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🇮🇹 Italy

7% flat tax in the south, €100k flat tax in the rich-person regime, lifestyle everywhere

Italy has two tax routes that meaningfully change the retirement math, and most people don't know about either. The Southern 7% Pensioner Regime gives foreign pensioners 9 years of flat tax on all foreign-source income — IF they move to a town under 20,000 in one of seven southern regions. The HNWI Lump-Sum Regime caps your foreign-income tax at €100,000/year flat for 15 years — built for ultra-high earners. Pair either with the Elective Residence Visa, walkable medieval towns, world-class food, and EU passport-eligibility in 10 years, and Italy goes from "romantic but expensive" to "actually competitive."

Who this fits
  • Foreign pensioners willing to live in small southern towns (Apulia, Calabria, Sicily, Sardinia, etc.) for 9 years of 7% flat tax
  • Very-high-net-worth retirees ($500k+/yr foreign income) where €100k flat tax is a deep discount
  • Lifestyle-driven retirees who want northern / Tuscan / coastal Italy and can absorb standard EU progressive tax
  • Couples drawn to walkable historic centers, food culture, and slow-pace small-town living
Who this doesn't
  • Anyone who refuses to learn Italian — outside Rome and tourist hubs, services are Italian-first
  • People who need fast bureaucracy — Italian paperwork is famously slow
  • Retirees on a tight budget moving to the north — Milan / Florence / Rome rents have gentrified hard

The 7% Southern Pensioner Regime

Move your tax residency to Italy, settle in a town with fewer than 20,000 residents in Abruzzo, Apulia (Puglia), Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Molise, Sardinia, or Sicily, and pay 7% flat on ALL foreign-source income for 9 years. Pension, dividends, capital gains, the lot. Apply on your first Italian tax return. Requires non-Italian tax residency for the 5 prior years. The catch is the population threshold — Lecce city is too big; Lecce's surrounding villages are not. Real cost-of-living downside: rural Italy has thinner healthcare and worse public transit than Rome or Milan.

The HNWI Lump-Sum Regime

€100,000/year flat tax on ALL foreign-source income, regardless of how much. Italian-source income still taxed normally. 15-year cap. Requires non-Italian tax residency in 9 of the last 10 years. Game-changer for retirees with $1M+/year foreign income — at $2M of foreign income, the 5% effective rate is hard to beat anywhere in the EU.

Visas + residency

Italy's Elective Residence Visa is the retiree path. ~€31,000/year passive income (+20% spouse), proof of accommodation in Italy, no work allowed. Italian consulates apply discretion — many demand €38-50k/year in practice. Approval rates vary by consulate — research the specific consulate near you before assuming numbers. EU passport eligibility after 10 years of legal residence; an Italian-language test (B1) at naturalization.

Where to live

Rome is the obvious gateway with the best international connectivity. Milan is for working/finance + opera + design. Florence and Bologna are smaller, walkable, university towns with strong food culture. The Lakes (Como, Garda, Maggiore) are gorgeous, expensive, retiree-friendly. Tuscany hill towns (Cortona, Montepulciano, Lucca) are Disney-grade beautiful and price accordingly. The 7% south: Lecce surroundings (Apulia), Tropea / Reggio (Calabria), Cefalù / Trapani (Sicily), Cagliari surroundings (Sardinia) — slower pace, cheaper, much fewer English speakers, much better weather. Sicily and Calabria specifically are still affordable and beautiful in 2026.

Healthcare

SSN (national health service) covers legal residents at a tiered annual fee (~€2k cap, income-tested). Quality is excellent in northern Italy (top-tier hospitals in Milan / Bologna / Padua), variable in the deep south. Private supplemental insurance €100-200/month at 65 for shorter waits + private hospitals. Cash medical tourism is reasonable.

Visa options at a glance

Quick reference. Check the deep dive above for the nuance, and an immigration lawyer for your specific case.

Elective Residence Visa
Retirees with strong passive income; no work
31,000/yr
Presence: Tax residency expected ·Path: 1-year visa → 5-year permit → permanent residency at 5 years
Official source →
Southern Italy 7% Pensioner Regime
Foreign retirees moving to small southern towns
No financial threshold
Presence: Italian tax residency in qualifying town ·Path: 9-year flat-tax window
Official source →
HNWI Lump-Sum Tax
High-net-worth retirees
No financial threshold
Presence: Italian tax residency ·Path: 15-year flat-tax window
Official source →

Healthcare at a glance

Typical retirement-age (65+) cost: ~$200/month · medical inflation premium: 3.5%/year above general inflation
SSN registration + private specialist visits

Legal residents register with the SSN (national health service) for ~€2,000/year cap (income-tested). Public covers GP, hospital, most specialists. Private supplemental (€100-200/month at 65) for shorter waits + private hospitals. South of Italy has more variable quality than the north.

What to do next

Heads upThis calculator is a planning aid, not financial advice. Tax rules, visa requirements, market returns, and personal circumstances change — what you see here is a directional estimate based on your inputs. Before acting on any number, check with a qualified tax advisor, financial planner, or immigration lawyer who knows your actual situation.