
Money, Safety & eSIM in Cyprus
Cyprus uses the euro (€), and cards are widely accepted even at small tavernas — carrying much cash isn't essential, though it helps for small purchases and rural areas. Cyprus is one of the safer countries in Europe for tourists; the main real-world risk is driving, since Cyprus drives on the left (a legacy of British rule) and rental-car mix-ups are the most common visitor mishap. eSIM and local SIM options both work well.
The unglamorous section that quietly makes or breaks a trip: how to pay for things, what to actually watch out for, and the one detail that catches out more visitors here than almost anything else — Cyprus drives on the left.
Money and payments
The euro (€) is the currency throughout the Republic of Cyprus. As a rough anchor for budgeting, €1 has recently traded at roughly $1.05–1.10 — check a live rate before you go, since it moves. Cards (Visa, Mastercard, increasingly contactless) are accepted almost everywhere, including most tavernas and taxis; cash is still useful for small village shops, some parking, and tipping.
| Payment method | Where it works best |
|---|---|
| Card (contactless) | Hotels, restaurants, taxis, supermarkets — accepted almost everywhere |
| Cash (euros) | Small village tavernas, parking meters, tipping |
| Mobile payment (Apple/Google Pay) | Widely accepted alongside contactless card readers |
Is Cyprus safe?
Yes, very much so — Cyprus is consistently ranked among the safer countries in Europe for visitors, with low rates of violent crime. The most statistically real risk for tourists is road safety, not crime: unfamiliar left-hand driving, mountain roads in the Troodos, and rental scooters on the coast all deserve real caution. Petty theft is rare but not unheard of in the busiest beach-town strips — normal precautions apply.
Driving on the left — the detail that catches people out
A holdover from British colonial rule (Cyprus was a British colony until 1960), Cyprus drives on the left, with the steering wheel on the right side of the car — the opposite of most of continental Europe and the US. If you're renting a car and you're used to right-hand driving, budget extra caution for your first day, especially at roundabouts, which follow the same logic as the UK's.
eSIM and staying connected

eSIM is the easiest option if your phone supports it — Airalo and Holafly both sell Cyprus or regional Europe data plans from roughly $5–15 for 7–15 days, activated before you land. A physical local SIM (from Cyta, Epic, or PrimeTel, available at the airport or any phone shop) is just as easy and similarly priced, and often gives better value if you're staying longer than two weeks.
Getting around beyond driving
- Public buses connect the major towns but run infrequently, especially in the evening and on Sundays — check timetables in advance rather than assuming a frequent service.
- Taxis are widely available and metered, but not especially cheap for longer distances — a car rental usually works out better value if you're covering multiple towns.
- Cyprus's small size (you can drive coast to coast in under 2 hours) makes a rental car genuinely worth it for most itineraries that go beyond a single beach town.
Health and practical basics
Tap water is generally safe to drink throughout the Republic of Cyprus, unlike many popular Mediterranean destinations — a small but genuinely convenient detail. Pharmacies are well-stocked and pharmacists speak English fluently in tourist areas. No special vaccinations are required for entry.












































