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Understanding how to prove housing suitability for family reunification in Italy is one of the most practically important, and frequently misunderstood, steps in the entire ricongiungimento familiare procedure. Non-EU sponsors who wish to bring a spouse, minor children, or dependent parents to Italy must demonstrate that their accommodation meets minimum habitability standards set by Italian law, principally under Articles 29 and 29-bis of Legislative Decree No. 286/1998 (the Testo Unico sull’Immigrazione, or TUI). The formal proof is a document known as the certificato di idoneità alloggiativa, issued by the Municipality (Comune) or the local health authority (ASL).
Early indications suggest that Prefetture and consulates have applied stricter scrutiny to housing evidence since mid-2025, making thorough preparation more critical than ever in 2026. This guide walks through every stage of the housing-suitability process, from the initial pre-check to administrative remedies if the certificate is refused.
The housing suitability requirement applies to any non-EU citizen lawfully residing in Italy who sponsors a family member for reunification. The sponsor (the person already in Italy) bears the burden of proving that the accommodation is adequate for the number of people who will live there. The incoming family member, whether a spouse, minor child, adult dependent child, or dependent parent, does not apply for the certificate directly; however, their details (number, age, relationship) determine the minimum space the property must provide.
Housing proof sits at the very beginning of the application chain. Without a valid certificato, or, at minimum, a dated receipt proving that the municipal application has been filed, the nulla osta cannot be processed, and the consulate abroad will not schedule a visa appointment. Sponsors should therefore begin the housing suitability process before submitting any other reunification paperwork to the Prefettura.
The sponsor must hold a valid permesso di soggiorno of at least one year’s duration, issued for employment, self-employment, study, asylum, or other qualifying purposes, at the time the nulla osta application is filed. The permit must remain valid throughout the reunification procedure. The sponsor’s accommodation address, as registered with the Comune (residenza anagrafica), is typically the address that will be assessed for housing suitability.
Italian law links the housing requirement to a broader assessment of the sponsor’s financial capacity. The sponsor must demonstrate an annual income at least equal to the social-allowance threshold (assegno sociale), which increases with each additional family member to be reunited. This income must be lawful and documented, typically through a recent tax return (CUD/Certificazione Unica) or pay slips. The accommodation must comply with municipal habitability parameters set by the Decreto del Ministro della Sanità of 5 July 1975, which specifies minimum surface areas per occupant and room requirements (for instance, adequate sleeping arrangements, ventilation, and sanitary facilities). The certificato di idoneità alloggiativa certifies compliance with these standards for the specific number of people who will reside in the dwelling.
Holders of refugee status or subsidiary protection are generally exempt from proving both income and housing suitability when applying for family reunification. This exemption is codified in Article 29-bis TUI. For reunification involving a minor child under the age of 14, some Prefetture have applied a more flexible standard; however, the certificate is still formally required unless the sponsor holds protected status. Sponsors should verify the specific requirements of their Prefettura, as local practice can vary.
The table below summarises the full process. Each step is explained in detail in the numbered sections that follow.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre-check: confirm sponsor eligibility and identify accommodation address | Sponsor / lawyer | 1–3 days |
| 2. Apply for certificato di idoneità alloggiativa at Comune or request ASL inspection | Sponsor or property owner, Comune Ufficio Tecnico or ASL | 7–30 days (varies by Comune) |
| 3. Obtain municipal attestation or receipt of request if certificate pending | Comune / ASL | Immediate issue of receipt; certificate 7–30 days |
| 4. Include certificate (or receipt plus supporting documents) in nulla osta file and consulate visa application | Sponsor / consulate / Prefettura | Nulla osta: 30–120 days; consular visa: 15–90 days |
| 5. If housing rejected: request remedial inspection, submit additional evidence, or file administrative appeal | Sponsor / lawyer / Prefettura / TAR | Remedy: 7–30 days; appeal deadlines: 30–60 days |
| 6. After arrival: Questura may re-verify housing when issuing permesso di soggiorno | Questura / applicant | Questura appointment within 8 days of arrival |
Before approaching the Comune, the sponsor should assemble all evidence relating to the accommodation. The type of evidence depends on the tenure arrangement:
In all cases, collect recent utility bills (bollette) for the previous three months and, if available, a municipal tax receipt (TARI) showing the address and the name of the occupant. These ancillary documents corroborate actual residence at the declared address.
