Cyprus’ Securities and Exchange Commission plans to
raise the cost of doing regulated investment business on the island. It has proposed
higher application and annual fees for Cyprus Investment Firms, foreign
branches and market operators, while also introducing fresh charges for
material change notifications and algorithmic trading activity.
The consultation, published Monday, runs until 13
February and sets out a new fee grid that aligns charges more closely with
firms’ size, business model and turnover. Additionally, it removes some obsolete items such as a
separate crypto‑services approval fee now covered by EU MiCA rules.
Under the proposal, the cost of obtaining a CIF license
increases materially. Instead of a flat €7,000 for investment services, firms
would pay €8,000 per investment service in most cases, and €15,000 where the
business model includes dealing on own account. The fee for services which
relate to operating an MTF or OTF, rises to €30,000 from €25,000.
Crypto-Specific Fee Removed Under MiCA
One notable deletion concerns a specialized fee for
applications to extend CIF licenses to activities involving cryptocurrency.
The existing €5,000 charge for authorization
extensions relating to crypto services disappears from the schedule, as CySEC
notes that Regulation
Regulation
Like any other industry with a high net worth, the financial services industry is tightly regulated to help curb illicit behavior and manipulation. Each asset class has its own set of protocols put in place to combat their respective forms of abuse.In the foreign exchange space, regulation is assumed by authorities in multiple jurisdictions, though ultimately lacking a binding international order. Who are the Industry’s Leading Regulators?Regulators such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (
Like any other industry with a high net worth, the financial services industry is tightly regulated to help curb illicit behavior and manipulation. Each asset class has its own set of protocols put in place to combat their respective forms of abuse.In the foreign exchange space, regulation is assumed by authorities in multiple jurisdictions, though ultimately lacking a binding international order. Who are the Industry’s Leading Regulators?Regulators such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (
Read this Term on Markets in Crypto‑Assets introduces a
harmonized, directly applicable regime for crypto‑asset service providers
across all member states, including Cyprus.
The regulator argues that requiring CIFs to secure
separate or additional approval under the national investment services law for
crypto activities would therefore be redundant in the MiCA environment.
CIFs must inform the regulator about significant
shifts in clientele or market strategy, such as moving from serving only
professional clients to offering services to retail clients, or starting to
provide investment services in a third country.
For ongoing supervision, CySEC
CySEC
The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) is a financial regulatory authority of Cyprus. CySEC is one of the key watchdog authorities for brokerages in Europe, whose financial regulations and operations comply with the European MiFID financial harmonization law.Founded in 2001, CySEC is instrumental in providing licensing and registration for forex brokers and previously binary options providers.CySEC is responsible for a variety of different functions, which includes the supervision
The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) is a financial regulatory authority of Cyprus. CySEC is one of the key watchdog authorities for brokerages in Europe, whose financial regulations and operations comply with the European MiFID financial harmonization law.Founded in 2001, CySEC is instrumental in providing licensing and registration for forex brokers and previously binary options providers.CySEC is responsible for a variety of different functions, which includes the supervision
Read this Term proposes a significant
reconfiguration of annual subscription fees. CIFs and third‑country investment
firms operating in Cyprus through a branch would pay a higher flat component
and steeper turnover-based increments once annual turnover exceeds €500,000,
replacing the current lower percentages.
Continue reading: Cyprus Investment Firms Must Align with EU Sustainability Laws, CySEC Says
The flat element linked to firm type and initial
capital classification increases, with the standard CIF category seeing a base
level rise and investment firms engaging in dealing on own account facing an
annual fee of €30,000 for that activity alone.
New Annual Fee for EU Firm Branches
The incremental percentages applied to turnover above
€500,000 rise across all brackets. For turnover between €500,001 and
€1,000,000, the rate moves to 2%, while the €1,000,001 to €5,000,000 band
carries a 1% charge; the €5,000,001 to €10,000,000 segment is charged at 0.5%,
and amounts above €10,000,001 at 0.3%.
CySEC’s proposal replaces the existing model for
multilateral trading facilities, regulated markets and organised trading
facilities, which currently pay a six‑month subscription equal to 11% of
specific revenue streams, with fixed annual charges plus turnover-based
increments.
In addition to third‑country branches, CySEC
introduces an annual fee for branches in Cyprus established by investment firms
from other EU member states.
The calculation relies on the same components as for
CIFs – the flat element and the turnover-based increment – but multiplies the
result by 40%, effectively discounting the amount relative to domestic firms
while still bringing these branches into the annual fee net.
CySEC stresses that it will not grant individual
extensions and that any responses submitted after 13 February 2026 will not be
considered unless the submission period is formally extended through a public
announcement.
