General Principles
An individual’s liability for Italian taxation is based on their tax residence and on the source of the income: if the individual qualifies as an Italian tax resident, they are subject to taxation in Italy on their worldwide-sourced income, otherwise they are subject to Italian taxation only on the income produced in Italy during the tax year.
The tax year in Italy goes from 1 January to 31 December each year.
Personal Income Tax
Individuals considered to be Italian tax residents are liable to taxation in Italy on their worldwide-sourced income, unless exempted for a particular provision given by a treaty against the double imposition ratified by Italy.
As a general principle, according to Article 2 of the Italian Tax Code (TUIR), an individual is deemed to be an Italian tax resident if they meet at least one of the following conditions:
A “residence”, according to the Italian civil code, is deemed to be the place of habitual abode, while a “domicile” is the place where the individual establishes their centre of vital and economic interests giving a relevant role to their family’s location.
Generally speaking, the TUIR (Article 51, paragraph 8 bis) provides a favourable tax regime for employment income produced abroad by resident individuals. Indeed, employment income related to activity performed abroad is not taxed on an actual basis but on a notional basis. The notional income (retribuzione convenzionale) is a lump sum amount determined annually by the Italian Revenue Agency in accordance with the qualification(s) of the employee, the sector of their activity and their base salary received, excluding any additional remuneration, benefit and bonus they may receive.
In order to qualify for said tax regime all the following requirements have to be met for more than 183 days (or 184 days) in a 12-month period:
Double Taxation and Foreign Tax Credit
According to Article 165, paragraph 1, of the TUIR, the individual will be entitled to claim foreign tax credit for foreign taxes paid abroad on the same income.
Foreign tax credit is generally claimed through the filing of the Italian income tax return; however, it could also be recovered through the Italian wage statement, in the case of an employee, at the end of the fiscal year. Indeed, the employer may pay back the taxes withheld during the fiscal year directly to the employee through the payroll. This last solution is not recommended, because the exact amount of tax credit recoverable (which must respect some limits and is often not equal to the exact amount of taxes effectively paid abroad) often needs to be recalculated through the Italian tax return.
In any case, Italian tax law allows foreign tax credit only for foreign taxes which are considered as definitively paid in the relevant foreign country and according to the relevant international treaties’ provisions to avoid double taxation ratified by Italy.
Tax Rates and Special Tax Regimes
Taxable income in Italy is subject to imposta sul reddito delle persone fisiche (IRPEF).
The IRPEF tax rates go from 23% to 43%, in relation to different bands:
In addition, if the income is subject to taxation with progressive tax rates, regional and municipal taxes are also levied and they are calculated with the tax rates issued annually by the regional and municipal authorities, according to the place of residence.
The tax rates can vary from 1.23% to 3.33% for the regional tax and from 0% to 0.9% for municipal tax.
Taxation of Interest and Capital Gains
Income deriving from interest is generally subject to taxation, depending on the source of the income, in the following ways:
The current taxation of dividends received by private individuals assimilates non-qualifying shareholding with qualifying shareholding, therefore:
A temporary regulation for the distribution of dividends, in force between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2022, provides that dividends from qualifying shares, constituted by profits produced by 31 December 2017, are taxed with the previous rules and, thus, the progressive IRPEF tax rates applicable on a tax base are reduced to 40%, 49.72% or 58.14%, depending on the year in which the profits were produced.
If the dividend is distributed by a foreign company, in the case of non-qualifying shareholdings, a final tax equal to 26% is due on 100% of the dividend net of the tax paid in the foreign country. Otherwise, in the case of qualifying shareholdings, the 26% tax is due on the amount of the dividend only if it is distributed by a company located in a co-operative jurisdiction.
If the company is located in a tax haven, progressive IRPEF tax rates are applicable on 100% of the dividend, unless it is proved that the company carries on an effective activity in that country. In the latter case, the taxable basis is reduced to 50% of the dividend.
Capital gains
Regarding capital gains, the taxable base is calculated on the difference between the selling price of the asset and its purchase cost, which may include some legal and administrative expenses. The substitutive tax rate due on capital gains is equal to 26%.
The 2018 Italian Budget Law modified the previous regulation on taxation of capital gains deriving from disposal of shares, assimilating the taxation of non-qualifying shareholdings with taxation of qualifying shareholdings and applying the same tax rate of 26%.
However, the previous regulation is still applicable on capital gains realised before 31 December 2018, therefore:
Wealth Tax and Tax Monitoring Obligations
Individuals who qualify as tax resident in Italy must also do the following.
The tax rate for the IVIE is equal to 0.76% of the purchase cost of the property and is calculated in proportion to the percentage of the ownership and to the holding period (the whole year or few months). The taxpayer is entitled to a credit for wealth tax paid abroad on the properties. The IVAFE is, instead, equal to the fixed amount of EUR34.20 for each account in the case of a cash account or savings account. In the case of financial instruments, it should be calculated in proportion to value of the financial asset and to the holding period and is equal to 0.2% of the market value of the financial instruments recorded at the end of each calendar year. In the case of double taxation, it is possible to deduct the wealth tax paid in the country where the financial asset is held. For pension funds, reporting obligations are due whilst wealth tax is not.
Inheritance and Gift Tax
In Italy inheritance tax and gift tax are proportional to the value of the inherited or donated assets, with different tax rates and different no-tax allowances according to the relationship between the deceased and the heirs. More precisely:
The connecting criteria, which establish when the inheritance or gift tax is due and are provided by Article 2 of Legislative Decree No 346/1990 (which is the domestic law on inheritance and gift tax), are the following:
Some assets (eg, real estate located in Italy or shares in Italian companies) are irrefutably deemed to be located in Italy.
Also, the following transfers are not subject to inheritance and gift tax: child support, education and medical expenses as well as clothing or wedding expenses, and indemnities due by insurance companies to insurance policies’ beneficiaries/heirs.
Corporate Tax
The standard tax rate for corporation tax (IRES) is currently equal to 24% of the taxable income, while the IRAP (regional tax on productive activities) rate is generally equal to 3.9%, but each region can increase or decrease the standard rate by up to 0.92%.
The taxable base of IRES and IRAP are different. Both are based on profit and loss accounts; however, with different adjustments.
Taxation of Trusts
Italy does not have a proper regulation for trusts; however, the institution of the trust has been recognised in Italy through the ratification of the Hague Convention of 1 July 1985.
The tax liability of trusts has been regularised by the Italian tax system, which has included trusts for the first time among the taxable entities provided by Article 73 of the TUIR, (see 3.1 Types of Trusts, Foundations or Similar Entities).
