Opening a Bank Account in Cyprus: What Documents Do You Actually Need?

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For residents, newcomers and foreign nationals, the process is straightforward only if the paperwork is ready before the appointment.

 

Opening a bank account in Cyprus is usually less about choosing the right branch and more about arriving with the right documents. Banks are required to verify who the customer is, where they live, where their money comes from and whether the account activity makes sense for their profile.

For a simple personal account, the basic documents are broadly similar across the main banks. Applicants should expect to provide a valid passport or national identity card, proof of residential address, employment or income information and tax residency details. Foreign nationals may also be asked for their Cyprus residence documentation, such as a residence permit, registration certificate or Alien Registration Certificate.

The exact requirements can vary depending on the bank, the type of account, the applicant’s nationality, residence status, employment situation and whether the person is already living in Cyprus. Non-residents, self-employed applicants and people receiving income from abroad may face additional checks.

What banks usually ask for

The first requirement is proof of identity. For Cypriot and EU citizens, this is normally a valid national identity card or passport. For non-EU nationals, a passport is usually required. Banks may ask to see the original document, even if the application begins online.

The second key document is proof of address. This can usually be a recent utility bill, such as an electricity or water bill, a bank statement or another official document showing the applicant’s name and residential address. Some banks may accept a rental agreement or an official document issued by Cyprus authorities, but the document must normally be recent, clear and in the applicant’s name.

A common mistake is assuming that a lease alone will always be enough. In practice, it depends on the bank and the applicant’s profile. A person who has just moved to Cyprus and does not yet have utilities in their name should ask the bank in advance what alternative proof of address it will accept.

Some applicants may also be asked for a clean criminal record certificate. This is not usually listed as a standard requirement for every personal account, but Bank of Cyprus, for example, includes it among the required documents where applicable, specifically in cases where the applicant’s passport shows a single name. Banks may also ask for additional documents depending on the customer’s risk profile and due diligence checks.

Residence documents for foreign nationals

Foreign nationals living in Cyprus should also be ready to show evidence of their legal status in the country. For EU citizens, this may include the registration certificate issued after registering residence in Cyprus. For non-EU nationals, banks may request a residence permit, Alien Registration Certificate or other immigration documentation.

In some cases, banks may accept proof that an application or renewal is pending, but this is not automatic and should be confirmed with the bank before the appointment.

Applicants under international protection, asylum seekers or other special categories may be asked for specific documents linked to their status. Banks in Cyprus also offer payment accounts with basic features, a type of account designed for essential day-to-day banking. Access to these accounts is covered by EU and Cyprus rules, but applicants must still complete the required identification and due diligence checks.

Proof of income and employment

Banks will also want to understand how the account will be used. Employees should expect to provide a recent payslip, employment contract or salary certificate. Some banks list a payslip among the standard documents needed for opening an account.

Self-employed applicants may be asked for business registration documents, invoices, tax returns, accounting records or recent bank statements. Pensioners may need pension statements. Students may be asked for proof of studies and information on who funds their living expenses.

The purpose of these checks is not only administrative. Cyprus banks operate under anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing rules, which require them to understand the customer’s financial profile. That is why applicants may be asked about annual income, expected deposits and withdrawals, and the purpose of the account.

Source of funds

For many applicants, especially foreign nationals or people transferring money from abroad, the most important extra requirement is proof of source of funds. This means evidence showing where the money being deposited into the account came from.

For salary income, this may be payslips, an employment contract or bank statements from another country. For savings, the bank may ask for statements showing how the savings were accumulated. For property sale proceeds, it may ask for a sale agreement. For inheritance, dividends or business income, additional supporting documents may be required.

This is often the part of the process that causes delays. A bank may accept the identity and address documents but pause the application until the source of funds is properly explained and supported.

Tax residency details

Applicants should also be ready to provide tax residency information. Banks commonly ask for the country or countries where the person is tax resident, and in many cases the relevant tax identification number. They may also ask whether the applicant is a US citizen or resident for tax purposes.

This information is part of international tax reporting obligations and should be treated as a standard part of the onboarding process.

Can non-residents open an account?

Non-residents can apply to open a bank account in Cyprus, but approval is not guaranteed and the process is usually more detailed. A bank may ask why the applicant needs an account in Cyprus, what connection they have to the country and what transactions are expected.

A non-resident who owns property in Cyprus, works with a Cyprus employer, receives rental income, studies on the island or has a clear business or family reason for banking locally may find the process easier than someone with no obvious link to Cyprus.

The bank may also request documents from the applicant’s home country, such as foreign bank statements, proof of address, tax documents or evidence of employment. If these documents are not in English, the bank may ask for a certified translation.

Online applications and branch appointments

Some banks allow new customers to begin the process online or through a mobile app. This does not always mean the account is opened instantly. The bank will still review the application and may contact the applicant for additional documents or a branch appointment.

Applicants should also remember that online applications may have eligibility limits. For example, some digital onboarding routes may be available only to adults with an original passport or identity card and residence in specific countries.

For branch appointments, it is safest to bring the original identity document, the original or official version of residence documents, recent proof of address and printed or digital copies of income documents. Poor-quality scans, unclear photos or expired documents can delay the application.

What to prepare before you go

Before contacting the bank, applicants should prepare a small file with their passport or ID, proof of address, residence documentation if applicable, employment or income evidence, tax identification details and recent bank statements from any account that will be used to fund the new Cyprus account.

They should also be ready to explain the expected use of the account: salary payments, rent, savings, daily expenses, business-related transfers or property costs. The clearer the explanation, the less likely the application is to be delayed.

The practical answer is that a passport alone is rarely enough. For most people, the real document set is identity, address, residence status, income, tax information and source of funds. The exact list depends on the applicant, but preparing these documents in advance is the best way to avoid repeated visits to the bank.