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collective dismissal in italy

Collective Dismissal in Italy: Thresholds, Consultation Steps and the 75‑day Timeline

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Collective dismissal in Italy is one of the most tightly regulated employer actions in European labour law, governed primarily by Law 223/1991 (Legge 23 luglio 1991, n. 223). Any business operating in Italy that anticipates reducing its workforce by five or more employees within a 120‑day window must follow a mandatory procedure involving trade‑union consultation, notifications to government authorities and strict statutory deadlines. Failure to comply does not merely delay the process, it can void every dismissal and expose the employer to reinstatement orders or heavy compensation.

This guide walks HR leaders, in‑house counsel and general managers through every stage of the collective redundancy procedure in Italy, from the initial threshold test to the final dismissal notices, mapped against the critical 75‑day timeline.

What Is Collective Dismissal in Italy? Overview of Collective vs Individual Redundancy

Italian law draws a sharp distinction between individual termination of employment and collective redundancies. An individual dismissal, whether for just cause (giusta causa) or justified objective reason (giustificato motivo oggettivo), follows a separate, simpler procedure under Law 604/1966 and the Workers’ Statute. Collective dismissal, by contrast, triggers an entirely different procedural regime under Law 223/1991 and involves mandatory trade‑union consultation, administrative notification and pre‑defined selection criteria.

The practical consequence for employers is significant: misclassifying what should be a collective process as a series of individual dismissals is itself a procedural violation. Courts have consistently held that employers cannot avoid the collective redundancy procedure in Italy by staggering terminations or splitting them across nominally separate proceedings. Where the numeric and temporal thresholds of Law 223/1991 are met, the full collective procedure applies.

Employers restructuring operations in Italy should also be aware that collective dismissal obligations interact with other regulatory frameworks, including pay transparency requirements and smart working rules that may affect how roles are classified and whether alternatives to dismissal exist.

Legal Framework and Thresholds Under Law 223/1991

Law 223/1991 establishes the core rules for collective redundancies in Italy. It transposes EU Council Directive 98/59/EC on collective redundancies into Italian domestic law and has been amended over the years, notably by the Jobs Act reforms of 2015, but its fundamental structure remains intact.

The Threshold Test

The collective dismissal procedure is triggered when all three of the following conditions are met simultaneously:

  • Employer size. The employer employs more than 15 employees across the enterprise (not merely the affected unit).
  • Number of dismissals. The employer intends to dismiss at least 5 employees.
  • Timeframe and geographic scope. The 5 or more dismissals occur within 120 days, within the same province or within the same production unit, as a consequence of a reduction, transformation or cessation of business activity.

It is important to note that the 120‑day reference period is the window within which the employer’s intended dismissals are counted for threshold purposes. This should not be confused with the separate 75‑day procedural timeline, which governs the consultation process itself.

Types of Collective Dismissals

Law 223/1991 contemplates two principal scenarios that lead to collective dismissal:

  • Staff reduction (Articles 4 and 24). The employer decides to reduce headcount due to restructuring, reorganisation or cessation of all or part of the business. This is the most common trigger.
  • Post‑CIGS dismissals (Article 4). Where an employer has placed employees on the Cassa Integrazione Guadagni Straordinaria (CIGS, the extraordinary earnings integration fund administered by INPS) and determines, during or at the end of the CIGS period, that it cannot reabsorb all suspended workers, a collective dismissal procedure must be initiated for the excess headcount.

In both cases, the procedural steps are substantially identical, though the involvement of INPS and additional documentation requirements differ when CIGS has been in play.

Who You Must Notify and When, Named Authorities and Unions

Before a single dismissal letter can be issued, the employer must simultaneously notify multiple parties. The notification is the formal act that opens the collective dismissal procedure and starts the 75‑day clock.

Identifying Applicable Trade Unions and CCNLs

Italian collective bargaining operates at multiple levels. The employer must notify:

  • Company‑level union representatives, the Rappresentanze Sindacali Unitarie (RSU) or Rappresentanze Sindacali Aziendali (RSA) present in the establishment.
  • Territorial trade union organisations, the provincial or regional branches of the nationally representative unions affiliated with the CCNL (Contratto Collettivo Nazionale di Lavoro) that applies to the workforce being dismissed.

Employers must verify which CCNL applies to the affected employees, as this determines not only which unions to notify but also the applicable notice periods and severance entitlements.

Written Notice Requirements and Contents

The opening written communication must be sent simultaneously to the trade unions and to the competent territorial office of the Ministry of Labour. Under Law 223/1991, the notice must contain:

  • The reasons for the intended collective redundancies.
  • The technical, organisational or production‑related grounds justifying the reduction.
  • The number, professional profiles and roles of the employees to be dismissed.
  • The timeframe within which the dismissals are planned.
  • Any measures considered to mitigate the social consequences, including redeployment, retraining or early retirement incentives.
  • The calculation method for any additional severance or incentive payments offered.
Entity Type Who to Notify Practical Note
Private company (single establishment, >15 employees) RSU/RSA, territorial trade unions, local Ministry of Labour office Standard Law 223/1991 procedure; threshold = 5+ dismissals in 120 days
Multinational with multiple Italian establishments Trade unions at each affected establishment + Ministry of Labour (territorial office for each province) Run parallel local consultations; coordinate selection criteria across sites
Employer using CIGS / extraordinary redundancy fund INPS + trade unions + Ministry of Labour Different documentation required for post‑CIGS excess workers; INPS involvement mandatory

The Step‑by‑Step Collective Redundancy Procedure in Italy

The following eight steps map the full collective dismissal procedure from first notification to final termination, anchored to the statutory 75‑day maximum. Employers should treat this as the definitive procedural roadmap for any collective redundancy procedure in Italy.

