The governments of Cyprus and Ukraine initialed an amending protocol regarding the Cyprus – Ukraine Income Tax Treaty (2012) on 2 July 2015. A press release was published by the government of Cyprus in this regard on 8 September 2015.
Related Posts

Ukraine: State Tax Service highlights possibility of concluding АРА agreement
Ukraine’s State Tax Service, in a release, highlighted the possibility of concluding Advance Pricing Arrangement (АРА) on 28 March 2025. Transfer pricing rules in Ukraine, introduced since 2013, are a tool to combat tax evasion and ensure
Read More
Ukraine issues guidance on CbC reporting for US parent multinationals
The State Tax Service of Ukraine issued a guidance letter (No. 1308/IPK/99-00-21-02-03 IPK) on 12 March 2025 regarding the requirement for Ukrainian entities to submit a Country-by-Country (CbC) report on behalf of their US-based parent
Read More
Ukraine expands tax deductions for charitable contributions
Ukraine has increased the corporate tax deduction limit for charitable donations from 4% to 8% of a company’s taxable profit from the previous year. The change took effect on 16 March 2025 under Law No. 12328-d and will remain in place until
Read More
Germany updates CbC Report exchange list, adds four new jurisdictions
The German Official Gazette (Bundesgesetzblatt) No. 64 published the Seventh Regulation Amending the Country-by-Country (CbC) Report Extension Regulation on 11 March 2025. This update revises the list of jurisdictions participating in the
Read More
Ukraine: Central Bank raises key policy rate
The Board of the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) has decided to raise the key policy rate from 14.5% to 15.5% per annum and to adjust the operational framework parameters of its interest rate policy. The key policy rate is applied to calculate
Read More
Ukraine raises interest rate, increasing late payment penalties
The National Bank of Ukraine has announced it will raise the key policy rate from 14.5% to 15.5% per annum, effective 7 March 2025. For tax purposes, this impacts the late payment penalty interest, which is 120% of the National Bank rate. This
Read More