of the Law)
Elections in the Administrative Guidance
Elections included in the OECD Administrative Guidance that are included in the Law include the:
-Debt Release Election (Section 17(13) of the Law);
-Equity Investment Inclusion Election (Section 22(6) of the Law);
-Foreign Exchange Hedge Election (Section 17(12) of the Law);
-Portfolio Shareholding Election (Section 17(3a) of the Law);
-Excess Negative Tax Carry-Forward Election (Section 22(5b) of the Law)
As expected, the Law closely follows the EU Directive. There are very few options given to member states in the EU Directive in terms of flexibility over national implementation.
The main options relate to the design of the QDMTT.
The key differences are with the OECD model rules. ie:
• The Law extends the GloBE rules to include large scale, purely domestic groups,
• Cyprus applies the IIR to not only foreign subsidiaries but also to all domestic constituent entities. This is permitted but not mandatory under the GloBE Model Rules.
The OECD Model Rules allow flexibility as to how to apply the UTPR. Cyprus’s approach is to apply a UTPR top-up tax rather than a denial of deduction.
As such the carry forward provisions in Article 2.4.2 of the Model Rules for UTPR amounts not sufficient to provide for the additional cash tax expense are not relevant and these rules are not included in the Law.
Sections 10(2)/13(1)/14(1) of the Law provides that an MNE group can transfer the amount of top-up tax due either in whole or in part, by a constituent entity to another constituent entity or entities of the same group located in Cyprus. This option requires the applicant entity to register an application with the receiving entity and obtain the receiving entity’s consent. If the top-up tax is not paid by the payment date the liability for the tax returns to the original constituent entity.
Section 12 of the Law provides that Cyprus will apply a domestic minimum top-up tax (DMTT). Section 61 of the Law provides that this will be effective for financial years beginning on or after December 31, 2024.
The amount of top-up tax under the DMTT is the general GloBE top-up tax calculated under the Law. However, the Law provides for a number of adjustments.
It applies irrespective of the shareholdings in the group entities located in Cyprus. This reflects the OECD Administrative Guidance that provides that Top-up Tax that is subject to the QDMTT is based on the whole amount of the jurisdictional Top-up Tax calculated, irrespective of the ownership interests held in the Constituent Entities located in the QDMTT jurisdiction by any Parent Entity of the MNE Group.
Tax paid or incurred by a Constituent Entity-owner under a CFC Tax Regime that is pushed down to a domestic Constituent Entity in the GloBE Rules must be excluded, as provided in the OECD Administrative Guidance. This is included in Section 2 of the Law.
This preserves Cyprus’s primary right to tax income accruing to a Cypriot member entity which is also a CFC. If there were no statutory derogation from the general GloBE rules for the calculation of the domestic minimum tax, and the CFC tax paid by the controlling company abroad were included in the included taxes of the Cypriot CFC, the effective tax rate would be increased. Therefore, excluding the CFC tax from the Cypriot CFCs covered taxes allows Cyprus to tax low-taxed income at a higher rate than would be the case under an IIR.
Section 2 also prevents the pushdown of tax to hybrids, PEs and for taxes on distributions.
Any DMTT that has not been paid within four years is usually taken into account for top-up tax purposes in the fifth year. This does not apply for the DMTT calculation (just for tax under an IIR or UTPR). This is required to avoid circularity and ensure the DMTT is not taken into account for the domestic minimum tax calculation.
Section 12 applies the default GloBE rules for determining the accounting standard to be used. Therefore, GloBE income for DMTT purposes is calculated using the financial accounting standard of the ultimate parent entity, and, if that is not practicable, on the basis of an accepted or approved accounting standard, if:
-the constituent entity’s financial statements are prepared in accordance with that standard;
-the information contained in the financial statements is reliable;
-in the case of an Authorised Financial Accounting Standard, the financial accounts have been prepared subject to adjustments to prevent any Material Competitive Distortions;
-permanent differences of more than EUR 1 million are conformed with the UPEs accounting standard.
Section 12 of the Law provides that the Safe Harbours (as adopted by the EU/OECD) and the de minimis rule apply for the purposes of the DMTT.
Section 12(1)(c) applies the UTPR exemption for the Initial Phase of International Activity for DMTT purposes to:
-Large-scale domestic groups
-Constituent Entities/Joint Ventures where no ownership interest in the Constituent Entity or Joint Ventures is held by a parent entity outside Cyprus that is subject to a Qualifying IIR;
-Constituent Entities/Joint Ventures where the ownership interest in the Constituent Entity or Joint Ventures is held by a parent entity outside Cyprus that is subject to a Qualifying IIR and the ownership interest in the parent entity is held either by a Cypriot UPE or a Cypriot intermediate parent entity which is held by a UPE which is an excluded entity.
