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Italy’s 2026 Budget Law, Law 199/2025, published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale and effective from 1 January 2026, has reshaped the tax landscape for companies, trustees, foundations and high‑net‑worth individuals relocating to the country. Tax lawyers in Italy are fielding an unprecedented volume of queries as CFOs, tax directors and general counsel work to understand three headline changes simultaneously: the trebling of the non‑domiciled lump‑sum substitute tax to €300,000, the opening of the Rottamazione Quinquies amnesty window running from 20 January to 30 April 2026, and significant adjustments to both the VAT consolidated code and the capital‑goods tax credit framework.
This guide delivers the compliance decision points, worked examples and entity‑specific checklists that finance professionals need to act before critical deadlines close.
Law 199/2025, Italy’s 2026 Budget Law, received final parliamentary approval in late December 2025 and was published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale shortly thereafter. It entered into force on 1 January 2026, though several provisions rely on implementing ministerial decrees that the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF) and the Agenzia delle Entrate are issuing on a rolling basis throughout the first half of 2026.
The law covers the full fiscal year 2026 and includes provisions affecting personal income tax (IRPEF), corporate taxation, indirect taxes (VAT), investment incentives and debt‑settlement procedures. Most headline measures, the non‑dom lump‑sum increase, Rottamazione Quinquies and VAT code amendments, took effect on 1 January 2026. Capital‑goods credit transition rules apply to investments committed from 1 January 2026 onward, with grandfathering provisions for contracts signed before that date.
For the purposes of this guide, the critical provisions of Law 199/2025 include the articles amending Article 24‑bis of the TUIR (Testo Unico delle Imposte sui Redditi) to raise the non‑dom substitute tax, the articles establishing the Rottamazione Quinquies amnesty programme and its procedural framework, the articles amending Presidential Decree 633/1972 (the VAT consolidated text) and the articles modifying incentive‑credit rules under the former “Industria 4.0” and “Transizione 4.0” frameworks. Industry observers expect additional MEF circulars throughout Q2 2026 to clarify edge‑case eligibility for both the amnesty and the revised credit regime.
The Agenzia delle Entrate has already issued procedural guidance for the Rottamazione Quinquies submission portal. Additional implementing decrees from the MEF are anticipated for the capital‑goods credit transition and for specific VAT invoicing rules affecting public procurement. Tax lawyers in Italy advise monitoring the MEF’s official bulletin and the Agenzia delle Entrate’s website for updates that may narrow or expand the scope of these measures before the amnesty window closes on 30 April 2026.
Law 199/2025 amended Article 24‑bis of the TUIR to increase the annual lump‑sum substitute tax on foreign‑source income for qualifying new Italian tax residents from €100,000 to €300,000. The separate charge for each qualifying family member has also been raised from €25,000 to €50,000 per person per year. These changes apply to elections made from the 2026 tax year onward, meaning individuals who already held valid non‑dom elections under the previous thresholds are not affected during their existing election period.
To qualify for the non‑dom regime, an individual must establish Italian tax residence, broadly, domicile or habitual abode in Italy, or registration in the Anagrafe della popolazione residente for the greater part of the tax year, and must not have been Italian tax resident for at least nine of the ten preceding tax years. The regime is available for a maximum of fifteen consecutive years. There is no minimum‑spend or investment requirement, distinguishing Italy’s non‑dom scheme from golden‑visa models found elsewhere in Europe.
The €300,000 lump‑sum replaces Italian income tax, regional and municipal surcharges on all foreign‑source income, regardless of the actual amount earned abroad. Italian‑source income remains taxable under ordinary IRPEF rules. The election is made in the taxpayer’s annual return (or in a ruling request to the Agenzia delle Entrate) and may be extended to family members at the additional €50,000 charge per person. The substitute tax does not cover inheritance and gift tax, these are subject to a separate exemption for foreign‑situs assets during the election period.
For U.S. citizens or green‑card holders contemplating relocation, the Italian non‑dom election does not affect U.S. worldwide tax obligations. Such individuals remain subject to IRS filing requirements, including FBAR reporting for foreign financial accounts and PFIC (Passive Foreign Investment Company) reporting, irrespective of their Italian substitute‑tax status. The U.S.‑Italy double tax treaty may allow credits for Italian taxes paid, but the lump‑sum character of the non‑dom charge creates complexities that require bespoke cross‑border analysis. Early indications suggest that practitioner guidance from both PwC and CMS recommends obtaining a formal IRS private‑letter ruling before electing into the regime where significant U.S.‑situs investments are involved.
