Is Cyprus Safe? Is Cyprus Safe to Visit Right Now? What You Need to Know
Honest answers on crime rates, travel advisories, and the reality on the ground in Protaras and across the island, from a team that lives and works here year-round
The Honest Answer
If you have been watching the news and wondering whether Cyprus is still safe to visit in 2026, here is our answer as a team that operates here on the ground every day: the tourist resorts of Protaras, Ayia Napa, Limassol and Paphos are operating entirely normally. Beaches are open. Restaurants are full. Families are arriving, swimming and going home with the holiday they came for.
The headlines you have seen are real. The US and Israel launched strikes on Iran on 28 February 2026. On 2 March, a drone struck the British military base at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus. Some governments updated their travel advisories. Bookings fell sharply in the days that followed. (Source: Greek City Times, March 2026) None of that is in dispute.
What matters for someone planning a holiday is the distinction between Cyprus as a country caught in the news cycle of a regional conflict, and Cyprus as a place where tourists are actually at risk. Those are two very different things. This guide addresses both, honestly, with sourced data.
Cyprus Crime Statistics: The Verified Data
The most reliable way to assess safety in any destination is to look at official crime data rather than headlines. Every figure below is drawn from a named primary or official source, with a direct link.
What the Crime Data Means for Tourists
The statistics above describe the overall crime picture for a country of approximately one million people. When you narrow the focus to the tourist resorts of Protaras and Ayia Napa, the picture is even more reassuring. The crimes that do occur in Cyprus are overwhelmingly property offences concentrated in urban areas. Violent crime against tourists in Protaras and Ayia Napa is not a meaningful risk.
The most common issue tourists report in Cyprus is petty theft in crowded areas, which is easily avoided with standard travel awareness: do not leave valuables unattended on beaches, keep bags secure in busy markets and use the safe in your accommodation. Beyond that, Cyprus presents no meaningful personal safety risk for holidaymakers.
Travel Advisories Explained: What They Actually Say
After the events of late February and early March 2026, several governments updated their travel advice for Cyprus. Government advisories are often precautionary in language and do not always make clear what the practical implications are for a tourist in a resort town. Here is what each major advisory actually says, with direct links to the official pages.
| Country | Advisory level | What it means in practice |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Level 3: Reconsider Travel | Raised on 3 March 2026 citing regional conflict. Rooted in regional calculations, not specific intelligence about threats to tourists. Cypriot authorities have characterised it as a precautionary measure tied to the Iran conflict rather than evidence of imminent danger on the ground. Full analysis here. |
| United Kingdom | Travel permitted with awareness | The FCDO continues to allow travel to Cyprus. The advisory notes that regional escalation poses security risks and could cause travel disruption, particularly flight-related. There is no advice against visiting the Republic of Cyprus. Read the FCDO advice directly. |
| European Union member states | No warnings against travel | No European government has issued advice against visiting Cyprus. Standard safety awareness guidance applies, as it would for most European destinations at any time of year. |
| Australia and Canada | Exercise caution | Both countries have issued cautions about possible airspace restrictions linked to the regional conflict. Neither advises tourists to avoid Cyprus entirely. |
Why the US Level 3 Advisory Does Not Mean What You Think
The US State Department's Level 3 advisory for Cyprus caused significant alarm, but it is important to understand what it is based on. The advisory reflects the broader regional security environment following the Iran conflict, not specific intelligence about threats to tourists within Cyprus. Local authorities in Nicosia have explicitly stated that the advisory is a precautionary measure. Cyprus's Deputy Tourism Minister has repeatedly described the island as a safe destination where day-to-day life continues as normal. (Source: The Traveler, March 2026)
The US advisory also does not distinguish between different parts of Cyprus. The British military base at RAF Akrotiri, where the drone struck on 2 March, is a sovereign military installation entirely separate from the civilian tourist areas. Protaras is approximately 130 kilometres from Akrotiri. The beach resorts of the east coast operate in a completely different security context.