Section 12(1)(d) of the Law provides that an MNE group can transfer the amount of top-up tax due either in whole or in part, by a constituent entity to another constituent entity or entities of the same group located in Cyprus. This option requires the applicant entity to register an application with the receiving entity and obtain the receiving entity’s consent. If the top-up tax is not paid by the payment date the liability for the tax returns to the original constituent entity.
Registration
Section 47(1) of the Law requires each constituent entity in Cyprus to notify the Taxation Department by the GloBE Information Return (GIR) filing deadline.
Filing
The relevant aspects of the submission of GIR are included, as provided in the EU Directive.
The approach is for every Constituent Entity located in Cyprus to have an obligation to file a GIR in Cyprus. However, this obligation can be discharged if the GIR is filed by:
-A Designated Local Entity,
-The Ultimate Parent Entity, or
-The Designated Filing Entity.
Where the GIR is being filed by either the Ultimate Parent Entity or the Designated Filing Entity, the Constituent Entity, must file a notification with the Tax Department.
The notification must contain:
-Details of the entity that is filing the GIR, and
-The jurisdiction in which such an entity is located.
Where the GIR is filed by the Designated Local Entity it needs to outline the Constituent Entities that it is filing on behalf of.
Both the GIR and associated notifications must be filed no later than 15 months after the end of the fiscal year (with an 18-month deadline for the Transition Year).
The law also requires submission of an additional self- assessment return (a ‘GloBE Top-Up Tax Return’) within 30 days from the deadline for submission of the GIR.
Payment
Section 48(3) of the Law provides that the top-up tax payable is due within 30 days from the deadline for submission of the GIR.
Penalties
Section 49(1) of the Law provides that refusing to file a GIR is subject to a penalty of up to €10,000.
Section 49(2) of the Law provides that submission of an inaccurate a GIR is subject to a penalty of up to €5,000.
However, transitional penalty relief applies under Section 49(12) of the Law.
None Issued
| Cyprus | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Effective Date: | Accounting periods beginning on or after December 31, 2023 | ||
| Section/Article | |||
| First Set of OECD Administrative Guidance | |||
| 1.1 | Rebasing monetary thresholds in the GloBE Rules | – | |
| 1.2 | Deemed consolidation test | 2, Excludes state entities | |
| 1.3 | Consolidated deferred tax amounts | – | |
| 1.4 | Sovereign wealth funds and the definition of Ultimate Parent Entity | 2 nb excludes the National Investment Fund from the UPE defn | |
| 1.5 | Clarifying the definition of ‘Excluded Entity’ | 2 | |
| 1.6 | Meaning of ancillary for Non-Profit Organisations | – | |
| 2.1 | Intra-group transactions accounted at cost | – | |
| 2.2 | Excluded Equity Gains or Loss and hedges of investments in foreign operations | 17(12) | |
| 2.3 | Excluded Dividends- Asymmetric treatment of dividends and distributions | 17(bb2) | |
| 2.4 | Debt release Election | 17(13) | |
| 2.5 | Accrued Pension Expenses | 17(1)(h) | |
| 2.6 | Covered Taxes on deemed distributions | 25(5) | |
| 2.7 | Excess Negative Tax Carry-forward guidance | 22(5b) | |
| 2.8 | Substitute Loss carry forwards | 23(5) | |
| 2.9 | Equity Gain or loss inclusion election | 22(6) | |
| 2.9 | Qualified Ownership Interest/Flow through entity | 22(6) | |
| 2.1 | Allocation of taxes arising under a Blended CFC Tax Regimes | – | |
| 3.1 | Application of Taxable Distribution Method Election to Insurance Investment Entities | 44 | |
| 3.2 | Exclusion of Insurance Investment Entities from the definition of Intermediate Parent Entity and Partially-Owned Parent Entity | 2 | |
| 3.3 | Restricted Tier 1 Capital | 25 | |
| 3.4 | Liabilities related to Excluded Dividends and Excluded Equity Gain or Loss from securities held on behalf of policyholders | 17(bc2) | |
| 3.5 | Simplification for Short-term Portfolio Shareholdings | 17(3a) | |
| 3.6 | Application of Tax transparency election to Mutual insurance companies | – | |
| 4.1 | Deferred tax assets with respect to tax credits under Article 9.1.1 | – | |
| 4.2 | Applicability of Article 9.1.3 to transactions similar to asset transfers | – | |
| 4.3 | Asset carrying value and deferred taxes under 9.1.3 | – | |
