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The landscape for private equity lawyers Italy practitioners advise on has shifted materially in 2026. The parliamentary reform of Legislative Decree No. 58/1998, the Testo Unico della Finanza (TUF), introduces the società di investimento as a new corporate‑form fund vehicle, while the 2026 Budget Law (Legge di Bilancio 2026) recalibrates participation‑exemption thresholds under Article 87 TUIR with direct consequences for deal economics. Alongside these domestic changes, Italy’s transposition of AIFMD II reshapes licensing, marketing and direct‑lending rules for alternative‑investment fund managers. This guide translates each reform into operational checklists for GPs launching funds, lenders structuring fund‑finance facilities, and in‑house counsel navigating the transition.
The Decree 58/98 reform expands the toolbox available for fund structuring Italy 2026 launches. The checklist below maps the principal decision drivers to the vehicle form most likely to satisfy them.
Italy’s collective‑investment regime has historically been governed by Legislative Decree No. 58 of 24 February 1998 (TUF), supplemented by implementing regulations from CONSOB and the Banca d’Italia. Under the pre‑reform framework, Italian alternative investment funds (AIFs) could only be established as fondi comuni di investimento, segregated pools of assets managed by an authorised asset‑management company (SGR), or as SICAVs/SICAFs for open‑ and closed‑end purposes respectively. Private equity funds in Italy have traditionally operated as closed‑end fondi comuni.
The comprehensive reform of the TUF, described by the Banca d’Italia as “an important part” of the broader modernisation of Italian financial regulation, introduces significant statutory flexibility so that the capital structure of a fund vehicle can be shaped around the specific characteristics of the investment strategy. The centrepiece relevant to PE sponsors is the codification of the società di investimento, a corporate‑form vehicle analogous to the Luxembourg SCSp or the Anglo‑Saxon limited partnership, but embedded in Italian company law.
Running in parallel, the 2026 Budget Law private equity stakeholders must track modifies the Testo Unico delle Imposte sui Redditi (TUIR), adjusting thresholds and conditions for the participation exemption under Article 87. The AIFMD II transposition, which forms part of the broader process of aligning Italian law with EU‑level innovations, introduces a dedicated regulatory framework for credit funds and direct lending.
| Milestone | Date / status | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Original TUF enacted (Legislative Decree 58/1998) | 24 February 1998 | Foundational statute for Italian capital markets and fund regulation |
| Italian Senate favourable opinion on TUF reform bill | February 2026 | Parliamentary green‑light for core reform provisions including società di investimento |
| Banca d’Italia commentary on asset‑management reform | 30 January 2026 | Regulatory guidance on implementation priorities for fund managers |
| 2026 Budget Law (Legge di Bilancio 2026) entry into force | 1 January 2026 | Tax threshold changes effective for fiscal years beginning on or after this date |
| AIFMD II transposition into Italian law | 2026 (implementation ongoing) | New rules for credit‑fund origination and direct lending |
| Expected secondary legislation and CONSOB implementing measures | Pending (second half 2026 expected) | Detailed vehicle‑registration and operational rules for società di investimento |
Industry observers expect the secondary implementing regulations to be adopted in the second half of 2026, meaning GPs planning a near‑term fund launch should monitor CONSOB and Banca d’Italia publications closely. Transitional provisions in the reform bill are expected to allow existing fondi comuni to continue operating under current rules while providing a conversion pathway for managers who wish to adopt the società form.
The Decree 58/98 reform fundamentally changes the menu of fund vehicles società structures available to Italian PE sponsors. This section compares the three principal options in detail.
The società di investimento is a corporate‑form vehicle with separate legal personality. It is registered with the Companies Register (Registro delle Imprese) and subject to Italian company‑law governance, including board‑of‑directors structures, statutory auditors and formal shareholder meetings. The reform provides significant statutory flexibility so that the capital structure can be shaped around the specific characteristics of the investment strategy, according to analysis by WTS. Key features include the ability to issue multiple share classes with differentiated economic and voting rights, making it possible to replicate GP/LP economics within a corporate framework. The vehicle holds assets on its own balance sheet, simplifying transfers and disposals of portfolio companies.
The traditional fondo comune remains available and will continue to be the default structure for many Italian PE managers. It is an unincorporated pool of assets without separate legal personality, managed by a licensed SGR or AIFM. Governance is contractual, defined by the fund rules (regolamento del fondo) rather than by company law. Investors hold units (quote) that represent pro‑rata interests in the fund’s net assets. A depositary is required. The fondo comune structure is well understood by Italian institutional investors and benefits from established regulatory and tax precedent.