The Reality in Protaras and Ayia Napa Right Now
We are a villa and apartment rental company operating in Protaras. Our team is here every day. We are not writing this from a newsroom or a travel website aggregating advisories from a distance. Here is what we are actually seeing.
What Independent Operators in the Area Are Saying
This is not just our assessment. Triton Adventures, a diving and water sports company based in Ayia Napa, wrote in March 2026: "We operate every day in Ayia Napa and nothing has changed in terms of safety or operations. Customers are arriving, enjoying themselves, and leaving with the kind of experiences Cyprus is known for. If there were genuine risks, we would not operate." (Source: Triton Adventures, March 2026)
The Copenhagen Post, visiting Cyprus on a press trip in April 2026, described the island as "a remarkably safe, alluring and resilient destination" where "life on the island continues peacefully," with regional tensions having caused "a temporary dip in bookings" rather than any change to conditions on the ground. (Source: The Copenhagen Post, April 2026)
Resort Conditions by Area
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Understanding Cyprus's Position in the Region
Cyprus sits in the eastern Mediterranean, approximately 320 kilometres from Israel. (Euronews, March 2026) It is the closest EU member state to the ongoing conflict zone. That proximity is why the headlines mention Cyprus at all, and why some governments have updated their advisories. Understanding what that proximity actually means in practice is essential.
Cyprus is an EU Member State
The Republic of Cyprus is a full member of the European Union and subject to EU law, including consumer protections, legal recourse mechanisms and coordinated security frameworks. It is not a conflict-affected country. No EU member state has issued advice against visiting another EU member state in response to these events.
The British Bases Are Separate
RAF Akrotiri and Dhekelia are UK sovereign base areas operating under British military command. They are not part of the Republic of Cyprus for legal or administrative purposes. The drone strike on 2 March targeted a military installation, not a civilian area. The security response has been handled by the UK's Sovereign Base Areas Administration, not by Cypriot authorities. Civilian tourist areas were not affected.
The Bookings Impact Is Real But Reflects Anxiety, Not Danger
The booking data is real and should be acknowledged honestly. Data from AirDNA, which tracks short-term rental bookings, showed daily cancellation rates for Cyprus properties jumping from around 15% before the conflict to as high as 100% in the immediate aftermath of the 2 March events. The figure later eased but remained at approximately 45% by 21 March. (Source: Greek City Times, March 2026, citing AirDNA)
The Cyprus Hoteliers Association reported a near 40% drop in bookings for March and April compared to the previous year, according to director-general Christos Angelides. (Source: Greek City Times, reporting Reuters, March 2026) These figures reflect anxiety and uncertainty. They do not reflect a destination that has become unsafe. Cancellations caused by concern are a different phenomenon from cancellations caused by actual danger.
Flights and Airports: What to Expect
The most significant practical disruption affecting Cyprus travel in 2026 is not safety within the island but aviation disruption linked to regional airspace. This is the area where genuine caution and preparation are warranted.
Flights from Europe and the UK
Flights from the United Kingdom and from European countries are running normally to both Larnaca and Paphos International Airports. Some routes involving Middle Eastern airspace have seen adjustments, but the primary UK and European holiday flight paths are unaffected. (Source: Triton Adventures, March 2026; FCDO Cyprus travel advice)
Middle Eastern Routes
Flights to and from Middle Eastern destinations including Tel Aviv, Beirut, Dubai and Amman have seen cancellations and suspensions. (Source: Euronews Travel, March 2026) If you are travelling from or connecting through a Middle Eastern hub, check your airline directly before departure.
Drone Restrictions
Cyprus has implemented a ban on private drone use until further notice, with operation permitted only by government departments. If you were planning to bring a drone for photography, leave it at home for this trip. (Source: Euronews Travel, March 2026)
Practical Advice for Visitors in 2026
If you are planning to visit Cyprus in 2026 or have an existing booking you are considering cancelling, here is our practical guidance based on what we are seeing on the ground and what the official sources say.