| Second Set of OECD Administrative Guidance | |||
| 1 | Currency conversion rules | – | |
| 2 | MTTCs | – | |
| 3 | SBIE Rules | ||
| – Foreign rules | – | ||
| Stock-based compensation election | – | ||
| Leases | – | ||
| – Impairment losses inc in tangible asset value | – | ||
| 4.1 | QDMTT Safe Harbour | Transposed – 33/Ministerial Decree | |
| 4.2 | UTPR Safe Harbour | Transposed – 33/Ministerial Decree | |
| Third Set of OECD Administrative Guidance | |||
| 1 | Transitional CbCR – Purchase Accounting Adjustments (consistent reporting condition, goodwill impairment adjustment) | Transposed | |
| 2.2.1 | Transitional CbCR – JVs | Transposed | |
| 2.3.1 | Transitional CbCR – Same Financial Statements/Local Financial Statements for Statutory Reporting | Transposed | |
| 2.3.2 | Transitional CbCR – Using different accounting standards | Transposed | |
| 2.3.3 | Transitional CbCR – Adjustments to Qualified Financial Statements/Dividend Mismatches | Transposed | |
| 2.3.4 | Transitional CbCR – MNEs not required to file CbC Reports | Transposed | |
| 2.3.5 | Transitional CbCR – Qualified Financial Statements for PEs | Transposed | |
| 2.4.2 | Transitional CbCR – Treatment of Taxes on income of PEs, CFCs, and Hybrid Entities | Transposed | |
| 2.6 | Transitional CbCR – Treatment of hybrid arbitrage arrangements | Transposed | |
| 3.1 | Identifying Consolidated Revenue | ||
| 3.2 | Mismatch between Fiscal Years of the UPE and another Constituent Entity | ||
| 3.3 | Mismatch between Fiscal Year and Tax Year of Constituent Entity | ||
| 4.2.1 | Blended CFCs -multiple GloBE Jurisdictional ETRs | ||
| 4.2.2 | Blended CFCs – not required to calculate an ETR | ||
| 4.2.3 | Blended CFCs – income of non-GloBE Entities | ||
| 5.3 | 30 June 2026 Filing deadline | 57 | |
| 6 | NMCE Simplified Calcs | Transposed | |
| Fourth Set of OECD Administrative Guidance | |||
| 1.2.1 | Aggregate DTL Category basis | ||
| 1.2.1 | Exclusion of certain types of GL accounts and separate tracking | ||
| 1.2.1 | Exclusion of GL accounts that generate standalone DTAs | ||
| 1.2.1 | Exclusion of swinging accounts and separate tracking | ||
| 1.2.2 | FIFO/LIFO Basis | ||
| 1.2.3 | Aggregation of Short-term DTLs | ||
| 1.2.2 | Reversal of DTLs that accrued before the Transition Year | ||
| 1.2.2 | 5 year unclaimed accrual election | ||
| 2.1.2 | Recalculated deferred tax where GloBE carrying value differs from accounting carrying value | ||
| 2.1.2 | GloBE and accounting carrying values and the Transition Rules | ||
| 2.1.2 | Additional provisions for Intragroup transactions accounted for at cost | ||
| 2.1.2 | Exclusion of GloBE carrying value from SBIE | ||
| 3.1.3 | General rules for allocating cross-border, current taxes under a cross-crediting corporate tax system: 4 Steps | ||
| 3.1.3 | Specific rules for foreign PEs/CFCs, Hybrids/rev hybrids with domestic source income | ||
| 3.1.3 | Cross-crediting between Permanent Establishments and distributions from foreign subsidiaries | ||
| 4.1 | Extension of the Substitute Loss Carry-forward DTA to PEs, hybrids and rev hybrids | ||
| 4.2 | Allocation of deferred tax expenses and benefits from a Parent Entity to a CFC, PE Hybrid or Rev Hybrid: 5 step process | ||
| 4.2.2 | Five-Year Election to exclude the allocation of all deferred tax expenses and benefits to CFCs, PEs, Hybrids and Rev Hybrids | ||
| 4.2.3 | Exclusion of deferred tax assets or liabilities arising under a Blended CFC regime from transition rules | ||
| 5.2.2 | Determining GloBE status when a Flow-through Entity is held directly by another Flow-through Entity | ||
| 5.3.2 | Non-group owners: Partially owned Flow-through Entities | ||
| 5.3.5 | Non-group owners: Indirect minority ownership | ||
| 5.4.2 | Taxes allocated to a flow-through entity | ||
| 5.5.2 | Hybrid entities – Taxes pushed down include indirect owners | ||
| 5.5.4 | Hybrid entities – Entities located in jurisdictions without a Corporate Income Tax system | ||
| 5.6.2 | Extension of taxes pushed down to include Reverse Hybrids | ||
| 6.1.4 | Option to exclude a Securitization Entity from scope of QDMTT | ||
| 6.1.4 | Option to not impose top-up tax liabilities on SPVs used in securitization transactions | ||
| 6.1.4 | Amendments to the Switch-Off rule | Transposed | |
| 6.1.4 | New definition: Securitization Entity | ||
| 6.1.4 | New definition: Securitization Arrangement | ||
| January 2025 OECD Administrtive Guidance | |||
| 1 | Articles 8.1.4 and 8.1.5 | ||
