Italy: Non-resident individuals who transfer their place of residence to Italy

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Italy: Non-resident individuals who transfer their place of residence to Italy

scampuddu.jpg
nieddu.jpg

Barbara Scampuddu

Gian Luca Nieddu

Starting from 2017, non-resident individuals who transfer their place of residence to Italy may opt for a preferential tax regime with regard to foreign source income.

The new tax regime will apply under the condition that the individuals have not been resident in Italy for nine years out of the previous 10 years (in this regard, a specific ruling may be submitted to the Italian tax administration).

The option can be exercised by the deadline for filing the income tax return for the fiscal period in which the individual's residence is transferred to Italy, or in the following year.

The detailed rules for exercising this option are provided in the Decree of the director of the Italian tax agency dated March 8 2017. Although the option can be revoked, it is valid for a maximum of 15 years.

Under an objective standpoint, the preferential tax regime regards the individual income tax (IRPEF), the inheritance and gift tax and other indirect taxes applicable to immovable properties and financial activities held abroad (IVIE and IVAFE).

Individual income tax (IRPEF)

According to the preferential tax regime, individuals will be taxed as follows.

With regard to national source income, individuals will be taxed according to the income tax return according to the IRPEF ordinary rates, which range between 23% and 43%.

Income of a financial nature will normally be subject to a withholding tax of 26% (in some cases, 12.50%) levied by the intermediary.

Foreign source income

With regard to foreign source income (immovable property existing abroad, dividends of foreign companies, capital gains from the sale of non-qualified shares of foreign companies, etc.), individuals will pay a flat tax equal to €100,000 ($106,000) for each fiscal year.

Capital gains from the sale of qualified shares (shareholding higher than 20%), realised in any of the five fiscal periods following the option, are excluded and subject to the ordinary income tax. Starting from the sixth year after the option, those incomes will also be subject to the preferential tax regime. Any family member who meets the conditions requested may apply for the preferential tax regime and pay a flat tax equal to €25,000 for each fiscal year.

Inheritance and gift tax

With regard to individuals whose estate is being administered during the period of validity of the option, the inheritance tax will apply only to goods and rights existing in Italy. The same rules will apply with regards to gifts made over the lifetime of the option. Thus, goods and rights existing abroad will not be taxable for inheritance and gift tax purposes.

IVIE and IVAFE

Furthermore, such individuals and their family members are exempt from the real estate abroad value tax (Imposta sul valore degli immobili all'estero, or IVIE) and from the financial activities abroad value tax (IVAFE), respectively applicable at a rate of 0.76% and 0.2%.

RW

Lastly, such individuals and their family members do not have to comply with the rules regarding the so called "monitoraggio fiscale". Thus, they do not have to show in their tax return the goods and rights held abroad.

Barbara Scampuddu (barbara.scampuddu@hager-partners.it) and Gian Luca Nieddu (gianluca.nieddu@hager-partners.it)

Hager&Partners

Tel: +39 02 7780711

Website: www.hager-partners.it

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

In looking at the impact of taxation, money won't always be all there is to it
Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board is set to kick off 2026 with a new secretary to head the administrative side of its regulatory activities.
Ireland’s Department of Finance reported increased income tax, VAT and corporation tax receipts from 2024; in other news, it’s understood that HSBC has agreed to pay the French treasury to settle a tax investigation
The Australian Taxation Office believes the Swedish furniture company has used TP to evade paying tax it owes
Supermarket chain Morrisons is facing a £17 million ($23 million) tax bill; in other news, Donald Trump has cut proposed tariffs
The controversial deal will allow US-parented groups to be carved out from key aspects of pillar two
Awards
ITR invites tax firms, in-house teams, and tax professionals to make submissions for the 2027 World Tax rankings and the 2026 ITR Tax Awards globally
Pillar two was ‘weakened’ when it altered from a multinational convention agreement to simply national domestic law, Federico Bertocchi also argued
Imposing the tax on virtual assets is a measure that appears to have no legal, economic or statistical basis, one expert told ITR
The EU has seemingly capitulated to the US’s ‘side-by-side’ demands. This may be a win for the US, but the uncertainty has only just begun for pillar two
Gift this article