Generally, to define the taxation of a resident taxpayer who qualifies as beneficiary of the income of a trust, it is necessary to analyse the three types of trust regulated by the Italian tax system.
The inheritance and gift taxation of trusts has not been a straightforward matter over the years.
The dispute relates to the nature of the tax event when the inheritance or gift tax is due and it is effectively caused by a regulatory lacuna.
The Italian Revenue Agency has addressed the matter, clarifying that inheritance or gift tax shall be paid when the asset is transferred to the trust, as the tax event, while the Italian Supreme Court has stated that it shall be paid when the asset is definitively distributed to the beneficiaries because, when the asset is initially transferred from the settlor to the trustee, there is no actual enrichment of the latter. But now, the Italian Revenue Agency, after the publication of a draft document in August 2021 on the matter, seems to have changed its mind and to agree with the Italian Supreme Court so that a new and official circular providing new dispositions on the application of the inheritance and gifts tax to trusts is expected soon. Inheritance and gift tax is calculated with regard to the degree of the relationship between the deceased/donor and the heir/donee and applying the current tax rates and allowances.
Special Tax Regimes
In order to attract foreign people to Italy, the Italian government has recently introduced some special tax regimes aimed at incentivising foreigners to move their tax residence to Italy and, thus, to invest in the country.
Impatriates regime (expat tax breaks)
The “impatriates” regime provides relevant tax incentives for inbound employees and self-employed individuals who transfer their tax residence in Italy.
The favourable regime was introduced in 2017 and significantly reinforced in 2020.
Under the current version of the regime, the new resident individual will be subject to Italian personal income tax (IRPEF) only for the 30% of their income deriving from activities performed in Italy (eg, 70% of the Italian income will be tax exempt). A cap of EUR200,000 on tax saving applies to self-employment and business income only.
Also, for individuals moving their tax residence to the southern Italian regions (eg, Abruzzo, Basilicata, Campania, Calabria, Sardinia, Sicily, Puglia), the taxable income is reduced to the 10% of the earnings (eg, 90% is tax exempt in Italy).
The new resident individual can benefit from the above regime provided that they:
The impatriates regime is applicable for a period of five tax years; however, an extension for a further five years with taxable income reduced to 50%, is applicable if alternatively:
If the individual has at least three children, the five-year extension will grant a taxable income reduction of 10%.
Also, upon written request, the exemption can be directly applied by the employer who will apply withholdings on the reduced taxable basis. Alternatively, and for the self-employed, the election can be made in the individual annual income tax return.
Professional sportspersons
The impatriates regime also applies to sportspersons, but with the following limitations:
New residents tax regime
The 2017 Italian Budget Law introduced a favourable and optional regime for individuals wishing to move their tax residence to Italy. The new tax regime represents a more convenient regime than the ordinary one applicable to Italian resident high net worth individuals, who are normally subject to taxation on their worldwide income.
The tax incentive for the “new resident” consists in the possibility of paying an annual flat tax of EUR 100.000 on the foreign-sourced income, irrespective of the nature and the amount of the income and of its remittance in Italy. The flat tax absorbs and replaces any tax (income and wealth tax) on non-Italian sourced income and assets (eg, financial, real estate and working activity income). An anti-avoidance rule is applicable only to gains deriving from sales of significant holdings in foreign companies within the first five years of the exercising of that option. Italian-sourced income is taxable under ordinary rules. Furthermore, individuals both Italians and foreigners, can opt for the regime if they have been resident out of Italy for tax purposes for nine out of the previous ten calendar years. This regime is applicable for a period of 15 tax years.
Also, individuals applying for the regime can extend it, on a voluntary basis, to some or all family members. In this event, an additional flat tax of EUR25,000 is due for each additional family member opting for the benefit.
To apply for the regime, individuals can file a specific ruling with the Italian tax authorities or, alternatively, the election can be made through the Italian tax return. The ruling can be filed before becoming an Italian tax resident and although it is not mandatory is strongly advisable (tax authorities then provide an answer within 120 days).
If opting for the regime, inheritance and gift taxes on foreign assets won’t be due and also the new resident can cherry-pick countries and assets that they wish to exclude from the flat tax and include them in the Italian tax return instead. These items will be subject to the ordinary Italian rules on tax payments and foreign tax credits will be applicable.
Tax Incentives for Retirees
The 2019 Italian Budget Law introduced a favourable regime for retired individuals wishing to move their tax residency to the southern regions of Italy. The tax incentive for the retirees regime provides for the application of a substitutive tax of 7% on all income from non-Italian source. The 7% substitutive tax does not cover Italian-source of income which will be liable to ordinary progressive tax rates.
Also, individuals moving to Italy qualify for this tax regime if they are entitled to a foreign pension and have not been tax resident in Italy for at least the previous five years, and relocate to a municipality (Comune) of a southern region of Italy (eg, Abruzzo, Molise, Campania, Apulia, Calabria, Sicily, Sardinia, Basilicata) having a populations with no more than 20,000 inhabitants.
The regime is applicable for a period of nine tax years and the election must be performed through the individual Italian tax return.
Furthermore, individuals eligible for the regime are exempted from Italian disclosure of foreign assets and they are not subject to the payment of Italian wealth taxes on foreign assets.
Besides the favourable tax regimes recently introduced (see 1.2 Exemptions), good income tax planning is necessary if an individual is tax resident in Italy or is the beneficiary of Italian-sourced income.
As stated, if an individual qualifies as an Italian tax resident, they are subject to tax on their worldwide-sourced income in Italy, as well as on the income taxed in the country of source. In order to avoid the double taxation, Italy has signed many tax treaties with a large number of countries against double taxation of income and also a few treaties against double taxation for inheritance and gift tax purposes.
It is necessary to identify, then, when the tax treaty is applicable and which are the mechanisms provided by domestic law for avoiding double taxation (eg, the mechanism of tax credit provided by Article 165 of the TUIR).
Regarding the use of trusts or similar entities, it is also necessary to be careful with the taxation of a trust’s income. Since the instrument of trust has become more common in Italy during the last years, the Italian Revenue Agency is inevitably paying more and more attention to the correct taxation of the income produced by trusts and the income distributed to beneficiaries.
Non-resident owners are obliged to pay property tax (IMU) on the property from the date of its registration with the registry of Italians living abroad (AIRE). If the property is not leased, the IMU’s substitution effect on the IRPEF shall be achieved. It ensures that the owner does not have to pay the IRPEF on the property available. The annual IMU rate is established by each individual municipality annually.
