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🇮🇹 Italy

Italy Elective Residency Visa

EU residency for retirees and passive-income holders. €32K/year in foreign-source income clears it, pairs naturally with the 7% southern Italy pensioner tax regime, and runs the same ten-year naturalization clock as the Investor Visa.

Financial req
€32K/yr income
Processing
2 to 3 months
Naturalization
10 years
Presence required
183+ days / year
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The basics of the Elective Residency Visa

What it is

Italy's Elective Residency Visa (Residenza Elettiva) is a residency permit for non-EU nationals who want to live in Italy on stable foreign-source income without working in Italy. You demonstrate at least €32K/year in passive foreign-source income (pensions, annuities, dividends, rental income, royalties), sign an undertaking not to take Italian employment, and apply through the Italian consulate that covers your US state. The visa is granted for one year initially and renews in two-year increments. Permanent residency becomes available at year five; the citizenship petition can be filed at year ten with B1-level Italian.

Who it’s for

  • US retirees with Social Security plus pensions or annuities clearing €32K/year
  • Couples planning to base in qualifying southern comuni to access the 7% regime
  • Founders running US-incorporated businesses remotely from Italy
  • Patient planners on a ten-year horizon to an Italian (and EU) passport
  • Clients who actually want to live in Italy full-time on foreign income

Why it’s beneficial

The Elective Residency is the simplest entry point to Italian residency for clients who don't want to operate an Italian business. The €32K/year threshold is among the lowest passive-income bars for any EU residency, and the visa pairs naturally with Italy's 7% southern pensioner tax regime (9 years on foreign pension income for retirees in qualifying small comuni). Combined with full EU mobility and a 10-year naturalization clock identical to the Investor Visa, the structural fit is among the cleanest in the EU.

Key benefits

The outcomes the Elective Residency Visa actually delivers, beyond the headline numbers. The six that matter most to our clients.

  1. 7% southern Italy pensioner regime

    Foreign retirees moving to qualifying southern comuni (under 20,000 in Abruzzo, Molise, Puglia, Calabria, Basilicata, Sardegna, Sicilia) pay a flat 7% on foreign pension income for 9 years. Pairs naturally with the Elective Residency Visa.

  2. Fast processing

    Consular processing of complete Elective Residency files typically runs 30 to 60 days. Among the fastest EU passive-income visas to issue.

  3. EU mobility from day one

    Italian residency unlocks the Schengen Area immediately. Italy sits at the geographic center of Europe; intra-EU travel is functionally domestic.

  4. Family on one application

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify on the principal application. Each family member receives the same residency rights and the same ten-year clock.

  5. Path to EU citizenship

    Ten years of legal residency unlocks the citizenship petition. Italians of recent descent may qualify via jure sanguinis (citizenship by descent), which is a separate, faster pathway. We screen for descent eligibility on the Consult.

  6. Top-ten healthcare globally

    Universal public coverage available to legal residents (WHO ranks Italian healthcare in the global top ten). Most expats add private complementary insurance at €40-80/month for faster specialist access.

Financial requirements

The financial threshold to qualify, with the documentation we walk every client through.

Passive-income demonstration

€32,000/year

Demonstrate at least €32,000/year in stable passive foreign-source income (pensions, annuities, dividends, rental income, royalties, consistent interest income). Family thresholds scale: +20% for spouse, +5% per child. You sign an undertaking not to take Italian employment. Mexican or Latin American sources are eligible alongside US-source income.

Choosing the right route is half the work. We model the comparison against your portfolio in the Consult.

How the process works

  1. Contact us

    Reach out and tell us about your situation. From there, you'll either book a 60-minute Freedom Consult (if you're weighing options across countries) or get started on this route directly (if you already know it's the right fit).

  2. Engagement and document gathering

    We coordinate the document pack: FBI background check (apostilled), birth and marriage certificates, twelve months of bank statements, pension or annuity confirmations, Italian accommodation proof (lease or property purchase), Italian health insurance, and the Italian-counsel power of attorney.

  3. Consular submission

    Submit the Elective Residency application through the Italian consulate covering your US state. Most consulates process complete files in 30 to 60 days.

  4. Arrival and Permesso di Soggiorno

    You enter Italy on the visa stamp. Within eight days of arrival, file the Permesso di Soggiorno at the local Questura. The card arrives within 60 to 120 days.