Foreign limited partnerships, typically Luxembourg SCSps or UK/English LPs, managed from Italy continue to be common for pan‑European strategies. Under the reformed TUF and AIFMD II transposition, a foreign AIF marketed to Italian investors may require the local establishment of a management company or branch, or compliance with national private‑placement rules. Fund finance in Italy considerations for foreign wrappers are distinct: lender enforcement depends primarily on the governing law of the foreign vehicle, and security is typically taken over the portfolio companies rather than the fund interests themselves.
| Entity Type | Key Registration & Regulatory Steps | Fund‑Finance / Lender Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Società di investimento (new corporate vehicle) | Register as company with Companies Register; file TUF notifications for regulated activity; obtain or delegate AIFM licence if managing assets directly | Lenders can take corporate security (share pledge, asset charge); upstream guarantees possible but subject to corporate‑law limitations on financial assistance; cleaner asset‑transfer mechanics; covenant enforcement more straightforward |
| Fondo comune di investimento (unincorporated fund) | Establish via SGR/AIFM; notify regulator under TUF; appoint depositary and administrator; comply with fund‑rule filing requirements | Lenders rely on contractual pledge or charge over fund units/interests; limited ability to take corporate‑level guarantees; intercreditor arrangements with depositary add complexity |
| Foreign limited partnership (managed from Italy) | May require local management company or branch establishment; marketing notification to CONSOB under AIFMD national private‑placement regime | Lender enforcement governed by foreign law; security typically taken at portfolio‑company level; Italian law security over fund interests may not be available |
The 2026 Budget Law recalibrates several provisions of the TUIR that directly affect private equity deal economics. For private equity lawyers Italy practitioners counsel, the most consequential change concerns the participation‑exemption regime under Article 87 TUIR.
The participation exemption (partecipation exemption, or PEX) allows corporate taxpayers to exclude a substantial portion of capital gains realised on the disposal of qualifying shareholdings from the corporate‑income‑tax base. Under the long‑standing regime, Article 87 TUIR requires that several conditions be met simultaneously: the shareholding must have been held continuously for at least 12 months; it must have been classified as a financial fixed asset (immobilizzazione finanziaria) in the first set of financial statements after acquisition; the target company must not be resident in a low‑tax jurisdiction; and the target must carry on a genuine commercial activity.
The 2026 Budget Law adjusts the interaction between these conditions and the treatment of dividends and capital gains flowing through fund vehicles. For domestic corporate investors, the exempt portion of qualifying capital gains remains significant, but the Budget Law tightens anti‑avoidance provisions targeting structures designed to convert ordinary income into PEX‑eligible gains. GPs structuring exits must verify that the holding‑period and classification requirements are met at the relevant entity level, which, under the new società vehicle, means at the fund‑company level rather than at the SGR level.
Worked example: A società di investimento acquires a 100% stake in PortfolioCo for EUR 20 million in January 2026, classifying it as a financial fixed asset. In March 2027 (14 months later), it sells the stake for EUR 35 million. If all Article 87 TUIR conditions are satisfied, the EUR 15 million capital gain is substantially exempt from IRES. However, if the vehicle is a fondo comune, the tax analysis shifts: Italian resident funds benefit from a separate tax regime where fund‑level income is generally exempt, with taxation deferred to investor‑level distributions. The vehicle‑choice decision therefore requires modelling both entity‑level and investor‑level tax outcomes.
The transfer of shares in portfolio companies is generally exempt from VAT under Italian law. However, transfers of real‑estate‑rich companies or assets may trigger proportional registration tax, mortgage tax and cadastral tax. The vehicle form can affect the availability of restructuring reliefs and the characterisation of transfers for indirect‑tax purposes. Fund counsel should map indirect‑tax consequences alongside income‑tax modelling at the structuring stage.
Dividends distributed by Italian portfolio companies to an Italian fund vehicle are subject to different withholding‑tax treatments depending on the vehicle form. Distributions to a fondo comune managed by an Italian SGR are generally collected gross at fund level. Distributions to a società di investimento follow corporate‑dividend rules, with the potential application of the PEX regime to reduce the effective tax burden. Non‑resident LPs investing through any Italian vehicle should review applicable double‑tax treaty provisions and EU directive protections (Parent‑Subsidiary Directive) to optimise withholding‑tax outcomes on distributions received from the fund.
The asset management regulatory reform changes the due‑diligence landscape for banks and alternative lenders providing capital‑call facilities, NAV facilities and portfolio‑level financing to Italian PE funds. Fund finance in Italy now requires lenders to differentiate their documentation and security packages by vehicle type.