In addition, the Italian Budget Law 2022 fixed a reduction of 37.5% of the IMU due on a single housing unit owned in Italy by non-residents in the territory of Italy if they are holders of a foreign pension under an international convention with Italy.
There is a “Superbonus” in the form of tax relief governed by Article 119 of Decree Law No 34/2020 (the “Relaunch Decree”), which consists of a 110% deduction of expenses incurred as of 1 July 2020 for the implementation of specific interventions aimed at energy efficiency and static consolidation or reduction of seismic risk of buildings. Facilitated interventions also include the installation of photovoltaic systems and electric vehicle charging infrastructure in buildings.
The Italian Budget Law 2022 extended the benefit, providing different deadlines depending on who incurs the eligible expenses.
Specifically, the Superbonus is payable until 31 December 2025, in the following measures:
Also, non-residents and non-citizens may decide to set up a trust or a limited liability company in order to make property purchases rather than buying properties as individuals.
Estate planning represents an interesting focus for HNWI and many aspects need to be considered when there is an investment in real estate, with particular attention being paid to the fiscal effects that will follow the investment. In fact, these effects will be different based on the type of the property and the seller (ie, whether it is a company or an individual who runs a business activity), particularly the VAT regime.
It is worth mentioning that a favourable fiscal regime would apply where a residential property is bought by an individual with the aim of that property being their primary residence. With regard to inheritance and gift tax and immovable properties, the taxable base is the fair market value. However, the Italian Revenue Agency cannot give a value higher than the one declared in the donation deed or in the inheritance tax return, if it is at least equal to the cadastral value of the real estate. Furthermore, the mortgage and cadastral taxes are levied on any transfer of Italian-situs immovable property with a 3% rate, which applies even when the transfer is exempt from inheritance and gift tax.
The Italian tax regime, in relation to inheritance and gift tax at least, is an attractive one, since the tax rates are still very low compared to those in force in other EU states, and the tax-free allowances are notably favourable to the taxpayer.
For the above reasons, the Italian legislature drafted a bill in 2015 which provided an increase of the applicable tax rates in combination with a significant reduction of the no-tax allowances available.
The proposal has not yet been definitely approved by the Italian Parliament, but it is reasonable to assume that a tax reform will be approved in the not too distant future.
Furthermore, it is currently a matter of considerable debate whether it would be appropriate to introduce a “wealth tax” on large estates owned by individuals in Italy, but nothing has been implemented yet.
In the past, due to the lack of exchange of information between countries, many Italians moved their assets abroad in order to escape high taxation in Italy and to hide their taxable income.
For this reason, the Italian government launched a voluntary disclosure programme in 2015 and then, in 2017, gave Italian tax residents a final opportunity for regularising assets held abroad, in terms of financial monitoring obligation and income taxation.
Moreover, Italy has implemented both the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) and the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS). Due to the application of the CRS, the Italian Revenue Agency has started to exchange information with other countries, collecting information on Italian residents with asset abroad. In particular:
With regard to recent EU DAC6, Italy has enacted Legislative Decree No 100/2020 in July 2020, which contains the specification of the criteria on the basis of which, in the presence of certain distinctive elements or hallmarks (and exactly, in the presence of the risky cases referred to in Annex 1, letters A, B, C and E), the cross-border mechanism’s reporting obligations to the Italian Revenue Agency are activated.
The obligation of communication is placed on intermediaries and taxpayers who are considered to have a strong “connection” with the Italian territory.
Tax Avoidance
The Italian Revenue Agency is making a great effort to identify and discourage the development of interposed entities created only to hide assets and income produced. In this sense, Italian law provides a specific administrative offence called “tax avoidance”, punishable by law.
Tax avoidance includes any legal strategy or interpretation of tax law and its omissions aimed only at reducing tax charges.
Unlike other European countries, good succession planning is uncommon among entrepreneurs and high net worth individuals in Italy. The reasons for this include the favourable estate taxation conditions, which provides no worries to the deceased regarding the tax consequences of a generational transfer. In addition, forced heirship guarantees that heirs will receive their due quota of the estate without the necessity of opting for a will.
Although Italy is characterised by the high value of an individual’s estate (despite the lower average income), the culture of succession planning has shown an increase only in the last few years.
In recent years, Italy has undoubtedly assisted the emigration of young people due to the general phenomenon of globalisation and the lack of job opportunities in Italy. It is, for instance, always more common for high net worth individuals to buy properties abroad for the benefit of their children so that they may live and work abroad. Moreover, it is common for retirees to move abroad in their later years.
Thus, it is strictly necessary to look at the other jurisdiction’s private succession law when approaching the matter of succession, most importantly whether the deceased is tax resident in another country or the asset is abroad.
According to the provisions of Article 21 of EU Regulation No 650/2012, as a general rule, the law applicable to the succession as a whole shall be the law of the state of habitual residence of the deceased as of the time of death.
Italian succession law provides for forced heirship rules with Articles 536 et seq of the Italian Civil Code. According to this regulation, forced heirs include:
The forced heirship rules provide that the reserved quota of the estate shall be necessarily transferred to the heirs and cannot be freely disposed of. The quota reserved to each forced heir depends on the composition of the family of the deceased upon their death. For instance, if a family is composed of a spouse and two children, the quota reserved to the children is 50% of the estate (25% per child) and the quota reserved to the spouse is 25%. In this case the remaining 25% of the estate can be freely disposed of.
It is worth underlining that lifetime gifts shall be considered – and must be added to the estate received – in order to calculate the quota reserved to the forced heir, even if at the time of the gift there was no connection with Italy. When the lifetime gifts prejudice the reserved quota of the heirs, they can apply for a “reduction”, which is a remedy provided by the Italian civil law aimed at making transfers in excess of the disposable quota partially or totally ineffective (see 5. Wealth Disputes).
Finally, same-sex civil unions were recognised by the Italian civil law in 2016. Therefore, same-sex civil couples are now subject to the same succession law and the same tax regime as applies to marriages (see 9.2 Same-Sex Marriage).
Italian law provides for two types of conventional marital property regimes: separation of property and conventional community of property, either of which can be chosen by the parties upon marriage.
The conventional community of property regime provides that, as of the date of marriage, all property belongs to both spouses in equal shares.
The separation of property, instead, provides that, upon marriage, each spouse maintains exclusive ownership and the right to use and administer property acquired before and after the marriage without exception, and shall meet their own debts with their own property.
