By Thomas Moroder · Pending review · Last reviewed 26 april 2026 · 5 minutes read
Disclaimer. This guide is for general information only. It is not legal, tax, immigration, mortgage or investment advice. Italian rules vary by municipality, property type, buyer status and personal circumstances, and they change over time. Before signing an offer, paying a deposit or making a tax election, speak to an Italian notary, lawyer, commercialista, mortgage adviser or immigration lawyer as appropriate.
Introduction
Italy is not usually considered a low-tax country. But for some foreign pensioners, one regime can be surprisingly attractive: the 7 percent substitute tax for retirees who move their tax residence to qualifying municipalities in southern Italy.
For the right person, it can change the economics of retirement in Sicily, Puglia, Calabria, Sardinia, Campania, Basilicata, Abruzzo or Molise. For the wrong person, it can create confusion, compliance risk and false expectations.
This guide explains what the regime is, who may qualify, what changed in 2026, and how to think about it before buying property.
What the regime is
The regime allows qualifying foreign pensioners who transfer tax residence to certain Italian municipalities to pay a 7 percent substitute tax on foreign-source income covered by the election. It is designed to attract pensioners to smaller municipalities in southern Italy and support local economies.
It is not a visa. It is not automatic. It is not a property incentive. It is a tax election that must be handled correctly.
The 2026 update: municipality threshold
The content plan originally referred to qualifying municipalities under 20,000 inhabitants. Current official guidance notes that Law no. 34/2026 expanded the threshold to municipalities with a population not exceeding 30,000 inhabitants, effective from April 2026. This materially widens the map of potentially qualifying towns.
This change should be checked by the reviewing commercialista before publication and reflected in any calculator.
Who may qualify
The core conditions usually include:
- you receive foreign pension income
- you were not Italian tax resident in the previous five tax years
- you transfer tax residence to Italy
- you move to a qualifying municipality in one of the eligible southern regions
- you make the election properly in the Italian tax return
The details matter. Treaty position, pension type, previous residence, timing of arrival, registration and source of income all need review.
Qualifying regions
The regime is linked to municipalities in southern regions, commonly including Sicily, Calabria, Sardinia, Campania, Basilicata, Abruzzo, Molise and Puglia, subject to the population and legal requirements.
Do not choose a town based only on tax. Choose a place where you can live well: healthcare, airport access, language support, internet, winter services, community, climate and resale market.
What counts as foreign pension?
Foreign pension income may include state, occupational or private pensions, but classification can be complex. Some payments that look like pensions to a foreign buyer may require treaty analysis. Some public-sector pensions have special rules under tax treaties.
This is why the regime should be reviewed by a commercialista experienced in international pensions, not by a general property adviser.
Is it only the pension?
A major attraction is that the substitute tax can apply to qualifying foreign-source income, not only the pension, under the regime’s rules. This may include certain investment income or other foreign income, depending on the case.
However, Italian-source income, reporting obligations, wealth taxes, treaty rules and foreign-country taxation must be analysed separately.
How to apply
The practical sequence is usually:
- Analyse eligibility before moving.
- Choose a qualifying municipality.
- Secure the right immigration status if non-EU.
- Move residence and register appropriately.
- Obtain or update the codice fiscale.
- File the Italian tax return and make the election.
- Pay the substitute tax correctly.
Missing the procedural step can undermine the benefit. Do not rely on informal advice from sellers or agents.
7 percent regime vs other regimes
The 7 percent retiree regime is different from Italy’s high-net-worth flat tax regime, which is aimed at wealthy new residents and uses a fixed annual substitute tax. It is also different from worker regimes for people moving to Italy to work.
For a pensioner with moderate or high foreign pension and investment income, the 7 percent regime may be compelling. For a wealthy family with complex global assets, another structure may be better. For a remote worker, the retiree regime is usually not the right tool.
Traps
The first trap is assuming property purchase creates eligibility. It does not.
The second trap is choosing a non-qualifying municipality. A beautiful town just above the threshold or outside the covered regions may not qualify.
The third trap is partial-year timing. The year in which you move, register and become tax resident can affect the analysis.
The fourth trap is home-country taxation. Italy’s 7 percent tax does not automatically eliminate tax in your former country. Treaty advice is essential.
The fifth trap is healthcare. Tax residence, civil residence and healthcare access must be coordinated, especially for non-EU retirees.
Property strategy
For this regime, the property search should follow the tax map but not be dictated by it. Start with eligible regions, then filter for towns with healthcare, access and livability. Consider renting for six to twelve months before buying, especially if you are moving from a large city or a different climate.
7% retiree flat tax — scenario planner
Compare your Italian tax bill under the optional 7% substitute tax regime versus ordinary IRPEF, for a foreign pensioner who transfers tax residence to a qualifying southern Italian municipality (population ≤30,000 from April 2026). Indicative only — confirm eligibility and home-country tax with a qualified commercialista.
FAQs
Yes, subject to eligibility and current rules.
Yes. Current official guidance reflects an expansion to municipalities up to 30,000 inhabitants.
No. The regime is based on tax residence and eligibility, not merely ownership.
It is for foreign pensioners and can apply to covered foreign-source income, but advice is essential.
Southern regions including Sicily, Calabria, Sardinia, Campania, Basilicata, Abruzzo, Molise and Puglia are commonly referenced.
Potentially, but they also need immigration status allowing them to live in Italy.
Yes. This is specialist cross-border tax planning.
No. Confirm eligibility first, then choose property.
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