The certificato di idoneità alloggiativa is ordinarily requested from the Ufficio Tecnico of the Comune where the property is located. In certain municipalities and regions, the competent authority is instead the ASL, Ufficio di Igiene Pubblica, depending on the organisational structure adopted locally. The Rome Prefettura, for example, provides an online request form through its services portal. In other cities the application must be submitted in person or by registered post.
The application should include:
Upon submission, the Comune issues a dated receipt (ricevuta di protocollo). This receipt is critical: the Ministero dell’Interno’s official document list for family reunification states that either the certificato itself or a copy of the receipt of the application (copia della ricevuta di richiesta del certificato) may be attached to the nulla osta file. Processing times vary: in some municipalities the certificate can be issued within 7 days, while others may take up to 30 days or longer, particularly where an on-site ASL inspection is required.
Once the certificato (or the protocol receipt) is in hand, the sponsor uploads it to the nulla osta application. For the online procedure, this is done through the Prefettura’s ALI portal or via a designated patronato. Paper-based applications require physical copies attached to the dossier.
After the Prefettura issues the nulla osta, the family member abroad applies for an entry visa at the Italian consulate. The consulate may request additional housing documentation, for instance, translated or legalised copies of the certificate and lease. Sponsors should confirm the specific documentary requirements of the relevant consulate, as practices differ by country. The nulla osta housing evidence is reviewed again at the consular stage, so any deficiencies identified at this point can delay visa issuance by weeks or months.
If the Comune or ASL refuses to issue the certificato, for example, because the dwelling does not meet minimum surface-area requirements, or because habitability conditions are not satisfied, the sponsor has several options:
After the family member arrives in Italy, the Questura may conduct housing verification when processing the application for a permesso di soggiorno. The sponsor must book a Questura appointment within 8 days of arrival, the entry stamp on the passport serves as proof of the arrival date. If the Questura finds the accommodation unsuitable at this stage, it may delay or refuse the residence permit, triggering a further round of remedial action or appeal.
The following table lists every document typically needed when proving housing suitability for family reunification in Italy. Requirements can vary by Comune; always confirm the specific list with the local Ufficio Tecnico or ASL before submitting.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Certificato di idoneità alloggiativa / Attestazione comunale di disponibilità dell’alloggio | Issued by Comune Ufficio Tecnico or ASL. Original or certified copy. Must include protocol number and date. Required for the nulla osta file. |
| Property title (atto di proprietà) or recent visura catastale | Issued by notary or land registry (also accessible online via Agenzia delle Entrate). Shows ownership, cadastral data, and room count. |
| Registered lease (contratto di locazione registrato) | Must include codice fiscale of both parties and be accompanied by the Agenzia delle Entrate registration receipt. Unregistered leases are not accepted. |
| Utility bills (bollette) or TARI municipal tax receipt | Most recent 3 months. Must show the address and occupant’s name. |
| Floor plan (planimetria catastale) | From cadastral records or drawn by a professional (geometra). Shows habitable rooms, surface area, and layout. |
| Sponsor’s identity document and permesso di soggiorno | Copy of passport photo page and valid residence permit. |
| Declaration of hospitality (dichiarazione di ospitalità) | Required only if the sponsor is hosted by a third party. Host signs a Comune-issued form or notarised statement and attaches ID or permesso. |
| Receipt of municipal application (ricevuta di protocollo) | If the certificate has not yet been issued. Acceptable in the nulla osta file per Ministero dell’Interno guidance. |
| Photos of living spaces | Timestamped photos of each room, sleeping areas, and shared facilities. Recommended supplement, increasingly requested in 2026. |
| Building or safety certificates | Some Comuni or ASL may request condominium rules or anti-overcrowding statements. |
Sponsors using rented accommodation must ensure the lease is formally registered with the Agenzia delle Entrate. A private, unregistered agreement, even if signed by both parties, does not satisfy the housing suitability requirement. For hosted arrangements, the dichiarazione di ospitalità should be filed with the Comune and accompanied by documentary evidence that the host’s dwelling itself meets habitability standards for the increased number of occupants. Consulates outside Italy may require that key documents be translated into the language of the host country and legalised or apostilled; sponsors should verify consulate-specific requirements well in advance. For a comprehensive checklist of all documents needed for family reunification, consult the complete family practice area resources on this site.