The table below illustrates the approximate break‑even analysis for the 2026 non‑dom election. Under current IRPEF 2026 changes, the top marginal rate on personal income (above €50,000) stands at 43%, plus regional and municipal surcharges that can add 2–3 percentage points.
| Scenario | Foreign‑source income | Non‑dom cost (substitute tax) | Approximate IRPEF + surcharges |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual, no family members | €500,000 | €300,000 | ~€220,000–€230,000 |
| Individual, no family members | €1,000,000 | €300,000 | ~€440,000–€460,000 |
| Individual + spouse | €2,000,000 combined | €350,000 | ~€880,000–€920,000 |
| Individual, no family members | €650,000 | €300,000 | ~€290,000–€300,000 |
The break‑even point for a single individual sits at roughly €650,000–€700,000 of annual foreign‑source income. Below that level, regular IRPEF may actually be cheaper, a reality that was far less common under the former €100,000 threshold. For couples or individuals with family members electing in, the break‑even shifts upward by €50,000 per additional person. These figures exclude the inheritance and gift tax exemption benefit, which can be substantial for individuals with significant foreign‑situs estates.
The Rottamazione Quinquies, Italy’s fifth iteration of the “definizione agevolata” debt‑settlement programme, was established by Law 199/2025 and permits taxpayers to settle outstanding tax debts by paying the principal amount owed plus accrued interest, while receiving a full waiver of penalties and collection surcharges. The amnesty window opened on 20 January 2026 and closes on 30 April 2026.
The programme covers debts entrusted to the collection agent (Agenzia delle Entrate‑Riscossione) during specified assessment periods. Eligible debts include unpaid IRPEF, IRES (corporate income tax), IRAP (regional business tax), VAT assessments and certain social‑security contributions. Debts arising from EU customs duties and VAT on imports are generally excluded. Companies, foundations, public authorities and individuals may all apply, provided their debts fall within the qualifying parameters defined by the Agenzia delle Entrate’s procedural guidance.
Filing a Rottamazione Quinquies application does not shield the taxpayer from concurrent audit activity on unrelated matters. The likely practical effect of filing will be to focus revenue‑authority attention on the taxpayer’s broader compliance profile, particularly where the debts being settled are large relative to declared income. Companies with complex group structures should conduct a comprehensive pre‑claim review of all open positions, including transfer‑pricing exposures and withholding‑tax obligations, before submitting. This reduces the risk of an application triggering a broader enquiry.
Law 199/2025 introduced amendments to the VAT consolidated text (Presidential Decree 633/1972), implementing adjustments to invoicing rules, reverse‑charge mechanisms and input‑VAT recovery timelines. These VAT consolidated code 2026 changes are particularly significant for entities involved in public procurement and for investee companies operating across multiple Italian jurisdictions.
The 2026 amendments refine the rules governing the timing of VAT deductions, tightening the window within which input VAT may be recovered on supplier invoices. They also extend the mandatory use of electronic invoicing (fatturazione elettronica) to additional categories of transactions that were previously exempt, including certain intra‑group services. The reverse‑charge mechanism for construction‑sector and energy‑sector supplies has been updated with revised threshold criteria and expanded reporting obligations.
Municipal authorities and public bodies that procure goods and services through public tenders must update their invoicing templates to reflect the new e‑invoicing categories. The reverse‑charge rules now require that public‑sector purchasers validate the supplier’s VAT classification against the Agenzia delle Entrate’s registry before processing payment. Failure to comply may result in the disallowance of input‑VAT deductions and the imposition of administrative penalties ranging from 90% to 180% of the VAT amount involved, in line with existing penalty frameworks under Presidential Decree 633/1972.
The capital‑goods tax credit changes introduced by Law 199/2025 represent the latest evolution of Italy’s industrial‑incentive framework, which has progressed through “Industria 4.0,” “Transizione 4.0” and now the 2026 Budget Law recalibration. The headline change is the reduction and scheduled phase‑out of the automatic tax credit for qualifying capital‑goods investments, replaced by a more targeted incentive structure linked to sustainability and digital‑transition objectives.
Investments for which binding purchase orders were confirmed (with a deposit of at least 20% paid) before 31 December 2025 remain eligible for the pre‑existing credit rates, provided the assets are delivered and accepted by 30 June 2026. New investments committed from 1 January 2026 onward fall under the revised framework, which reduces credit percentages and introduces additional certification requirements. Companies must retain documentary evidence of order dates, deposit payments and delivery confirmations to support grandfathering claims in the event of an audit.