Our Verdict
Cyprus has a homicide rate of 0.82 per 100,000 people, among the lowest in the Mediterranean. (World Bank / UNODC) It ranks 31st globally for rule of law, with an order and security sub-score of 0.80 out of 1.0. (World Justice Project 2024) The island's official crime statistics show that the overwhelming majority of serious offences involve property crimes, not violence against people. (CYSTAT 2024) None of that has changed in 2026.
What has changed is the regional context. A conflict involving the US, Israel and Iran has escalated in the wider Middle East. A drone struck a British military base on the island. Some governments have updated their travel advisories. Booking figures have fallen sharply. These are all real events with real economic consequences for Cyprus.
But for a tourist deciding whether to visit Protaras or Ayia Napa, the relevant question is not whether Cyprus is in the news. It is whether the place they are visiting is safe to be in. The answer to that question, based on the verified crime data, the on-the-ground reporting from operators and journalists visiting the island in April 2026, the official European advisories and our own daily experience of operating here, is yes.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Cyprus is one of the lowest-crime countries in Europe and the tourist resorts of Protaras, Ayia Napa, Limassol and Paphos are operating entirely normally in 2026. The island has a homicide rate of 0.82 per 100,000 people according to World Bank and UNODC data, well below the European average. The headlines surrounding Cyprus relate to regional geopolitical events, not to conditions on the ground in tourist areas. No European government has issued advice against visiting Cyprus.
On 28 February 2026 the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran. On 2 March, a drone struck RAF Akrotiri, a British military base located in the south of Cyprus. The US State Department raised its Cyprus travel advisory to Level 3 on 3 March 2026. These events triggered a wave of booking cancellations. However, the drone struck a military installation, not a civilian or tourist area. Protaras, Ayia Napa, Limassol and Paphos were unaffected and continue to operate normally.
The US Level 3 advisory means Reconsider Travel and was issued on 3 March 2026 in response to the broader regional conflict involving Iran. It is a precautionary measure based on the regional security environment, not on specific intelligence about threats to tourists within Cyprus. Cypriot authorities have stated that day-to-day life and tourist activity continues normally. No European government has issued an equivalent warning, and the UK FCDO continues to allow travel to Cyprus with standard awareness guidance.
Yes. Protaras is operating entirely normally. Beaches, restaurants, shops and tourist facilities are all open. Police patrols are regular and visible. No incidents affecting tourists have been reported in the area. As a villa rental company based in Protaras, our team is here every day and we are welcoming guests throughout the 2026 season.
According to the most recent data from the World Bank, compiled from UNODC sources, Cyprus recorded an intentional homicide rate of 0.82 per 100,000 people in 2023. The most common category of crime in Cyprus is property offences such as theft, which accounted for 31.8% of the 5,942 serious offences reported in 2024 according to the Statistical Service of Cyprus. Violent crime against tourists is not a pattern that appears in the official statistics.
Flights from the UK and from European countries to Larnaca and Paphos airports are running normally. The main disruption relates to routes involving Middle Eastern airspace, including flights to and from Tel Aviv, Beirut, Dubai and Amman. If you are travelling from or via a Middle Eastern hub, check your airline directly. Budget carriers including EasyJet and Jet2 continue to operate their UK and European routes to Cyprus.
This depends on your policy and your country of residence. The US Level 3 advisory may affect the validity of some American travellers’ insurance policies for Cyprus, depending on the terms. European travellers are generally in a different position as no European government has issued an equivalent warning. Check your policy carefully before travelling and, if uncertain, contact your insurer directly.
Yes. Cyprus has a long history as a family holiday destination and nothing in the current situation changes the on-the-ground safety picture for families visiting Protaras, Ayia Napa or other main resort areas. The beaches are open, facilities are operational, and the low violent crime rate that has characterised Cyprus for decades remains unchanged.
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