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Commercial Property Guide for Cyprus

8 min readLast updated April 2026

Whether you need an office, a retail shop, a restaurant space, or a warehouse, Cyprus has a growing commercial property market with competitive rents by European standards. Here is what you actually need to know before signing a lease.

Types of Commercial Property

Offices

Class A towers, business parks, and converted apartments. Limassol has the strongest demand.

Retail Shops

High-street units, shopping malls, and tourist-area storefronts.

Restaurants & F&B

Requires specific zoning and additional licensing (food safety, liquor).

Warehouses & Industrial

Concentrated in industrial zones near Limassol port, Larnaca, and Nicosia outskirts.

Mixed-Use

Ground-floor commercial with residential above. Increasingly popular in new developments.

Key Office Areas by City

Limassol

  • Omorfita Business District — The main business corridor. Class A offices, walking distance to the seafront. Highest rents in the city.
  • Zakaki (near the port) — Industrial-commercial mix. Popular with shipping and logistics companies. More affordable than the seafront.
  • Agios Athanasios — Newer business parks along the highway. Good for tech companies wanting modern space with parking.

Nicosia

  • Strovolos — The de facto business center. Banks, law firms, and corporate headquarters cluster here.
  • CBD (old town) — Government offices and traditional businesses. Rents are lower but parking is a nightmare.
  • Makarios Avenue — The main commercial artery. High-profile addresses but limited modern office stock.

Paphos

Limited office stock — Mainly concentrated in Kato Paphos and along the main road to the airport. Paphos is primarily residential and tourism-focused, so commercial options are fewer and typically smaller. If you need a proper office, expect to look harder and settle for less choice.

Lease Terms

Term LengthTypical UseNegotiating Power
3 yearsSmall offices, startupsLow — landlord has flexibility
5 yearsMost common for offices and retailModerate — can negotiate on rent
8+ yearsAnchor tenants, large retailStrong — best rates, rent-free periods

The longer you commit, the better rate you can negotiate. Most leases include annual CPI-linked rent increases.

Common Charges (On Top of Rent)

  • Service charge — Covers cleaning, security, lift maintenance, common area electricity. Varies widely by building.
  • Maintenance / sinking fund — Annual contribution for major repairs (roof, facade, lift replacement).
  • Parking fees — Not always included. In Limassol and Nicosia, dedicated parking spots can cost €50–150/month each.

Rule of thumb: Budget 10–20% on top of your base rent for common charges. Always ask for a breakdown before signing.

Zoning Requirements

Your business must be located in a commercial (Ε) or mixed-use zone. Residential zones strictly prohibit commercial activity — even a small office.

Before signing any lease, verify the zoning with the Town Planning Department or check the local development plan. Getting this wrong means your business license application will be rejected and you will be stuck in a lease you cannot use.

Licensing & Registration

  • Business license — Issued by the municipality where your premises are located. Required for all commercial activities.
  • Trade registration — Register with the Registrar of Companies (for limited companies) or as a sole trader.
  • VAT registration — Mandatory if turnover exceeds €15,600/year. Voluntary registration is also possible.
  • Industry-specific — Restaurants need food safety permits. Bars need liquor licenses. Healthcare needs Ministry approval.

Fit-Out: Who Pays for What?

Landlord Typically Provides
  • • Shell and core (walls, floors, ceiling)
  • • Air conditioning system
  • • Bathroom facilities
  • • Electrical and plumbing rough-ins
  • • Fire safety systems
Tenant Typically Pays For
  • • Interior partitions and layout
  • • Flooring finishes
  • • Kitchen / specialty installations
  • • IT infrastructure and cabling
  • • Signage and branding

Insider Tip: Negotiate a Rent-Free Period

It is standard practice to negotiate 1–3 months rent-free at the start of your lease to cover fit-out time. The longer your lease commitment, the more months you can ask for. On an 8-year lease, 3 months rent-free is very achievable. On a 3-year lease, expect 1 month at best. Always ask — landlords expect this negotiation.

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