
When parents split up, the first question that usually lands on a lawyer's desk is "how much will I have to pay-or receive-for the kids?". In Cyprus the answer is spelled out in Law 216/1990, but the courts apply that law with a good dose of common sense and life-experience. Below is a plain walk-through of the rules, the guiding court decisions and some hard-won practical tips.
1 | The legal backbone-Articles 33 & 37, Law 216/1990
2 | How judges decide the figure
Cypriot family judges describe themselves as "regulators, not accountants." They carry out a two-step balancing act.
Classic rulings such as Oxinou v Louis (2012) and Korellidis v Korellidi (2012) say the court's aim is to keep the child as close as possible to the lifestyle he or she would have enjoyed if the family had stayed intact. Precision down to the last cent is not required; reasonableness is.
3 | What counts-and what gets chopped
Judges readily allow:
They push back when claims are inflated or weakly proven-think designer wardrobes or five-star holidays without receipts. The onus is on both parents to give full and honest financial disclosure; hiding income usually backfires.
4 | Seasonal salaries, benefits and "phantom income"
5 | Practical tips to keep the process sane
| Do | Avoid |
|---|---|
| Keep a running file of receipts and bank statements. | Turning the budget into a battleground-courts see through it. |
| Exchange payslips, tax returns and any proof of qualifications early. | Under-declaring income or "forgetting" a side hustle. |
| Build a review clause for big life changes (job loss, school switch). | Expecting 100% of every claim; judges often trim the fat. |
| Anchor every figure to the child's welfare, not parental rivalry. | Treating maintenance as punishment or leverage. |
How Phoebus, Christos Clerides & Associates LLC can help
Our family-law team blends courtroom experience with a negotiation-first ethos to secure maintenance arrangements that are fair, enforceable and child-centred. We: