Current status The territory comprises two base areas. One is
Akrotiri Cantonment ( ; ), or the Western Sovereign Base Area (WSBA), which includes two main bases at
RAF Akrotiri and
Episkopi Cantonment, plus all of
Akrotiri village's district, including
Limassol Salt Lake, and parts of eleven other village districts. The other area is
Dhekelia Cantonment ( ; ), or the Eastern Sovereign Base Area (ESBA), which includes a base at
Ayios Nikolaos plus parts of twelve village districts. As of 2026, based units include:
Akrotiri Cantonment (including RAF Akrotiri and Episkopi Cantonment): •
No. 903 Expeditionary Air Wing RAF •
No. 84 Squadron RAF • 1st Battalion,
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment • Cyprus Operations Support Unit • Cyprus Military Working Dog Troop • Cyprus Joint Police Unit (CJPU) ;Dhekelia Cantonment: • 4th Battalion,
Royal Regiment of Scotland • Joint Service Signal Unit (Cyprus) • Joint Service Adventure training Centre
Ayios Nikolaos Station, in the ESBA, is an
ELINT (electronic intelligence) listening station of the
UKUSA Agreement intelligence network. The UKUSA signals intelligence system is sometimes known as "
ECHELON".
Governance The
sovereign bases were retained in 1960 to keep military bases in areas under British sovereignty, along with the rights retained to use other sites in what became the territory of the Republic. That makes them different from the other
British Overseas Territories. The basic philosophy of their administration was declared by the British government in Appendix O to the 1960 treaty with Cyprus, which provided that the British government intended: • Not to develop the Sovereign Base Areas for other than military purposes. • Not to set up and administer "colonies". • Not to create customs posts or other frontier barriers between the Sovereign Base Areas and the Republic. • Not to set up or permit the establishment of civilian commercial or industrial enterprises except insofar as these are connected with military requirements, and not otherwise to impair the economic, commercial or industrial unity and life of the Island. • Not to establish commercial or civilian seaports or airports. • Not to allow new settlement of people in the Sovereign Base Areas other than for temporary purposes. • Not to expropriate private property within the Sovereign Base Areas except for military purposes on payment of fair compensation. According to the
British Ministry of Defence: The territory is administered by an
Administrator, who is also the
Commander of
British Forces Cyprus, which is Major General
Tom Bewick. The Administrator is officially appointed by the
British monarch on the advice of the Ministry of Defence. The Administrator has all the executive and legislative authority of a governor of an overseas territory. A Chief Officer is appointed, and is responsible to the Administrator for the day-to-day running of the civil government, with subordinate Area Officers responsible for the civil administration of the two areas. No elections are held in the territory. British citizens are normally entitled to vote in United Kingdom elections, as British Forces or overseas electors. The areas have their own legal system, distinct from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Cyprus. This consists of the laws of the
Colony of Cyprus as of August 1960, amended as necessary. The laws of Akrotiri and Dhekelia are closely aligned with, and in some cases identical to, the laws operating within the Republic of Cyprus. The Court of the Sovereign Base Areas is concerned with non-military offences committed by any person within Akrotiri and Dhekelia. Law and order is maintained by the
Sovereign Base Areas Police. Offences involving British Forces Cyprus and military law are dealt with by the Cyprus Joint Police Unit. Fire and rescue services are provided by the Defence Fire and Risk Management Organisation through stations at Episkopi, Akrotiri, Dhekelia and Ayios Nikolayos. The Defence Medical Services provide emergency ambulance cover based from medical centres in the main bases. All emergency services are accessible from any telephone using the Europe-wide emergency number
112. Reviews In January 2010, a British press article claimed that as a result of budgetary constraints arising from the
Great Recession, the
British Ministry of Defence drew up controversial plans to withdraw the United Kingdom's 3,000 strong garrison and end the use of Cyprus as a staging point for ground forces. The Labour government, under whom the proposal appeared, was replaced by the
Cameron–Clegg coalition whose defence review did not mention the issue. On 15 December 2012, in a written statement to the
House of Commons, the UK's
Secretary of State for Defence,
Philip Hammond, revealed the findings of a report on the SBA military bases following the completion of a review of their operations by
Lord Ashcroft:
Dispute and controversies The
Republic of Cyprus claims that the Sovereign Base Areas are a "remnant of
colonialism". On 30 June 2005 the
House of Representatives of Cyprus unanimously adopted a resolution on the legal status of the base areas originally proposed by
Vassos Lyssarides. The resolution refers to "relevant UN decisions on the abolition of colonialism, as well as the fundamental principles of international law, which forbid the occupation of territory within the domain of any other country." It claims that "the United Kingdom does not have substantial sovereignty over the British bases, but it has as much sovereignty as is necessary for military reasons and not for administrative, financial and / or any other reasons." The resolution urged the UK government "to fulfil its financial obligations towards the Republic of Cyprus, which derive from the Treaty of Establishment." It also argued that the UK does not have territorial waters in the areas. The UK government does not recognise Cypriot claims that the UK's sovereignty in the areas is limited. In July 2001, protests were held at the bases by local Cypriots, unhappy with British plans to construct
radio masts at the bases as part of an upgrade of British military communication posts around the world. Locals claimed the masts would endanger local lives and cause cancer, as well as have a negative effect on wildlife in the area. The British and Cypriot governments jointly commissioned health research from the
University of Bristol and the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Cyprus, and that research project reported in 2005 that there was no evidence of health problems being caused by electromagnetic fields from the antennas. The Sovereign Base Areas Administration has carried out assessments and surveys into the effects on wildlife, which have fed into an "Akrotiri Peninsula Environmental Management Plan", published in September 2012. In 2004, the UK offered to cede of farmland as part of the rejected
Annan Plan for Cyprus. On 29 August 2013, during the
Syrian civil war, some Cypriot and British media sources speculated that long-range ballistic missiles, fired from Syria in retaliation for proposed British involvement in military intervention against the Syrian government of
Bashar al-Assad, could hit Cyprus, and could potentially deliver chemical weapons. In some Cypriot media it was stated that the proposed interdiction of the Syrian civil war, utilising Akrotiri and Dhekelia, could recklessly endanger the Cypriot populations near to those bases. Two days earlier, on 27 August 2013, Cypriot foreign minister
Ioannis Kasoulides had moved to calm Cypriot concerns, saying that the British bases were unlikely to play a major part in any intervention. A spike in the
US Air Force arms delivery from US and
NATO depots in Europe to Akrotiri was reported by the Israeli newspaper
Haaretz, and "the illegal presence of thousands of American soldiers" at the base have drawn criticism. During his 2024 visit to the base dispatching surveillance planes to
Gaza, the British prime minister
Keir Starmer noted, "We can't necessarily tell the world what you're doing here" "for reasons that are obvious to you, the whole world is relying on you". Surveillance planes continued being dispatched towards Gaza after the
ceasefire between
Israel and
Hamas began. In March 2026, during the
2026 Iran war, a drone strike was launched against the bases by
Hezbollah. Following the attack, the diplomatic tension raised higher between Britain and Cyprus, as domestic protests criticized the presence of the bases and being dragged into regional conflict. In April 2026, British Minister for the Armed Forces
Al Carns, made it clear that there will be no negotiation about the bases, or ceding sovereignty over the bases.
Border and travel documents There is normally no passport check at the border from Akrotiri or Dhekelia to Cyprus. Perhaps to help reduce any tensions in the area, outside of the bases much of the territory is indistinguishable from that controlled by Cyprus and casual visitors may not realize that they have crossed an international border. In the exchange of notes establishing them, the British government specifically stated that it would not "...create customs posts or other frontier barriers between the Sovereign Base Areas and the Republic." The main road connecting all major cities on Cyprus's southern shore run non-stop through SBA: Some 7 km (5 miles) of the A6 highway through Akrotiri SBA and some 16 km (10 miles) of the A3 highway through Dhekelia SBA. More formal controls do exist at the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus boundary. Possession of a passport or an
EU-compliant national identity card is generally needed in Cyprus. A passport is required to travel between
Cyprus/SBAs and
Northern Cyprus. Issues concerning the validity of car insurance and customs are specified by SBAs' administration.
Brexit implications Under Article 2(1) of the Protocol, the SBAs were partially part of the
European Union Customs Union in three domains:
VAT, agriculture and fisheries. However, the SBAs were already outside the EU. Therefore, concerns were raised about the future status of about 15,000 Cypriots (
EU citizens) working in the SBA following the UK's
2020 departure from the EU. Cyprus,
Ireland and
Spain were the only three EU states that conducted bilateral talks with the UK on the Brexit issue. The talks between the UK and the Republic of Cyprus started in October 2017. The
Brexit withdrawal agreement has a protocol on the SBAs, with provisions essentially maintaining their previous status. == Geography ==