Italian 2026 Finance Law – Key Tax Measures: Reduced Tax Rate for Middle Incomes | Flat-tax/HNWI“new-resident” regime adjustments (for high net-worth individuals) | Incentives / “flat tax” regimes for employment income| Continued incentives for investments and capital goods (businesses) | Tax-collection and “fiscal-relief” measures: debt-collection amortization, freeze for property-transfer taxes | Tax treatment of dividends, capital gains, and financial income | Sectors/Special Taxes: financial intermediaries, “windfall” taxes, bank levy

Italian Personal Income Tax Rates

These are the personal income tax rates (IRPEF – Imposta sul Reddito delle Persone Fisiche) that apply after 1 January 2024. For applicable rates before that date please click this link.

The rates were changed by Legislative Decree No. 216/2023, published in the Official Gazette No. 303 of 30 December 2023.

The FY 2026 Finance Law (Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025) has amended the IRPEF brackets again. Under Article 1, para 3, the second IRPEF rate is reduced from 35% to 33%, effective from 1 January 2026 (i.e. for income received in FY 2026). 

The IRPEF rates shown below, together with regional and municipal surcharges, apply to income that is not subject to imposta sostitutiva (“substitute tax”). Below the IRPEF table is a list of examples of income and gains that may be subject to substitute tax instead of the main national, regional, and municipal income taxes.

IRPEF (National Income Tax)

Rates for FY 2024 and FY 2025

Bracket of Income (annual amounts) Rate Cumulative Tax to Top of Band
On the first €28,000 23% €6,440
Above €28,000 up to €50,000 35% €7,700
Over €50,000 43%

IRPEF (National Income Tax)

Rates for FY 2026

Bracket of Income (annual amounts) Rate Cumulative Tax to Top of Band
On the first €28,000 23% €6,440
Above €28,000 up to €50,000 33% €7,260
Over €50,000 43%

Regional and Municipal Additional Taxes 

On top of the above rates of national income tax you need to add

  • additional regional tax (addizionale regionale) which varies from 0.70% to 3.33%; and the
  • the additional municipal tax (addizionale comunale) which ranges from 0.0% to 0.9%

depending on region, municipality, brackets of income and applicable rates for the relevant tax year, which are updated from time by resolution of the Regional or Municipal authorities. The links below show the current and historical rates in force although extrapolating these is complex.

You can search below for your Region and Municipality (Comune) and find the applicable rates of Additional Regional and Municipal Taxes.

Searches are in the Italian language on the Italian Ministry Web Site and may not be up to date as some Regions and many Municipalities have not yet published the FY 2026 rates and bands.

Department of Finance Additional Regional Tax Rates

Department of Finance  Additional Municipal Tax Rates

Download Department of Finance  Excel Table of Additional Municipal Tax Rates 2025

Tax Deductions and Credits

General Personal Relief/No Tax Area

There is no personal relief or general standardized deduction from income which would exempt income from tax – the rates above apply to all income received in the year. 

However Italy does have a series of specific deductions and tax credits applicable to certain types of income and costs.  Note that these deductions (with the exception of social security contributions) and tax credits are only available to reduce the liability to IRPEF, and in some cases, regional and municipal taxes. Where a substitute tax applies most of the standard deductions and tax credits generally do not apply.

Standard Tax Credits

Relief from tax for low income earners is given via tax credit which means that the tax as calculated at the rates above is offset by the credit. wholly or partially depending on total income – the higher the total income the lower the credit. the credit available depends on type of income – income from employment, pension income and income from self employment.

Specific Deductions and Credits

See this article.

Imposta Sostitutiva/Substitute Tax

The rates shown above apply only to  income which is not subject to imposta sostititva (“substitute tax”). Substitute tax applies in place of the scale rates shown above  of  IRPEF, national income, regional and municipal tax shown above. Whether substitute tax applies – and it may apply either automatically or at the option of the taxpayer –  depending on the type of income and the applicable treatment under law.