Timing is one of the most unpredictable elements of the housing-suitability process. Municipal processing speeds vary widely, and downstream steps, nulla osta issuance, consular visa appointments, can compound delays. The table below sets out the principal timing benchmarks.
| Action | Typical timing / deadline |
|---|---|
| Apply for certificato at Comune / ASL | 7–30 days processing (varies by municipality) |
| Receive dated protocol receipt of application | Same day as submission |
| Nulla osta processing (Prefettura / ALI portal) | 30–120 days (case and workload dependent) |
| Consular entry-visa issuance after nulla osta | 15–90 days (consulate dependent) |
| Arrival in Italy → book Questura appointment for permesso | Within 8 days of arrival |
| Administrative appeal against housing refusal | Within the deadline stated in the refusal decision (commonly 30–60 days) |
Given these wide windows, sponsors should apply for the certificato as early as possible, ideally 60 to 90 days before they intend to file the nulla osta request. Obtaining the protocol receipt on the day of submission provides a safety net: many Prefetture accept the receipt as interim proof while the certificate is being processed. However, industry observers expect that in 2026 a growing number of Prefetture will require the actual certificate rather than a receipt, particularly in high-volume jurisdictions.
| Item | Typical amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Municipal / ASL application fee for certificato | €0–€50 | Varies by Comune. Some municipalities charge no fee; others require a marca da bollo or small administrative charge. |
| Lease registration (Agenzia delle Entrate) | 2% of annual rent + marca da bollo | Paid by the contracting parties. Registration receipt is essential evidence for the housing file. |
| Translation / legalisation of documents | €30–€200 per document | Required by some consulates. Prices vary by translator, language pair, and country. |
| Lawyer / consultant assistance (optional) | €150–€800+ | For drafting declarations, preparing the municipal application, or filing appeals. Obtain a written fee estimate. |
| TAR administrative-appeal filing costs | Variable | Court filing fee plus legal costs. Large variance depending on complexity. Seek a detailed quote before proceeding. |
The housing-suitability certificate itself is often the least expensive element of the reunification process. The greater cost risk lies in delays and refusals, a rejected certificate can add months to the family reunification timeline and may necessitate professional legal assistance or an administrative appeal. Sponsors working within tight budgets should factor in the potential cost of a replacement lease or an alternative property if the current accommodation fails the suitability assessment. For information on finding qualified legal assistance in Italy, consult the directory on this site.
Since mid-2025, Prefetture across Italy have placed increasing emphasis on the quality and completeness of housing evidence submitted with nulla osta applications. The likely practical effect of this enforcement trend in 2026 includes the following developments:
To mitigate these risks, sponsors applying in 2026 should aim to obtain the full certificato before submitting the nulla osta application. Where that is not feasible, combining the protocol receipt with a registered lease, a detailed planimetria, and timestamped photos provides the strongest interim evidence package. Sponsors relying on a dichiarazione di ospitalità should ensure the host’s declaration is endorsed or witnessed at the Comune.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alessandro Gravante at Giambrone & Partners International Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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