For a società di investimento, the lender’s security package can include a pledge over the shares of portfolio companies held on the fund’s corporate balance sheet, an assignment of receivables (including capital‑call receivables from investors), and, subject to corporate‑law limitations on financial assistance under Articles 2358 and 2474 of the Italian Civil Code, upstream guarantees from the fund vehicle itself. The likely practical effect will be that società‑form funds offer lenders a cleaner enforcement pathway, since assets are held directly by a legal entity rather than in a segregated pool managed by a third‑party SGR.
For a fondo comune, the security package is necessarily contractual. Lenders take a pledge or charge over the fund units or over the capital‑call commitments of investors, but enforcement requires cooperation with (or step‑in rights against) the SGR. The depositary’s role as custodian of fund assets introduces an additional layer in any enforcement scenario. Intercreditor agreements must address the ranking of the lender’s claims relative to those of the depositary and other fund creditors.
For foreign LP wrappers, lender enforcement depends on the governing law of the vehicle. Italian‑law security is typically limited to pledges over Italian portfolio‑company shares, and lenders must ensure that cross‑border enforcement mechanisms (including recognition of foreign judgments or arbitral awards) are robust.
Early indications suggest that lenders will need to revise several standard covenant formulations. Information covenants should require delivery of both corporate filings (for società) and regulatory reports (for fondi). Borrowing‑base or NAV‑coverage covenants must specify the valuation methodology and frequency aligned with the vehicle’s regulatory obligations. Event‑of‑default clauses should capture regulatory sanctions, licence revocations and SGR changes of control as trigger events alongside traditional financial defaults.
The Banca d’Italia has emphasised that the reform of the regulatory framework for asset management is integral to Italy’s broader capital‑markets modernisation. For GPs and fund managers, this translates into a series of operational steps that must be planned and executed alongside vehicle‑choice and tax decisions.
Any entity managing an Italian AIF, whether structured as a società di investimento or a fondo comune, must either hold an AIFM authorisation or delegate management to a licensed SGR or EU AIFM. The AIFMD II transposition introduces additional requirements for managers of credit funds, including specific risk‑management and origination policies. Managers intending to pursue direct‑lending strategies must comply with the new regulatory framework analysed by practitioners at firms such as Advant Nctm.
| Filing / Notification | Authority | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| AIFM authorisation or notification | Banca d’Italia / CONSOB | Before commencing management activity |
| Fund/vehicle registration (società: Companies Register; fondo: regulatory filing) | Companies Register / CONSOB | Before marketing to investors |
| Marketing notification (domestic) | CONSOB | Before commencement of marketing activity in Italy |
| EU passport notification (if cross‑border) | Home‑state regulator + CONSOB | Before marketing in other EU Member States |
| Depositary appointment confirmation | Banca d’Italia | At fund establishment |
| AML/KYC programme filing | Banca d’Italia / UIF | Ongoing; initial filing at establishment |
Under the AIFMD II‑aligned regime, Italian AIFMs managing Italian AIFs may passport their management and marketing activities across the EU using the standard notification procedure. The reform clarifies that both società di investimento and fondo comune vehicles qualify as AIFs for passporting purposes, provided the AIFM holds the requisite authorisation. Managers of non‑EU AIFs wishing to market in Italy must comply with Italy’s national private‑placement rules, which are also being updated as part of the TUF reform.
All Italian AIFMs remain subject to Italy’s anti‑money‑laundering framework (Legislative Decree 231/2007), which requires investor due diligence, suspicious‑transaction reporting to the Unità di Informazione Finanziaria (UIF), and ongoing monitoring. The operational burden is comparable across vehicle types, although a società di investimento’s corporate structure may simplify certain beneficial‑ownership identification procedures relative to a fondo comune where investor information flows through the SGR.
Experienced private equity lawyers Italy sponsors rely on identify several drafting and negotiation areas that require immediate attention in light of the 2026 reforms.
The convergence of the Decree 58/98 reform, the 2026 Budget Law and Italy’s AIFMD II transposition creates a compressed timeline for action. GPs, lenders and fund counsel should prioritise the following steps:
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026. This article reflects legislation and regulatory guidance publicly available as of that date. Readers should verify the status of pending secondary legislation, particularly CONSOB and Banca d’Italia implementing measures for the società di investimento vehicle, before making structuring or compliance decisions.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marco Carbonara at Alpeggiani Avvocati Associati, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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