  5. Optional tax-residency election

    If you intend to shift tax residency to Italy and qualify for the 7% southern regime, establish residence in a qualifying comune and file the election with the Italian tax authority. Election is optional; the visa itself does not force tax residency.

  6. Renew and pursue permanent residency

    Renew the Permesso every two years. Spend at least 183 days per year in Italy to maintain the citizenship-clock continuity. Permanent residency available at year five.

  7. Citizenship petition at year ten

    After ten years of legal residency, file the naturalization petition. The application requires a B1-level Italian-language exam, demonstrated integration, and consistent tax filing.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

2-3 months

Years 1-5

Years 5-10

Year 10+

Elective Residency Visa versus the alternatives

How this program stacks against the closest credible options for the same visitor. We don’t earn more if you choose one over another.

DimensionItaly Elective ResidencyItaly Investor VisaLearn moreItaly Digital NomadLearn more
Minimum financial bar€32K/yr passive income€250K startup€28K/yr active income
Processing2-3 months2-4 months2-3 months
Presence required183+ days / yearNone183+ days / year
Right to work locallyNo (no Italian employment)Yes (own business)No (foreign income only)
Tax regime fit7% southern pensioner (9 yr)€300K lump-sum (15 yr)€300K lump-sum compatible
Time to citizenship10 years10 years10 years
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parents

The Elective Residency fits retirees and passive-income clients living in Italy. The Investor Visa fits clients deploying capital with no minimum-stay obligation. The Digital Nomad Visa fits remote workers in the short term. We don't earn more if you pick one over another.

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Why clients work with us

Three reasons families pick Freedom Files over the do-it-yourself path or a single-jurisdiction agent.

First-hand experience

We know the Italian consular cadence and the Questura registration process from active engagements. The Elective Residency Visa looks simple until the ask for additional income documentation arrives.

Honest recommendations

About a third of Elective Residency inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when the Investor Visa, Portugal D7, or Greek FIP fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. The 7% southern regime and Italian tax-residency mechanics are mapped before the election is filed.

What income sources qualify?

Stable, regular, foreign-source passive income: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities, rental income from US property, dividend income, royalty streams, and consistent interest income. Active employment income for a US employer is generally not eligible for the Elective Residency (the Digital Nomad Visa is the parallel for active remote work). The consulate weights stability heavily.

What is the 7% southern-Italian regime?

Move foreign pension income into a qualifying southern Italian comune (generally towns under 20,000 in Abruzzo, Molise, Puglia, Basilicata, Calabria, Sardegna, or Sicilia) and you pay a flat 7% on that income for nine years. Eligibility requires you not to have been an Italian tax resident in the previous five years. It pairs naturally with the Elective Residency Visa.

Can I work remotely for a US employer on the Elective Residency?

The Elective Residency is built specifically for passive income and does not permit active remote work in a strict reading. The cleaner path for remote workers is Italy's Digital Nomad Visa, which is built for active foreign-source income. We map your specific income structure at the Consult.

Do I have to learn Italian?

Daily life in Rome, Milan, Florence, and the major tourist regions runs comfortably in English. The naturalization application requires a B1-level Italian-language certification, which most clients prepare for in the eighteen months before filing.

What about US taxes once I become an Italian tax resident?

Once you cross 183 days in Italy, you become an Italian tax resident. You file in both countries: US worldwide-income filing continues for US citizens; Italy taxes you on worldwide income at progressive rates topping at 43% outside the 7% southern or €300K lump-sum regimes. The US-Italy treaty handles double-taxation. US-licensed counsel maps your specific picture.

What is the total cost beyond the income demonstration?

Plan on €2-3K in government and administrative fees (visa, Permesso, family-member fees), €5-8K in Italian legal fees through our partner counsel, €1-2K in translation and apostille costs, and Italian private health insurance (€500-1,500/year per adult). Total non-investment cash outlay typically lands in the €10-15K range, plus accommodation lease.

Will I have to give up my US citizenship?

No. The United States and Italy both permit dual citizenship. You can hold both passports indefinitely.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the Elective Residency Visa is clearly the right program for your family and you’re ready to engage, contact our team directly. If you’re weighing this against other programs and want an honest read on the right move, the Freedom Consult is the sixty-minute conversation that ends the loop.

Contact our team →

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