| 1 | Amendments to CbCR Safe Harbour for 9.1 | ||
| 1 | Amendments to QDMTT Safe Harbour for 9.1 | ||
| 1 | Article 9.1 of the GloBE Rules | ||
| 1 | Central Record of Legislation with Transitional Qualified Status |
| Note | Cyprus | |
|---|---|---|
| QDMTT?(Enacted/Draft) | Is there a QDMTT in the Legislation? | Yes – Draft |
| Effective Date: | January 1, 2025 | |
| Administrative Guidance/Safe Harbour Guidance? | Are the provisions of the OECD Administrative Guidance and Safe Harbour Guidance reflected in the current legislation? | Partially |
| Separate/Transposed QDMTT | Is the QDMTT a Separate QDMTT or a Transposition of the GloBE Rules (with Amendments) | Transposed |
| Domestic Groups | A QDMTT can also apply to purely domestic groups. | Yes – 12(1) |
| Scope Definitions | The definitions of Ultimate Parent Entity, MNE Group, and Constituent Entity correspond with the definitions in the GloBE Rules. | Transposed – 2 |
| Income and covered taxes of Constituent Entities | The QDMTT must compute the tax liability for the jurisdiction by taking into account the income and covered taxes of Constituent Entities under the GloBE Rules. | Transposed – 2 |
| Separate ETRs | A QDMTT must determine a separate ETR and Top-up Tax amount for MOCEs, Joint Ventures and JV Subsidiaries. | Transposed – 2 |
| Charging | A QDMTT must impose a Top-up Tax on one or more domestic Constituent Entities on the Excess Profits of all domestic Constituent Entities, including the domestic Parent Entity. | Transposed – 2 |
| Enforceability | The legal liability for the domestic top-up tax needs to be enforceable against at least one Constituent Entity in the jurisdiction. | Transposed – 2 |
| Different Accounting Standard? – Optional | Is the use of a local accounting standard optional? | No |
| Different Accounting Standard? – Mandatory | Is the AG2 guidance followed? | No |
| Different Accounting Standard? – Default GloBE rules | Do the general GloBE rules apply for the QDMTT accounting standard? | Yes – 12(2) |
| Require 100% ownership? | The QDMTT )can require 100% ownership | No |
| Differences to GloBE Rules: tighter restriction is consistent with local tax rules | The QDMTT can be more restrictive than the GloBE Rules where the tighter restriction is consistent with local tax rules. | None |
| Differences to GloBE Rules: Not relevant to in the context of its domestic tax system | The QDMTT can exclude adjustments that are not relevant to in the context of its domestic tax system. | None |
| Income/Loss of a PE | The QDMTT must exclude the income or loss of a foreign Permanent Establishment from the income or loss of the Main Entity. | Transposed – 2 |
| Tax Transparency | A QDMTT must include certain tax transparent provisions. | Transposed – 2 |
| Adjusted Covered Taxes Consistency | The range of taxes included in Covered Taxes needs to be the same or narrower, as under the GloBE rules. | Transposed – 2 |
| GloBE Loss Election? | Not Required in QDMTT | Transposed – 2 |
| No Pushdown to CFC or PE | A QDMTT must exclude: (1) tax paid or incurred by a Constituent Entity-owner under a CFC Tax Regime that is pushed down to a domestic Constituent Entity in the GloBE Rules and (2) tax paid or incurred by a Main Entity that is allocated to a PE in the jurisdiction. | Yes – 2 |
| Exclude tax allocated to Hybrids | Second AG Guidance | Yes – 2 |
| Exclude allocated net basis tax on dividends (except WHT) | Second AG Guidance | Yes – 2 |
| UPE that is a Flow-Through Entity | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| UPE subject to Deductible Dividend Regime | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| Eligible Distribution Tax Systems | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| ETR Computation for Investment Entities | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| Investment Entity Tax Transparency Election | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| Taxable Distribution Method Election | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| Multi-Parented MNE Groups | Second AG Guidance | Transposed – 2 |
| Additional Top-Up Tax/Excess Negative Tax Expense | A QDMTT needs to have provisions for additional top-up tax where there is no Net GloBE Income and the Adjusted Covered are less than zero and less than the Expected Adjusted Covered Taxes. Amount. Excess Negative Tax Carry-forward rules also need to be in place. | Transposed – 2 |
