Italy is becoming increasingly active in shaping policies for internationally mobile professionals.
After introducing its long-awaited Digital Nomad Visa in 2024, the country is now evaluating a new tax incentive designed specifically for digital nomads, a measure Il Sole 24 Ore recently highlighted and lawmakers are currently discussing as part of the 2026 Budget Law process.
While the proposal has not yet been enacted, its appearance is not accidental. It reflects a broader strategic shift.
Italy is beginning to align its immigration framework for remote workers with an emerging tax policy direction aimed at making the country more competitive in attracting global talent.
Italy’s Digital Nomad Visa
In 2024, Italy introduced a fully operational residence permit for non-EU remote workers. The Digital Nomad and Remote Worker Visa enables highly skilled professionals to live in Italy while working online for:
a foreign employer, or
international clients as self-employed professionals.
The visa structures itself around clear requirements, minimum income, health insurance, accommodation, proof of remote work arrangements, and at least six months of experience, and it functions outside Italy’s quota system.
For immigration purposes, Italy has therefore already made itself accessible to digital nomads.
The taxation piece has eluded the framework until now.
The Current Tax Framework: The 2025 Impatriati Regime
On the tax front, Italy’s main relocation incentive is the newly reformed Impatriati Regime, which entered into force in 2025.
This version is significantly more selective than its predecessors. It requires:
three years of foreign tax residency prior to moving to Italy,
a university degree or classification as a “highly skilled” worker,
work performed predominantly in Italy,
and applies only to employment income and professional income, excluding business income.
For many digital nomads, whose tax residency may have shifted frequently across countries, meeting the three-year requirement could be challenging, as well as the degree/highly skilled requirement.
As a result, the current Impatriati framework does not always align well with these types of individuals.
This misalignment is an important part of why a dedicated digital nomad incentive has now entered political discussion.
The Proposed “Digital Nomad Tax Bonus”: What the Government has Announced
Lawmakers are examining an amendment to the current Regime Impatriati aimed at creating a tax benefit specifically for individuals relocating to Italy as digital nomads.
The proposal sits within the broader budget-drafting process for 2026.
Although lawmakers have not yet released the technical parameters (percentage reductions, duration, eligibility conditions), the fact that lawmakers are considering such a measure is noteworthy.
Unlike previous discussions, this initiative explicitly targets remote workers, not returning Italian expats or traditional employees, and its timing is coherent with the introduction of the Digital Nomad Visa.
In other words, the two developments, the visa and the proposed tax relief, point in the same direction: A more coherent, structured policy approach to attracting globally mobile talent.
Why This Proposal Matters
Even without the final legislative text, the emergence of a dedicated digital nomad tax incentive signals a few clear trends:
A shift toward tailored policy
Italy is moving beyond the one-size-fits-all approach of traditional relocation incentives. Remote workers have different mobility patterns, employer relationships, and tax backgrounds. A targeted measure suggests growing institutional recognition of these differences.
Alignment of immigration and tax frameworks
With the Digital Nomad Visa already in force, Italy lacked a corresponding tax tool. Policymakers appear intent on bridging that gap.
Increased competitiveness
Other jurisdictions have leveraged digital nomads as part of their economic strategy. Italy’s move suggests a desire to remain competitive in this space.
Acknowledgment of limitations in the new Impatriati Regime
The stricter requirements of the 2025 Impatriati Regime exclude a significant share of mobile professionals. A separate tool allows Italy to widen its appeal without altering the newly reformed regime.
What Digital Nomads and Advisors Should Watch for Next
Once lawmakers release a draft text, key aspects to examine will include:
eligibility definitions (degree, income,remote-work requirements, etc.)
interaction with the Digital Nomad Visa
duration of the benefit
whether it applies to employment income, self-employment income, or both
requirements around residency and physical presence
potential coordination with social security rules
Until authorities publish the final provision, planning must continue within the framework already in force, namely, the Digital Nomad Visa (for non-EU nationals) and the 2025 Impatriati Regime, for those who meet the criteria.
Tax Synergy
Italy’s proposed “digital nomad tax bonus” does not represent a finalized policy, yet. But its introduction into the legislative conversation is significant.
When combined with the Digital Nomad Visa and the recent overhaul of the Impatriati Regime, it marks a clear policy direction: Italy is positioning itself to attract remote workers not only through immigration channels but increasingly through the tax system as well.
If lawmakers enact the measure, it would give Italy a more complete and competitive framework for digital nomads.
For now, observers should follow the legislative process closely, as the details will determine just how accessible and impactful this incentive may become.