Pre and Postnuptial Agreements
Prenuptial agreements and postnuptial agreements, unlike in some other jurisdictions, are null and void in Italy because they are not recognised by the Italian jurisdiction. Therefore, even where the parties have entered into a prenuptial agreement, an Italian court would not enforce it. However, in 2019, the Italian Council of Ministers approved a draft of a law relating to the introduction of prenuptial agreements, to allow spouses to regulate their personal and economic relationships.
Generally speaking, the transfer of a property is a taxable event for personal income tax purposes. The capital gain obtained, which is the difference between the sale cost and the purchase cost, is subject to personal income tax or corporate tax if the property was held by a company. However, capital gains realised upon disposal of properties are not subject to tax in Italy when the property has been held for at least five years prior to disposal or it has been used as the owner’s habitual abode.
If the property is received by gift, the five-year holding period is determined in relation to the date on which the immovable property was acquired by the donor. If the property is inherited, the inheritance tax is due by the heir. For the determination of the inheritance tax, the value of properties located in Italy is their market value as of the date of the demise.
However, since it is sometimes difficult to find out the market value and it is quite often higher than the cadastral value, the law provides that if the stated value is at least equal to the cadastral value, no further claims can be raised by the Italian Revenue Agency (Article 34, chapter 5 of the Italian Code on Successions).
Concerning the effects on the value of an asset that is donated or inherited, a gratuitous transfer of asset, both for donation or succession, does not trigger capital gains tax or exit taxes, therefore, no step-up occurs.
In Italy there is an exception from the ban on succession agreements, as noted in the Article 768 of the Italian Civil Code, regulating the so-called “family pact”.
Under a family pact, a business or a qualifying participation in a family business company can be transferred, under an agreement shown by a public deed, to the living forced heirs. The pact is valid under the condition whereby the other forced heirs, not receiving the company’s shares, are either granted cash or some other asset by the transferees or renounce, totally or partially, their reserved quota.
Life insurance policies are also widely used in Italy, as they grant more benefits to the policyholder. From an income tax perspective, income is not taxed until the policyholder decides to redeem the policy and the beneficiary, if the insured person dies, is exempt from the tax on the portion related to the life risk component.
No specific instrument or provision for the purposes of regulating the succession of digital assets exists in Italy. As a consequence of this current state of the affairs, it is recommended to always include such assets (eg, cryptocurrencies) in the will, in order to give specific provisions to the heirs so that they can easily have access to the fund and handle the inheritance left from the de cuius. In the future, a statement by the legislature on this topic would be highly recommended.
The settlement of trusts has increased in the last few years because of the growing interest in this instrument. Trusts in Italy include the following.
Use of Trusts in Italy
A wide range of different uses of trust instruments has been developed in Italy. Family trusts are the first kind of trust used, above all trusts for disabled people and trusts set up for inheritance planning and for asset protection for family needs.
Other than trusts, in Italy, fiduciary companies are much more common, for their many advantages and fewer restrictions.
Foundations have also become more common in Italy during recent years. The use of foundations is mainly related to philanthropic and charitable purposes.
Also, Legislative Decree No 117/2017 approved a reform of non-profit entities (ETS), which changed the previous regulation and provided all the obligations and the tax advantages to all non-profit qualified entities, when they qualify as non-commercial. In particular, that Legislative Decree introduced, in November 2021, the Single National Register of the Third Sector (RUNTS) which contains the list of newly established and existing entities, as well as the voluntary organisations and social promotion associations. But the trust is not included in the entities that can be registered in the RUNTS because the trust, while having subjectivity from a tax point of view, nevertheless lack legal subjectivity.
Italy does not have a proper trust regulation; however, the institution of the trust has been recognised in Italy through the ratification of the Hague Convention of 1 July 1985. The Convention pursued the aim of harmonising the private international law rules related to trusts, in order to allow civil law countries to borrow the trust instrument from foreign jurisdictions whose legislation regulates the trust instrument properly.
The Italian Revenue Agency always pays more attention to foreign trusts, analysing if they have been set up in order to pursue the scope as indicated in the trust deed or if they have been created to hide assets from the Italian Revenue Agency or for a tax saving, so great care is taken when a citizen or an Italian resident serves as a fiduciary or is a beneficiary of a foreign trust, foundation or similar entities
Trusts are considered interposed when the settlor did not intend to dispose of the asset and retains complete control of it, even if it is formally transferred to the trustee. An individual cannot be appointed as trustee and a beneficiary of a trust at the same time, whereas it is possible that the settlor and the beneficiary are the same person (even if this kind of trust is frowned upon by the Italian Revenue Agency).
Black-List Trusts
A Tax Decree issued in October 2019 (Legislative Decree No 124/2019), has changed the tax treatment of income generated by opaque foreign black-list trusts received by Italian residents. In particular, while distributions made out of capital will generally continue to be considered non-taxable, any distributions out of income generated by a foreign black-list trust will be taxed in the hands of the Italian residents who receive said income. The new provisions entered into force on 27 October 2019. In summary, distributions of income from trusts established in black-list countries will be subject to tax in the hands of the Italian tax residents who receive said income, disregarding the qualification of the trust as “opaque” or “transparent”. Furthermore, if it is not possible to establish if the distribution is made out of income or out of capital, the whole amount will be considered as income.
As a general principle, a trust, when it is created, is irrevocable, although the trust deed can expressly provide for its own revocation.
Except for a few hypotheses in which the revocation of the trust is peacefully accepted, in most cases it appears quite evident that if the settlor has the power of revocation of a trust, it has direct implications on the typical effects of the trust, since the main purpose of segregation would be jeopardised.
However, it is also true that, during the “life” of the trust, the need or opportunity to diverge, temporarily or permanently, from what was initially agreed upon when the trust was set up can occur.
Asset protection planning is always specifically determined and based on the specific circumstances of the family. In fact, there is no solution valid for every family because many elements need to be considered before giving any recommendation. For example, the key element for family business planning is the essential communication between family members in order to avoid any disruption or fragmentation in the business and to avoid claims between forced heirs.
There is often no elaboration of the will and the succession then becomes more complex. In fact, family planning is essential, especially for family enterprises that need to elaborate an efficient plan in order to survive to the next generation. With regard to family asset protection, probably the most popular instrument used consists in an agreement between the spouses to give properties or other registered assets in a separate family fund for the purpose of satisfying the needs of the family.
The use of the “family pact” represents one of the most popular and efficient solutions for the generational transfer of a family business. In particular, the use of the family pact represents a good solution for the continuity of a company’s governance. The use of this instrument can ensure protection of the business and the satisfaction of the forced heirs. One or more of them will receive the company’s shares and the others will receive cash or some other assets by the transferees or renounce to their reserved quota. After the signing of the agreement, the clauses cannot be changed.
Furthermore, a good tax result is granted by Article 3 paragraph 4 of Legislative Decree No 346/1990, which specifies that, as long as certain conditions are met, the transfer of a company (as well as a unit of a company), companies’ participations or shares, if made in favour of the entrepreneur’s spouse or their descendants, is fully exempt from inheritance and gift tax. Another method used in family planning is the “usufruct”. In general terms, usufruct grants the right to enjoy the asset by using and receiving its fruits as if the person holding the right (usufruttuario) is the owner. Therefore, the usufruct holder is obliged to take care of the administration of the asset. This right is not transferable to the heirs.
What is left to the owner is the bare ownership (nuda proprietà). The usufruct right may last no longer than the life of the usufruct holder.
If the full owner donates the bare ownership, it is subject to gift tax; however, the taxable base is lower that it would have been if full ownership had been donated. Upon the death of the usufruct holder, the bare owner becomes the full owner, without paying any inheritance tax.
Another method for asset protection is setting up a trust. Trusts are very useful to prevent conflicts and other disagreements and, in addition, assure a unitary management without any disintegration. The trust, in this case, can be regulated by specific rules aimed to ensure that all the needs of the family members are met and that the trustee will act in the interest of the beneficiaries with the aim of preserving the business and their wills.
Beneficial Owner Register
Also, on 25 May 2022, Ministerial Decree No 55/2022 of the Ministry of Economy and Finance, which adopts the regulation on reporting, accessing and consulting data and information on the beneficial ownership of enterprises with legal personality, private legal persons, trusts producing legal effects relevant for tax purposes and legal institutions similar to trusts, has finally become official. The measure was long overdue and represents the key piece in operationalising the functioning of the Beneficial Owner Register considered to be of significant importance in the anti-money laundering system. In any case, in order for the Register to be effectively operational, it will be necessary to await the issuance of a new series of implementing measures.
The transfer of partial interest in an entity represents a method of transfer of property. The Italian legal system provides rules, also considering the protection of all the people involved. The business owner obtains capital gains that will be taxed with reference to all the values realised after the operation, according to the TUIR.
Wealth disputes are mainly related to inheritance issues and rights of succession. The problems and conflicts between heirs usually arise because of the lack of succession planning. The co-ownership between the heirs of the assets can end only after the division, which can attribute to each heir an exclusive portion of the estate.
Often, in the absence of an agreement or a will, the only way to solve the problem is to pursue an action before a court.
In the case of a disagreement, there are two types of legal actions available to the heirs in order to reduce the part of the estate received by the other heirs or legatees and to obtain an equal redistribution in compliance with their forced heirship quota.
Since 2013, any legal action against the co-heirs must be preceded by the attempt to solve the issue through compulsory alternative dispute resolution (arbitration), which should reach an agreement in a shorter time.
Italian law provides that the aggrieved parties can generally obtain financial compensation for their loss or for the damage caused by the other party. Many remedies are offered to the parties involved in these kinds of disputes, although the main source of compensation is the reimbursement of the economic loss.
In Italy, fiduciary companies actually turn out to be one of the strongest instruments for wealth planning and for the protection of the personal and fiscal information that the client wants to keep confidential. Fiduciary companies are mainly used by the banks in order to offer investment solutions aimed to satisfy, during all the time and with complete confidentiality, the needs of the client related to the risks beyond the direct control of financial instruments. The qualifying element of the relationship is strict confidentiality in front of third parties; this means that the protection is guaranteed and especially the real identity of the owner of the assets will always be hidden by a bond of confidentiality that cannot be broken, otherwise the right of compensation for damage can be claimed by the client.
As a professional operator, the fiduciary company is responsible for all the possible losses and damages arising from bad or negligent management of the client’s assets. The liability for the non-fulfilment of the duties declared in the fiduciary agreement follows the Italian rules applied to the “diligence of the agent”.
A particular type of fiduciary company plays the role of “portfolio manager” through a particular kind of fiduciary agreement regulated under the Italian law. This kind of agreement is aimed to increase the value of the clients’ financial assets and at the same time the fiduciary is required to transfer to the client the assets invested. The main characteristic of this form of management is to operate dynamically in order to obtain profits from the investment.
Modern portfolio theory is based on the diversification of the investments made by the agent. The point is that it is always recommended to invest in different kinds of asset in order to avoid high risks for the investor. According to this theory, the characteristic of security investment is based on the correlation among security returns.
The fiduciary agent should try to build a portfolio of investments based on the optimisation and minimisation of market risk through a reasonable selection of investments (or asset allocation). Of course, the combination selected strictly depends on the purposes that the client wishes to achieve and the financial activity will be organised around those wishes. Fiduciary companies hold the client’s assets but they remain separate from their own assets. The activities of the fiduciary company include making investments through the sale or acquisition of movable and immovable assets.
Obtaining Italian citizenship is automatic in some circumstances:
In any case, it is always mandatory to declare a child’s personal details upon their birth in the civil register of the municipality of their residence. Also, in Italy, there is no application of the right of the jus soli. Italian citizenship is also given, if requested, by marriage to an Italian citizen, after two years from the date of the marriage if the married couple live in Italy, or after three years if they live abroad.
“Residence”, according to the Italian civil code, is deemed to be the place of habitual abode, while “domicile” is the place where the individual establishes their centre of vital economic interests. Also, in general, to obtain Italian residency, a person has to be enrolled in the registry of resident population (AIRE).
In some cases, people may obtain Italian citizenship by a decree of the President of the Italian Republic, if the foreigner is recognised as having performed “eminent services to Italy” or if there is “an exceptional interest for the State”. In any circumstance, it represents a special procedure and is definitely not common.
The Italian legislature has introduced Law No 112/2016 with the aim of facilitating disbursements from private individuals, the subscription of insurance policies and the institution of trusts, and other juridical instruments aimed to cover life-time assistance for people with a severe disability, which causes a need for continual and global assistance.
In particular, trusts permit the transfer of the assets of the settlor into a fund in order that they be used to ensure long-lasting health assistance to the beneficiary, who is the person with disabilities. In fact, the trust will end when the beneficiary dies. During the existence of the trust, the roles of the trustee and of the guardian will be crucial: they will always have to act for the beneficiary in accordance with their needs and they will have to realise the best life possible for the beneficiary. In any case, some de residuo beneficiaries can be nominated in the act of the constitution of the trust by the settlor.
