Italy Digital Nomad Visa 2026
Live and work remotely from Italy — two routes for highly qualified professionals. Self-employed or employed, with a lower income threshold and a pathway to EU long-term residence.
Two Routes, One Visa Category
Italy offers two sub-routes under the same legal framework. Choose based on your work arrangement.
Digital Nomad (Nomade Digitale)
Self-employed / freelance highly qualified remote work. Requires Partita IVA (Italian VAT number) registration.
Remote Worker (Lavoratore da Remoto)
Employment or qualifying collaboration performed remotely. Employer/client can be based in Italy or abroad. Requires employment contract or binding offer.
Who Qualifies?
Freelancers / Self-Employed
Autonomous professionals performing highly qualified remote work. Must register for Partita IVA (Italian VAT). Income from international clients.
Remote Employees
Employed by a company in Italy or abroad, performing work remotely using technology. Must have employment contract or binding offer.
Collaborators
Working under a collaboration contract (Art. 2(1), D.Lgs. 81/2015). Client can be based in Italy or abroad.
Important: You must perform highly qualified work — typically requiring a bachelor's degree (3+ years post-secondary) or equivalent professional experience. At least 6 months of prior experience as a remote worker or digital nomad is mandatory.
Required Documents
Valid passport
Passport/travel document meeting validity and blank page requirements.
Proof of high qualification
Bachelor's degree (3+ years post-secondary) with apostille/legalization and Italian translation, OR qualifying professional experience documentation.
Proof of income
Annual lawful income at least 3x the minimum exemption level (~EUR 28,000/year). Bank statements, tax returns, employment contract, or invoices.
Health insurance
Medical/hospitalization insurance valid for Italy, covering the entire period of stay.
Proof of accommodation
Registered rental contract (contratto di locazione) or property ownership document in Italy.
Prior experience documentation
Evidence of at least 6 months of prior experience as a digital nomad or remote worker in your field.
Employment contract or offer (remote workers)
Employment/collaboration contract or binding offer for the high-qualification activity. Required for the "lavoratore da remoto" sub-route.
Employer declaration (if applicable)
If employer/client is Italy-resident: signed declaration (with ID copy) attesting absence of specified criminal convictions in the past 5 years.
Passport-size photos
Recent passport-size photographs meeting ICAO standards.
Note: Non-EU documents typically require apostille/legalization and official Italian translation. Requirements may vary by consulate — always check with your competent Italian mission.
Application Process
Check eligibility
Same dayVerify you meet all requirements and choose your sub-route (nomade digitale or lavoratore da remoto)
Gather & legalize documents
2-6 weeksCollect all documents, obtain apostille/legalization, and Italian translations where required
Submit visa application
1 dayApply at the competent Italian consulate/embassy in your country of residence
Consular processing
90-120 daysConsulate reviews your application — may request additional documents or interview
Enter Italy
Upon visa issuanceTravel to Italy with your issued national visa
Apply for residence permit
8 working daysFile residence permit application at the Questura within 8 working days of entry. Present consulate-stamped documentation.
Biometrics & permit issuance
2-4 weeksAttend Questura appointment for fingerprinting and receive your electronic residence permit
Cost Breakdown
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Residence permit contribution (up to 1 year) | EUR 40 |
| Electronic permit cost | EUR 30.46 |
| Stamp duty (marca da bollo) | EUR 16 |
| Postal fee | EUR 30 |
| Health insurance (annual, estimate) | EUR 400-1200 |
| Rent — Rome/Milan (1-bedroom, estimate/month) | EUR 800-1500 |
| Rent — smaller cities (1-bedroom, estimate/month) | EUR 400-800 |
| Living costs (estimate/month) | EUR 1000-2000 |
Residence permit fees total ~EUR 116.46. Visa application fees at the consulate may apply separately. All amounts are estimates and may change.
Benefits
- ✓Legal residence in Italy (EU member state)
- ✓Schengen travel (90/180 rule to other Schengen countries)
- ✓Renewable annually — no maximum total duration specified in the decree
- ✓Dependents included (spouse and minor children)
- ✓No annual quota restrictions — outside "decreto flussi"
- ✓No work authorization (nulla osta) required
- ✓Employer/client can be based in Italy or abroad (remote workers)
- ✓Potential access to 50% tax exemption under "impatriati" inbound-worker regime (subject to eligibility)
- ✓Pathway to EU long-term residence (5 years) and citizenship (10 years)
Important Restrictions
- ⚠Must perform "highly qualified" work — degree or equivalent professional experience required
- ⚠Minimum 6 months prior experience in the field
- ⚠Visa required even for stays under 90 days — tourist/visa-waiver entry does NOT substitute
- ⚠Must comply with Italian fiscal and social security rules — non-compliance triggers permit revocation
- ⚠Self-employed must register for Partita IVA (Italian VAT number)
- ⚠No special nomad tax rate — standard Italian tax rules apply
- ⚠Residence permit must be applied for within 8 working days of entry
Family Reunification
Eligible family members
Spouse, Minor children
Permit type
Family reasons permit (Art. 30)
Duration
Same duration as principal worker's permit
Work rights for dependants
Family permit allows access to employment, self-employment, study, and public services
Tax Considerations
General Tax Rules
No special nomad tax rate. Standard Italian fiscal rules apply. Potential eligibility for 50% "impatriati" tax benefit if transferring tax residence to Italy.
Impatriati Regime (50% Tax Benefit)
50% income tax exemption on up to EUR 600,000/year for 5 tax years if: (1) transferring tax residence to Italy, (2) not resident in Italy for prior 3 tax years, (3) working mainly in Italy, (4) holding high qualifications. Forfeiture if residence not maintained for 4 years.
Disclaimer: Tax obligations are complex and depend on individual circumstances, including duration of stay, income sources, and tax treaty positions. We strongly recommend consulting a qualified Italian tax advisor.
Long-Term Pathways
EU Long-Term Residence
5 years of continuous legal residence with valid permit + income/accommodation requirements
Italian Citizenship
10 years of legal residence in Italy (for non-EU nationals) + additional requirements
Why Italy for Digital Nomads?
Lower Income Threshold
Starting at ~EUR 28,000/year — one of the most accessible income requirements in Europe.
World-Class Culture
Art, history, cuisine, and la dolce vita. UNESCO World Heritage sites, fashion capitals, and culinary excellence.
EU Member & Schengen
Full EU membership with Schengen travel. Gateway to exploring all of Europe.
Potential Tax Benefits
Possible 50% income tax exemption under the impatriati regime for qualifying new residents.
Ready to Start Your Italy Journey?
Check your eligibility in 2 minutes or book a free consultation with our visa experts.