
The European Banking Authority (EBA) has opened a public consultation on new guidelines for approving branches of non-EU banks under the Capital Requirements Directive, with comments due by 3 February 2026. Although the initiative is EU-wide, Cyprus—currently holding the Council Presidency—will shepherd the file through the legislative pipeline, giving Nicosia added influence over a framework that directly affects cross-border staff deployments in financial services.
The draft text standardises the information that third-country banks must provide, including detailed mobility plans for executives and key personnel, proof of local governance structures and home-regulator non-opposition letters. For multinational banks that use Cyprus as a regional treasury or compliance hub, the proposals mean greater clarity on the documentation required to secure residency permits and intra-corporate transferee visas for expatriate managers.
VisaHQ can streamline this process for institutions and their assignees by managing the preparation and submission of Cyprus residency and ICT visa applications, liaising with authorities, and tracking changing requirements under the new EBA framework. Corporate mobility teams can learn more about these services at https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/
In practical terms, the guidelines could reduce authorisation timelines by harmonising templates across member states, thereby shortening secondment lead-times. Conversely, the EBA proposes tougher fitness-and-propriety checks that may necessitate more comprehensive background screening and could lengthen onboarding for some senior assignees.
Stakeholders have until the deadline to submit observations, after which the EBA will finalise the guidelines for adoption in the second half of the year. Mobility, HR and legal teams with banking clients should review the draft annexes now to anticipate new compliance checkpoints in relocation workflows.
The draft text standardises the information that third-country banks must provide, including detailed mobility plans for executives and key personnel, proof of local governance structures and home-regulator non-opposition letters. For multinational banks that use Cyprus as a regional treasury or compliance hub, the proposals mean greater clarity on the documentation required to secure residency permits and intra-corporate transferee visas for expatriate managers.
VisaHQ can streamline this process for institutions and their assignees by managing the preparation and submission of Cyprus residency and ICT visa applications, liaising with authorities, and tracking changing requirements under the new EBA framework. Corporate mobility teams can learn more about these services at https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/
In practical terms, the guidelines could reduce authorisation timelines by harmonising templates across member states, thereby shortening secondment lead-times. Conversely, the EBA proposes tougher fitness-and-propriety checks that may necessitate more comprehensive background screening and could lengthen onboarding for some senior assignees.
Stakeholders have until the deadline to submit observations, after which the EBA will finalise the guidelines for adoption in the second half of the year. Mobility, HR and legal teams with banking clients should review the draft annexes now to anticipate new compliance checkpoints in relocation workflows.