| Modified Top-Up Tax Formula | The QDMTT top-up tax formula needs to be modified as the GloBE Rules subtract tax paid under a QDMTT from the current GloBE Top-up Tax. | Transposed – 2 |
| Same Approach As GloBE Rules | A QDMTT must require that top-up tax is taken into account by the relevant Constituent Entity at the same time and in the same manner as under the GloBE Rules (eg it can’t be carried forward). | Transposed – 2 |
| SBIE Included? | Not Required in QDMTT | Transposed – 2 |
| SBIE Rates same as GloBE? | Not Required in QDMTT | Transposed – 2 |
| De Minimis Rule Included? | Not Required in QDMTT | Transposed – 2 |
| Restructuring Rules? | A QDMTT needs to include restructuring rules as provided in the GloBE rules to the extent necessary to conform to the tax reorganization rules in the jurisdiction. | Transposed – 2 |
| Safe Harbours? | A QDMTT needs to contain GloBE safe harbours. | Yes – Section 2 |
| Deferred Tax Transition Rule? | A QDMTT must include the deferred tax starting point under Article 9.1.1 of the Model Rules. | Transposed – 2 |
| SBIE Transitional Rates? | Not Required in QDMTT | Transposed – 2 |
| Initial Phase of International Activity Exemption | Not Required in QDMTT | No |
| Elections? | Where the GloBE Rules permit an election, a QDMTT must generally also provide for the election and require the MNE Group to make the same election under the QDMTT as is made under the GloBE Rules. | Transposed – 2 |
| Deferred Tax transition: First time or refreshing rule? | Second AG | No |
| New transition year – amend tax attributes? | Second AG | No |
| Currency provisions? | Second AG | No |
| DTL Recapture rules – Aggregate DTL Categories | Fourth AG, 1.2.8 | |
| DTL Recapture rules Unclaimed Accrual Five-Year Election | Fourth AG, 1.2.8 | |
| Reverse Hybrid Pushdown | Fourth AG, 5.6.2 | |
| Securitization Entities – A QDMTT may also exclude a Securitisation Entity from its scope | Fourth AG, 6.1.4 | |
| Securitization Entities – A jurisdiction may allocate the QDMTT liability for any QDMTT top-up tax to another Constituent Entity (if any) that is located in the jurisdiction | Fourth AG, 6.1.4 | |
| Note |
| Cyprus | ||
|---|---|---|
| Effective Date: | Accounting periods beginning on or after December 31, 2023 | |
| Section/Article | ||
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | De Minimis Test | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Simplified ETR Test | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Routine Profits Test | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Simplified Covered Tax defn (inc exclusion of uncertain tax positions) | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Simplified ETR defn | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Transition Period | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Transition Rate | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Defn of Qualified Financial Statements | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Special Rule for Joint Ventures | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Special Rule for Tax Neutral UPEs | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Special Rules for Investment Entities and their Constituent Entity-owners | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Special Rule for Net Unrealised Fair Value Loss | Transposed |
| Safe Harbour & Penalty Relief Guidance | Exclusions | Transposed |
| December 2023 OECD Administrative Guidance | ||
| 1 | Transitional CbCR – Purchase Accounting Adjustments(consistent reporting condition, goodwill impairment adjustment) | Transposed |
| 2.2.1 | Transitional CbCR – JVs | Transposed |
| 2.3.1 | Transitional CbCR – Same Financial Statements/Local Financial Statements for Statutory Reporting | Transposed |
| 2.3.2 | Transitional CbCR – Using different accounting standards | Transposed |
| 2.3.3 | Transitional CbCR – Adjustments to Qualified Financial Statements/Dividend Mismatches | Transposed |
| 2.3.4 | Transitional CbCR – MNEs not required to file CbC Reports | Transposed |
| 2.3.5 | Transitional CbCR – Qualified Financial Statements for PEs | Transposed |
| 2.4.2 | Transitional CbCR – Treatment of Taxes on income of PEs, CFCs, and Hybrid Entities | Transposed |
| 2.6 | Transitional CbCR – Treatment of hybrid arbitrage arrangements | Transposed |
| January 2025 OECD Administrtive Guidance | ||
| Amendments to CbCR Safe Harbour for 9.1 |
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