The law provides the possibility of nominating, through a judicial decree, a legal guardian for children or for people with a specific level of disability (elderly people, etc). The role of this tutor must result from a written document duly signed and dated by the judge. Guardians can be also chosen in the will of a parent. This guardian takes care of the education, they are responsible for the personal and the financial representation of the individual in case of need and they have to report their activities to the judge who made the decree.
Law 104/1992 is aimed to give assistance, social integration and other rights to people with serious illnesses. The recipients are disabled people but also their families. In fact, there are special provisions for these “caregivers” in order to assure them the rights to assist people in illness.
Specific tax deduction are provided for the caregivers of relatives who are at least 80: in this case, a deduction of 19% from the costs incurred for health assistance (until a maximum of EUR10,000 spent in total) is guaranteed.
Also, the Italian Budget Law 2022 has introduced a new benefit, valid only for expenses incurred in 2022, for the implementation of interventions aimed at overcoming and eliminating architectural barriers in existing buildings.
It consists of a tax deduction of 75% of documented expenses incurred in the period between January 1 and December 31 2022. The deduction is to be calculated on a total amount not exceeding specific amounts.
The Superbonus 110, which provides a tax deduction of 110% for structural changes to the houses and buildings where elderly people live in order that they might be able to be self-sufficient (eg, installation of ramps or elevators), is in force.
All these provisions must be confirmed by an official certificate that declares the level, and the gravity, of the illness or the handicap of the patient; otherwise, the special rules just mentioned cannot be applied.
Since 2012, children born out of wedlock and adopted children are recognised as forced heirs by the law. There is no discrimination between them and the other heirs as they have the exact same rights. Italian jurisdiction does not permit surrogate pregnancy arrangements.
Since 2016, Italy has recognised civil partnership between two people of the same sex.
According to this union, the couple can benefit from most of the rights applied to a heterosexual married couple (eg, the inheritance and gift rules and other rights). The major difference between the two legal institutions is that there is no recognition of step-child adoption for civil partnerships, which means that one partner cannot adopt the child of their partner.
In addition to these provisions, since January 2019, in the case of marriage between two people from different EU countries, the couple could choose the law applicable to the marriage.
Philanthropy represents a very good opportunity to invest money and new forms of community charities have recently emerged.
Italian tax law provides that if a donor is an Italian tax resident and the gift is made in favour of non-profit entities, they can benefit from a deduction of 30% on the costs incurred by the taxpayer (or of 35% if the gift is made in favour of a volunteer organisation, which consists in a particular type of entity such as recognised and non-recognised associations) up to a maximum donation of EUR30,000 for each tax year.
Alternatively, donations made by cash or in-kind contributions are deductible for individual, philanthropic entities and business enterprises up to 10% of total declared income. In addition, inheritance and gift tax are not due on donations to “non-profit entities”. Generally, the tax law of an EU member state does not permit the deductibility of donations made to charities not based in the same member state as the donor, but the European Union Court of Justice, in 2009, (C318/07 Hein Persche v Finanzamt Lüdenscheid) recognising the principle of the free movements (Article 56 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union) affirmed that, in such cases, the donor should benefit from the same tax law applied in the state of the non-profit organisation.
The reform first introduced in 2016 on “non-profit entities” has the aim of building an organic discipline in the field.
The introduction of the Single National Register of the Third Sector (RUNTS) in late 2021 represents one of the steps but also others are expected to be done by the legislature in the near future.
In order to satisfy the needs of the donors many instruments can be used for charitable planning, such as charitable trusts and private foundations.
This type of trust represents a good instrument to devolve all the assets to a specific cause, obviously previously mentioned in the trust deed. By placing assets into this structure, many fiscal advantages are insured.
On the other hand, private foundations are usually founded by HNWI and their families and they have a deep social impact on the community. The foundation is set through a public deed or through a will that gives wealth to the pursuit of a specific aim. In Italy, there are both operating and the grant-making foundations, depending on how the gifts are managed. Foundations can have shareholdings but this cannot represent the main activity accomplished by the foundation. The family foundation is also an excellent method to manage family wealth, potentially without being bound by time restrictions.
Of course, both charitable trusts and private foundations are aimed at giving concrete help in many local and weak sectors of society.
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milano@studioloconte.it www.loconteandpartners.itTax Transparency Measures
A number of domestic and international measures have been implemented in the last few years leading to a full transparency vis-à-vis Italian public authorities on assets held abroad, foreign legal entities and cross-border structures.
Automatic exchange of information under the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) led from 2017 to a massive flow of information to the Italian tax authorities on financial accounts and financial products held by Italian taxpayers with foreign financial intermediaries.
The information transmitted under the CRS partially overlaps with that obtained from the tax authorities under reporting obligations imposed by Italian domestic tax law on both resident taxpayers and financial intermediaries.
Italian resident individuals, non-commercial entities and non-commercial partnerships are indeed required to report, on a yearly basis, in their income tax return (so-called RW reporting), information on investments held abroad and foreign financial assets that may originate Italian taxable income (Article 4, Law Decree of 28 June 1990, No 167). The reporting may be excluded only if the foreign financial assets are held in management or administration with Italian financial intermediaries and income deriving therefrom is subject to taxation at source applied by the same intermediaries.
In addition, Italian financial intermediaries shall report on a periodical basis transfers of cash amounts to or from abroad (so-called monitoraggio valutario), transactions potentially originating capital gains and other financial proceeds subject to Italian taxation (Form 770 reporting), as well as details on accounts and products held by their clients (so-called anagrafe tributaria).
The information collected from these various sources is expected to support the Italian tax authorities in their audit activity. In particular, as one of the measures of the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR), the Italian government issued on 28 June 2022 a decree providing for the integration of the data available to the tax authorities into a single database to be searched by applying most up-to-date data analysis methodologies in order to identify taxpayers at risk of tax evasion. To comply with European and Italian privacy regulations, the relevant information shall, however, be subject to a “pseudo-anonymisation” prior to being processed.
Finally, with the guidelines provided in circular letters of 10 February 2021, no 2 and of 13 May 2022, no 12/E, the Italian implementation process of European Directive (EU) 2018/822 (so-called DAC 6) was completed. The Directive requires intermediaries involved in cross-border arrangements containing one of the “hallmarks” identified therein or taxpayers implementing the arrangement or to which the arrangement is made available to report detailed information on such arrangements to the Italian tax authorities that, in their turn, shall transmit the same information to the corresponding competent authorities of the other EU States involved in the arrangement.