Cyprus’ Securities and Exchange Commission plans to
raise the cost of doing regulated investment business on the island. It has proposed
higher application and annual fees for Cyprus Investment Firms, foreign
branches and market operators, while also introducing fresh charges for
material change notifications and algorithmic trading activity.
The consultation, published Monday, runs until 13
February and sets out a new fee grid that aligns charges more closely with
firms’ size, business model and turnover. Additionally, it removes some obsolete items such as a
separate crypto‑services approval fee now covered by EU MiCA rules.
Under the proposal, the cost of obtaining a CIF license
increases materially. Instead of a flat €7,000 for investment services, firms
would pay €8,000 per investment service in most cases, and €15,000 where the
business model includes dealing on own account. The fee for services which
relate to operating an MTF or OTF, rises to €30,000 from €25,000.
Crypto-Specific Fee Removed Under MiCA
One notable deletion concerns a specialized fee for
applications to extend CIF licenses to activities involving cryptocurrency.
The existing €5,000 charge for authorization
extensions relating to crypto services disappears from the schedule, as CySEC
notes that Regulation
Regulation
Like any other industry with a high net worth, the financial services industry is tightly regulated to help curb illicit behavior and manipulation. Each asset class has its own set of protocols put in place to combat their respective forms of abuse.In the foreign exchange space, regulation is assumed by authorities in multiple jurisdictions, though ultimately lacking a binding international order. Who are the Industry’s Leading Regulators?Regulators such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (
Like any other industry with a high net worth, the financial services industry is tightly regulated to help curb illicit behavior and manipulation. Each asset class has its own set of protocols put in place to combat their respective forms of abuse.In the foreign exchange space, regulation is assumed by authorities in multiple jurisdictions, though ultimately lacking a binding international order. Who are the Industry’s Leading Regulators?Regulators such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (
Read this Term on Markets in Crypto‑Assets introduces a
harmonized, directly applicable regime for crypto‑asset service providers
across all member states, including Cyprus.
The regulator argues that requiring CIFs to secure
separate or additional approval under the national investment services law for
crypto activities would therefore be redundant in the MiCA environment.
CIFs must inform the regulator about significant
shifts in clientele or market strategy, such as moving from serving only
professional clients to offering services to retail clients, or starting to
provide investment services in a third country.
For ongoing supervision, CySEC
CySEC
The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) is a financial regulatory authority of Cyprus. CySEC is one of the key watchdog authorities for brokerages in Europe, whose financial regulations and operations comply with the European MiFID financial harmonization law.Founded in 2001, CySEC is instrumental in providing licensing and registration for forex brokers and previously binary options providers.CySEC is responsible for a variety of different functions, which includes the supervision
The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) is a financial regulatory authority of Cyprus. CySEC is one of the key watchdog authorities for brokerages in Europe, whose financial regulations and operations comply with the European MiFID financial harmonization law.Founded in 2001, CySEC is instrumental in providing licensing and registration for forex brokers and previously binary options providers.CySEC is responsible for a variety of different functions, which includes the supervision
Read this Term proposes a significant
reconfiguration of annual subscription fees. CIFs and third‑country investment
firms operating in Cyprus through a branch would pay a higher flat component
and steeper turnover-based increments once annual turnover exceeds €500,000,
replacing the current lower percentages.
Continue reading: Cyprus Investment Firms Must Align with EU Sustainability Laws, CySEC Says
The flat element linked to firm type and initial
capital classification increases, with the standard CIF category seeing a base
level rise and investment firms engaging in dealing on own account facing an
annual fee of €30,000 for that activity alone.
New Annual Fee for EU Firm Branches
The incremental percentages applied to turnover above
€500,000 rise across all brackets. For turnover between €500,001 and
€1,000,000, the rate moves to 2%, while the €1,000,001 to €5,000,000 band
carries a 1% charge; the €5,000,001 to €10,000,000 segment is charged at 0.5%,
and amounts above €10,000,001 at 0.3%.
CySEC’s proposal replaces the existing model for
multilateral trading facilities, regulated markets and organised trading
facilities, which currently pay a six‑month subscription equal to 11% of
specific revenue streams, with fixed annual charges plus turnover-based
increments.
In addition to third‑country branches, CySEC
introduces an annual fee for branches in Cyprus established by investment firms
from other EU member states.
The calculation relies on the same components as for
CIFs – the flat element and the turnover-based increment – but multiplies the
result by 40%, effectively discounting the amount relative to domestic firms
while still bringing these branches into the annual fee net.
CySEC stresses that it will not grant individual
extensions and that any responses submitted after 13 February 2026 will not be
considered unless the submission period is formally extended through a public
announcement.