Examples of income that is subject to tax at the scale rates shown in the above tables and regional and municipal additional tax are: 

  • income from employment
  • pension income (except for qualifying pensioners transferring residence to  the South of Italy (see below) and certain distributions from regulated Italian supplementary or complimentary pension schemes
  • business, trading or professional income otherwise than for taxpayers on the Regime Forfettario
  • rent from Italian property (where the option to substitute tax is not taken)
  • rent from non Italian property 
  • royalty income 
  • miscellaneous income
  • distributions from non- EU harmonised investment funds and ETF’s
 

Examples of income that are liable to substitute tax are:

  • income from pensions where the option to substitute tax at 7% has been taken (NB. if the option has been taken the 7% flat rate will apply to all non Italian source income).
  • foreign-source income  where election for an annual flat tax is made (HNWI regime)
  • income from investments, e.g. interest, dividends, capital gains  – generally taxed at 26% flat rate. Lower rates may apply (e.g. 12.5% to  income from qualifying Treasury bonds)
  • capital gains deriving from equity type instruments and disposals on certain financial assets (excluding gains on certain non EU harmonised investment funds and ETF’s)
  • income from self employment carried out under the Regime Forfettario
  • income for renting Italian property for the option for taxation at a flat rate of 21% on gross receipts has not been taken (cedolare secco).
  • certain distributions from  regulated Italian supplementary or complimentary pension schemes
  • income from crypto assets realised otherwise in the course of a business or deemed business (e.g. mining etc.) 
  • capital gains from foreign currency transactions where the average balance of foreign currency accounts exceeds Euro 51,645.69  (1 million lire) for at least 7 consecutive working days during the tax year
 
The substitute tax applies to investment income and rental income only where the person receiving the relevant income does not realise the income in the course of a business activity (e.g financial trading or carrying out a property letting business). 

Rates of Imposta Sostitutiva/Substitute Tax

Type of Income / Regime Substitute Tax Rate
Capital gains on financial assets 26%
Income from qualifying Treasury and similar bonds 26%
Dividends on Equities and Distributions from EU harmonized funds and ETF's 26%
Other interest income (possibly with option to tax at scale rates) 26%
Other financial income 26%
Crypto‑asset gains and income (from FY 2026) 33%
Crypto‑asset gains and income (up to FY 2026) and Euro‑linked electronic money tokens (EUR‑stablecoins) from FY 2026 26%
Rental income (cedolare secca) – standard rate 21%
Rental income (cedolare secca) – three or more properties 26%
Self‑employment income – Regime Forfettario (startup rate) 5%
Self‑employment income – Regime Forfettario (standard rate) 15%
Income from Italian regulated pension schemes (returns on investments) 9% – 15%
Flat tax for new residents (Art. 24‑bis TUIR) €300,000 per year
Additional family member under flat tax regime €50,000 per year
Foreign pensioners regime (Art. 24‑ter TUIR) 7%

Example: Tax Calculation

Base Information

  • John, Italian tax resident, not benefitting from any special regime, has the following income:
  • State pension: €14,000
  • Private pension annuity: €14,000
  • EU‑harmonised fund distributions: €16,000
  • Airbnb rental income: €5,000

Tax Treatment

  • State pension (€14,000) → IRPEF
  • Private pension (€14,000) → IRPEF
  • EU fund distributions (€16,000) → 26% substitute tax
  • Airbnb rental (€5,000) → 21% cedolare secca

Tax Calculation

IRPEF income: €28,000

  • 23% on first €28,000 → €6,440

Substitute taxes:

  • EU fund distributions: €16,000 × 26% → €4,160
  • Airbnb rental: €5,000 × 21% → €1,050

Total Tax Due

IRPEF: €6,440

Substitute taxes: €5,210

Total: €11,650

Deductions and offsets

This is the gross tax due before e.g. 

It is unlikely that any foreign tax will be offsetable. The income subject to substitute tax is usually not eligible for a foreign tax credit. Pension income, is under most (but not all) of Italy’s tax treaties taxable only in the country of residence.  

Wealth tax may also be due.