For example, irrespective of any tax advantage obtained by the taxpayer, intermediaries may be required to report any arrangement undermining automatic exchange of information, including the transfer of the majority of the financial assets to a financial intermediary in a State that is not bound by the automatic exchange of information under the CRS. In this latter respect, Italian tax authorities clarified in circular 12/2022 that also a transfer to an account with a US financial institution may meet that hallmark, since US exchange of information regulations (FATCA) cannot be deemed equivalent to automatic exchange of information under CRS regulations.
The various and frequently overlapping flows of information to the tax authorities raise important tax compliance issues. Due to the different conditions and applicable regulations, these may indeed easily give rise to mismatches, leading to clarification requests to the taxpayers also in the absence of any violation.
Implementation of Beneficial Owners Register
In 2022, the Italian Government issued ministerial regulations (Decree 11 March 2022, no 55) implementing the central registers with the Chamber of Commerce where information on beneficial ownership of corporate and other legal entities (in the so-called “ordinary section” of the register) and on the settlor, trustee(s), protector(s), beneficiaries and controlling persons of tax relevant trusts and similar arrangements (to be reported in the so-called “special section” of the register) shall be held.
Access to the information in the “ordinary section” on beneficial owners of corporate and other legal entities is granted not only to competent public authorities and financial intelligence units, but also to the public in general, except in exceptional circumstances where it would expose the beneficial owner to the risk of fraud, kidnapping, blackmail, violence or intimidation or where the relevant individual is incapable or of a minor age.
To that purpose, the Decree specifies that the exceptional circumstances precluding access to the public shall be reported in the communication originally made to the register by the relevant corporate entity. In such a case, the request to access the information shall be forwarded by the Chambers of Commerce to a “counter-interested” person that may oppose the request on a grounded basis, with a final decision on whether to grant access to be taken by the same Chamber of Commerce.
Access to the “special section” of the register on tax relevant trusts and similar arrangements is also granted to any person having a direct, concrete and actual interest. Also, in such a case, the Chamber of Commerce is the public authority entitled to grant or deny such access following a motivated request by the interested person.
Penalties for an omitted communication to the register range from EUR103 to EUR1,032.
Intermediaries subject to AML regulations (including financial intermediaries as well as professional consultants) are expected to review the information available in the register in the course of their KYC procedures, so that the lack of or insufficient or incomplete communication may also raise issues in the relationships with professional and financial service providers.
Tax Authorities Guidelines on Trust Taxation
In August 2021, the Italian tax authorities published a draft for discussion of a long-awaited circular letter providing for a comprehensive review of their official position on trust taxation.
The draft left various points open and received comments, criticisms and suggestions for improvement from a number of professionals, scholars and associations. The final version has not yet been released almost one year after the publication of the draft, but some of the principles set forth therein have already started to be applied by the Italian tax authorities in their audit and assessment activity as well as in their rulings.
Among other things, the draft revisits the historical position of the tax authorities on some important interpretative issues, such as indirect taxation and individual reporting obligations in relation to trusts.
With respect to indirect taxation, under Italian gift tax law, gift taxes are applicable to all assets (wherever located) contributed to a trust by an Italian resident settlor and to Italian assets contributed to a trust by non-resident settlors. The tax applies, subject to certain exceptions, at rates ranging from 4% to 8% depending on the degree of kinship between the settlor and the beneficiaries.
The draft circular letter revisits the historical interpretation whereby gift tax should be applied at the time of the settlement of the assets into the trust (Circular letters of 6 August 2007, No 48/E and of 22 January 2008, No 3/E and, more recently, the ruling of 10 September 2019, No 371) acknowledging the opposite consolidated interpretation of the Italian Supreme Court, whereby it shall rather be applied when assets are distributed to the beneficiaries (see Supreme Court decisions of 15 January 2019, No 734; 7 June 2019, No 15453; 7 June 2019, No 15456; 18 July 2019, No 19310; 18 July 2019, No 19319; and 29 May 2020, No 10256). Indeed, the Supreme Court repeatedly held that the effective enrichment of the beneficiaries, which is an expression of their ability to pay, only materialises upon the final distribution, whereas the addition of the assets to the trust qualifies as a mere intermediate act with no tax consequence.
The draft circular letter does not provide any indication in relation to the gift tax that was applied on past contributions, prior to the change in the official interpretation of the tax authorities. This matter is expected to be addressed in the final version of the circular, hopefully clarifying how gift tax that might have been applied on the basis of the past official interpretation of the tax authorities may crystallise the indirect taxation on trusts already created or may be recovered or may be offset against gift tax over future distribution of capital.
As anticipated, another critical topic addressed by the Italian tax authorities relates to the compliance by trusts’ beneficiaries with Italian reporting obligations (RW form). These shall indeed be complied with not only by persons holding the foreign assets and investments directly, but also by beneficial owners of those same assets and investments, as identified for anti-money laundering purposes. The definition of beneficial owner provided for AML purposes does not, however, fit well in the context of the provisions on foreign asset reporting obligations, and this has raised doubts regarding the actual scope of the reporting obligations. In particular, the only legal provision explicitly dealing with trusts provides for a very broad definition of trusts’ beneficial owners, including, among others, the beneficiaries or a class of beneficiaries (Article 22, Legislative Decree of 21 November 2007, No 231).
Most practitioners have held that such a broad definition should not be relevant for tax-reporting legislation, taking into account its rationale and ultimate purpose. In particular, the prevailing interpretation (also supported by previous guidelines from the tax authorities) has been that discretionary beneficiaries of opaque trusts that do not exercise any control over the trusts’ assets and the income deriving therefrom should be excluded from the reporting obligation.
However, that interpretation is not shared by the draft circular letter, where the position is taken that Italian residents that are identified, or may be easily identified, either directly or indirectly, as the current trust’s beneficiaries are required to comply with the reporting obligations irrespective of the discretionary nature of the trust.
This being said, it would be reasonable that the final version of the circular letter might mitigate the above interpretation by, for example, explicitly excluding “unaware” beneficiaries that are not informed of their status from the reporting obligation. The strict interpretation that may be inferred from the circular letter on this topic indeed raises serious concerns and practical issues, especially considering the high penalties that may be imposed in the event of omitted or incorrect compliance (up to 30% of the undeclared amounts) and the potential lack, on the part of the beneficiaries of discretionary trusts, of the minimum information that is needed to properly comply with the reporting obligations.
It may be noted that the matter does not, however, affect individual trusts’ beneficiaries transferring their tax residence to Italy and opting for the regime providing for a yearly EUR100,000 flat tax on foreign-source income and gains (the “new residents” regime, pursuant to Article 24-bis of the Italian Income Tax Code). Those individuals are indeed excluded from RW reporting obligations (save for qualified participations in foreign companies that shall be reported in the first five years following the election).