The 2026 framework redirects incentive spending toward investments in energy efficiency, renewable‑energy integration and advanced digital infrastructure. Qualifying investments may access enhanced depreciation rates, a form of super‑depreciation that accelerates the write‑off of the asset’s cost for tax purposes, rather than a direct tax credit. For manufacturing companies and public‑tender suppliers, this shift requires revised investment appraisal models that factor in the timing difference between a front‑loaded credit and an accelerated depreciation benefit spread over the asset’s useful life. Industry observers expect that the net present value of the new incentive is materially lower than the former credit for capital‑intensive businesses, making pre‑31 December 2025 commitments particularly valuable.
The convergence of multiple 2026 changes creates a uniquely complex compliance environment for investee companies, foundations and entities interacting with the public sector. The decision matrix below maps entity type to recommended immediate actions.
Investee companies whose key personnel (founders, beneficial owners or senior executives) elect into the non‑dom regime must review intercompany arrangements that may create Italian‑source income for the electing individual, for instance, management fees, director compensation or consultancy payments that would fall outside the lump‑sum shelter and into regular IRPEF. Foundations receiving donations from non‑dom electors should confirm whether the donor’s election affects the tax treatment of the donation. Trustees administering Italian‑resident trusts or trusts with Italian beneficiaries face heightened reporting requirements under the RW framework (for foreign financial assets) and CRS (Common Reporting Standard) obligations. Penalties for failure to file or for inaccurate RW reporting can reach 6% of the undisclosed asset value per year, making timely compliance essential.
Board minutes documenting compliance decisions, particularly the decision to apply for Rottamazione Quinquies or to support a key individual’s non‑dom election, should be drafted with input from tax counsel. The minutes should record the financial rationale, the expected tax impact, and the steps taken to verify eligibility, creating a contemporaneous record that may be valuable in any subsequent enquiry.
| Date | Measure | Immediate Company Action |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Law 199/2025 enters into force; non‑dom lump‑sum rises to €300,000; VAT code amendments effective; capital‑goods credit transition begins | Initiate compliance review across all affected areas; brief the board |
| 20 January 2026 | Rottamazione Quinquies submission portal opens | Begin debt audit and eligibility assessment immediately |
| 30 April 2026 | Rottamazione Quinquies submission deadline | File application with all supporting documents; retain proof of submission |
| 30 June 2026 | Grandfathering deadline for pre‑2026 capital‑goods investments (delivery and acceptance) | Ensure qualifying assets are delivered and accepted; document evidence |
| Q2–Q3 2026 | Expected MEF implementing decrees for VAT and incentive details | Monitor MEF bulletin; update internal processes as decrees are issued |
| Entity Type | Key Obligations (2026) | Immediate Action by Q2 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Company (resident) | Review corporate VAT positions; file outstanding VAT and IRPEF returns; consider Rottamazione Quinquies for qualifying debts | Perform exposures audit; board approval to apply for amnesty if criteria met |
| Foundation / Non‑profit | Check donor/resident status changes; ensure correct VAT treatment on commercial activities | Review donations and commercial revenues; consult tax counsel regarding amnesty eligibility |
| Municipal / Public authority | Review public procurement VAT invoicing changes; confirm reporting for EU funds | Update procurement invoicing templates; notify finance office of VAT code changes |
| Trustee / Trust | Determine whether beneficial owners qualify for non‑dom election; check reporting (RW, CRS) | Model tax outcomes for trustees and beneficiaries; align trust deeds with reporting needs |
The 2026 Budget Law demands prompt, coordinated action across tax, legal and finance functions. Three immediate steps will mitigate exposure and capture available savings: first, run a rapid tax‑exposure audit covering all open positions with the Agenzia delle Entrate‑Riscossione to determine Rottamazione Quinquies eligibility before the 30 April 2026 deadline; second, model the non‑dom election for any key individual whose relocation or residency status may trigger the €300,000 substitute tax; and third, evaluate whether existing capital‑goods investment plans qualify for grandfathering or must be restructured under the new incentive regime. Engaging experienced tax lawyers in Italy at the earliest stage ensures that these decisions are made on a fully informed basis, with defensible documentation in place before deadlines expire.
For tailored guidance on any of the measures discussed in this article, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified Italian tax counsel.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paolo Pizzocri at Paolo Pizzocri Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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