Ultimate Guide to Becoming a Citizen of Italy in 2025

italy citizen

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What Visa Is Needed for Short-Term Stays?

Non-EU nationals must start with the right visa: tourist (90 days), study, working holiday if applicable or elective residency if you have independent income.

How to Obtain Long-Term Residency?

Voluntary residency: For retirees or financially independent individuals

Work Visa: Requires a job offer as well as annual quotas on numerous sectors. 

Entrepreneur / Startup Visa: For investors or self-employed, independent professions. 

Family Reunification: Spouses and dependants of residents.

When Can I Apply for Permanent Residency?

After five years of uninterrupted legal residency in Italy, one can apply for a permesso di soggiorno permanente, which has fewer renewals and more rights.

How Can I Become an Italian Citizen?

Citizenship by Descent (Jus Sanguinis) 

Available if you have a continuous bloodline to a parent or grandparent born in Italy. Italy has tightened rules that direct bloodline (parent/grandparent) will be valid from March 28, 2025.

Citizenship by Marriage 

After 3 years of marriage (2 years if residing in Italy), with proof of the legitimacy of the relationship and suitable Italian language competency.

Citizenship by Naturalization

Non-EU nationals: eligible to apply after 10 years of residence.

EU nationals: eligible to apply after 4 years of residence.

Subject to language and integration requirements.

Can I Hold Dual Citizenship?

Yes, Italy allows dual citizenship. You can retain your original passport and have all rights of Italian nationality and EU nationality. 

What About Taxes and Finances?

Italy has two main regimes:

High net worth flat tax: EUR 200,000/year on foreign income (family members EUR 25,000 each) for a maximum of 15 years.

Inpatriate regime: 50% or 40% tax advantage on domestic income for qualifying workers for a maximum of 5 years.

Act before mid-2025 to enjoy the benefits.

What Legal Hurdles Should I Know?

Tax residency is determined by 183 days spent in Italy, registration with Anagrafe and domicile

Through some recent legislative changes, citizenship by descent is limited to direct relatives only, and applications will now be administered only in Rome.

About Shamini

I’m Shamini, a writer who enjoys exploring and explaining current events. I provide detailed insights and fresh perspectives on various topics, helping readers understand the stories that matter most.

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