Interposition of Legal Entities and Structures
Replies recently issued by the Italian tax authorities have increasingly focused on cases where foreign entities, trusts and similar arrangements may be treated as interposed and therefore disregarded for Italian income tax purposes, so that Italian income taxes apply on the proceeds deriving from the assets held by the interposed entity or arrangement as if they were held directly by the participants in the interposed entity or by the settlor or beneficiary of the interposed trust.
As far as trusts are concerned, the position of the Italian revenue agency is generally to disregard for income tax purposes, and to treat as merely interposed, revocable trusts, as well as trusts where the settlor or the beneficiaries retain significant powers to direct the trustee in relation to the discretionary management and disposal of the trust assets. For example, the Italian tax authorities include among interposed trusts those where the settlor has the right to terminate the trust (for his or her own benefit or for the benefit of third parties), to receive distributions, or to direct the trustee to allocate the trust’s assets and income to persons selected by the settlor.
That strict approach was confirmed also in some recent replies where, for example, a trust with the settlor’s surviving wife being at the same time beneficiary and one of the two trustees was declared interposed for her benefit even if the trust deed excluded her involvement in any decision relating to distributions (ruling 398/2021).
The interpretation on the conditions for the interposition of corporate entities is, however, less consolidated.
In the past, the tax authorities concluded that foreign companies should be treated as interposed if they are established in States that have a privileged tax regime, and are not required to keep proper books and accounting records (circular letter of 4 December 2001, no. 99/E).
That historical interpretation has, however, been superseded in some recent public rulings where tax authorities put more focus on the functions and activities that are effectively attributable to the legal entity.
For example, in a recent ruling, a company was declared interposed, notwithstanding being resident in the UK and filing statutory accounts in compliance with ordinary accounting principles (ruling 282/2022). In that case, the lack of an active investment business (the company’s main activity was the exploitation of the individual shareholder’s image rights) and the absence of an organisational structure and of an autonomous economic purpose were deemed decisive.
By contrast, in another ruling, the Italian tax authorities excluded a Cayman Islands limited partnership set up as a vehicle for co-investment in various investment funds by the funds’ asset manager executives from being regarded as interposed (ruling 274/2022). In this case, the partnership lacked any organisational structure, was not required to file statutory accounts and had as its sole purpose the passive holding of the interests in the funds based on a predetermined investment plan. The fact that the Italian resident taxpayer was a minority investor in the partnership and was not involved in its management was nevertheless deemed sufficient to exclude the vehicle’s interposition.
It should be pointed out that the interposition of a trust or legal entity does not necessarily imply a higher Italian income tax burden.
On the one hand, the holding of assets through a non-interposed entity or legal arrangement may allow a deferral of taxation on the proceeds deriving from the underlying assets to the time when the proceeds are distributed to the beneficiaries (unless general or specific anti-avoidance provisions are applicable, such as controlled foreign companies regulations). On the other hand, income taxation applicable on distributions may be significantly higher than that applicable on the proceeds deriving from the underlying investments. For example, distributions made by companies and trusts established in States that have a privileged tax regime are subject to taxation in the hands of Italian resident individual beneficiaries at the ordinary progressive income tax rates, plus municipal and regional surcharges, up to a maximum combined rate of approximately 45%.
That tax burden may be significantly higher than the effective taxation applicable on proceeds deriving from the assets owned by the participated company or trust that would be applicable if the company or trust were disregarded for tax purposes. For example, income deriving from financial assets is generally subject to taxation at a 26% rate and capital gains deriving from the sale of real estate properties may be excluded from taxation if a five-year holding period is met. Hence, in these cases, declaring the intermediate entity/arrangement as interposed may ultimately lead to a lighter taxation.
The interposition of trusts may also have different implications for income tax and indirect tax purposes. The Italian tax authorities did indeed take in a recent ruling the view that a trust shall not be disregarded for inheritance and gift tax purposes, notwithstanding being treated as interposed for income tax purposes (ruling 359/2022). The consequence of that interpretation, if not revised by the tax authorities, would be that Italian inheritance and gift tax should be applicable neither at the time of the contribution of the assets to the interposed trust, nor at the time of the demise of the settlor, but only when assets are distributed by the trust to the beneficiaries.
Cryptocurrencies
The increasing interest in the cryptocurrency market has led to various initiatives and debates among public authorities, scholars and professionals on the tax and legal implications of this type of investments by private individuals.
The fact that crypto-assets can be issued, recorded and stored in a decentralised manner without the involvement of traditional financial intermediaries raises special concerns, in particular in relation to anti-money laundering and tax reporting obligations.
In that respect, Legislative Decree of 21 November 2007, No 231 was amended by Law 90/2017 (anticipating subsequent initiatives taken at EU level, such as EU Directive 2015/849 of 20 May 2018) to include among intermediaries required to comply with anti-money laundering obligations any juridical or natural person providing on a professional basis services relating to the utilisation, exchange or storing of virtual currencies or their conversion into currencies with legal tender status or any services ancillary to their acquisition, trading or intermediation as well as digital wallet services.
The same service providers are also subject to the tax reporting obligations relating to any transfer of cash to or from abroad mentioned above.
In addition, the Italian tax authorities recently clarified that Italian resident individuals and non-commercial entities and partnerships shall report on a yearly basis in their tax returns (RW reporting) the value of cryptocurrencies, as if they were financial assets held outside of the Italian territory (ruling 788/2021).
The transparency vis-à-vis the Italian tax authorities will be completed following the implementation of the amendments to the CRS to bring crypto-assets into the scope of the CRS framework for the automatic exchange of information, as suggested by the OECD in a public consultation document issued in March 2022 (Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework and Amendments to Common Reporting Standard).
Italian tax law does not, however, currently provide any specific rule governing the taxation of transactions in cryptocurrencies, and this has led to uncertainties over the categorisation of these assets for tax purposes and hence over the applicable income tax regime.
In the absence of specific rules, the Italian tax authorities clarified that cryptocurrencies shall be assimilated to currencies with legal tender status for tax purposes and hence be subject to taxation accordingly (ruling 788/2021).
This implies the application of a 26% substitute tax on capital gains realised through the forward sale of cryptocurrencies as well as through the sale of cryptocurrencies coming from deposits (including electronic wallets), subject to the condition that the average amount of currencies held (also in different wallets) calculated on the basis of the exchange rate at the beginning of each fiscal year, exceeds EUR51,645.69 in the course of the relevant fiscal year for seven consecutive working days.
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Milan
Italy
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milano@maisto.it www.maisto.it