Stage 1: Internal Assessment and Selection Criteria (Before Day 1)

Before issuing any formal notification, the employer must conduct an internal assessment: which roles are affected, what objective selection criteria will be applied, and whether alternatives to dismissal (redeployment, reduced hours, voluntary redundancy) have been exhausted. The selection criteria must be objective and non‑discriminatory, Law 223/1991 references carichi di famiglia (family dependants), length of service and technical/production needs as the default statutory criteria unless different criteria are agreed with trade unions during consultation.

Stage 2: Formal Written Notification (Day 1)

The employer sends the written communication described above to the trade unions and the Ministry of Labour simultaneously. This is Day 1 of the procedure. The content requirements are strict, and omissions can invalidate the entire process.

Stage 3: Trade Union Consultation, Phase 1 (Days 1–45)

Within 7 days of receiving the employer’s notification, the trade unions may request a meeting to open formal consultation. The employer is obligated to engage in good‑faith discussions aimed at reaching an agreement on alternatives to dismissal, the number of dismissals, selection criteria and social mitigation measures. This first phase of trade union consultation in Italy lasts a maximum of 45 days.

Stage 4: Agreement or Failure to Agree (Day 45)

If the parties reach an agreement during the first 45 days, the procedure can conclude and dismissals may proceed in accordance with the agreed terms. If no agreement is reached, the procedure advances to the administrative phase.

Stage 5: Administrative Phase, Ministry of Labour Mediation (Days 46–75)

Where Phase 1 ends without agreement, the Ministry of Labour’s territorial office convenes the parties for a further 30 days of mediation. The Ministry acts as facilitator, not decision‑maker, it cannot block the dismissals but attempts to broker a compromise. This second phase brings the total maximum to 75 days.

Stage 6: Final Assessment and Selection (After Day 75)

Once the 75‑day window has elapsed, whether by agreement, expiry or early conclusion, the employer may proceed to select the individual employees for dismissal, applying the agreed or statutory criteria.

Stage 7: Issuing Individual Dismissal Notices

Each affected employee receives a formal written dismissal notice. The notice period in Italy is governed by the applicable CCNL and the employee’s seniority and role. Employers may offer pay in lieu of notice where permitted by the CCNL.

Stage 8: Post‑Dismissal Filing and Mobility Procedure

Within 7 days of issuing the dismissal notices, the employer must send a final communication to the Ministry of Labour, INPS (where applicable) and the trade unions listing the dismissed employees, the selection criteria applied and the outcome of consultations. This notification places dismissed workers on the regional mobility list (lista di mobilità), giving them access to the mobility procedure in Italy, including preferential re‑employment rights and, where applicable, the NASpI unemployment benefit administered by INPS.

Collective Dismissal in Italy: Day‑by‑Day Timeline

Day Action Who Acts
Pre‑Day 1 Internal assessment: identify affected roles, draft selection criteria, explore alternatives Employer (HR / legal)
Day 1 Send formal written notification to trade unions and Ministry of Labour Employer
Days 1–7 Trade unions review notification and may request consultation meeting Trade unions
Days 1–45 Phase 1: trade union consultation (good‑faith negotiations on alternatives, criteria, mitigation) Employer + trade unions
Day 45 Assessment: agreement reached or consultation fails Both parties
Days 46–75 Phase 2: Ministry of Labour mediation (if Phase 1 failed) Ministry of Labour + both parties
Day 75+ Employer selects employees, issues individual dismissal notices Employer
Within 7 days of dismissals Final communication to Ministry, INPS and unions; employees placed on mobility list Employer

The 75‑Day Timeline Explained: Exceptions and Shortcuts

The 75‑day cap is the headline figure, but the actual duration of a collective dismissal in Italy varies depending on company size and whether the parties reach early agreement. The following table summarises the key scenarios.

Scenario Statutory Period Practical Notes
Standard procedure (employer with >15 employees) Up to 75 days (45 + 30) Full two‑phase process: 45 days union consultation + 30 days Ministry mediation
Fewer than 10 dismissals planned Up to 45 days (30 + 15) Both phases are halved: 30 days consultation + 15 days mediation
Agreement reached during Phase 1 Ends on date of agreement No Phase 2 needed; employer may proceed immediately to dismissal notices
Post‑CIGS collective dismissal Up to 75 days Same timeline but additional INPS documentation obligations apply
Company in insolvency / amministrazione straordinaria Up to 75 days (subject to insolvency court directions) Insolvency practitioner leads the process; court may impose different scheduling

Industry observers note that in practice most collective dismissal procedures conclude well before the 75‑day limit, particularly where the employer offers meaningful severance incentives early in the consultation. The likely practical effect of entering Phase 2 without any prior concession is a harder negotiation and increased litigation risk.

Practical Obligations: Notice, Payment, TFR and Severance

Once the consultation procedure is completed, the employer must meet several financial and administrative obligations for each dismissed employee.

Notice Periods and Pay in Lieu

The notice period in Italy for terminated employees is not set by statute for most private‑sector workers. Instead, it is determined by the applicable CCNL, which sets different notice periods based on the employee’s role, seniority level and length of service. Employers must check the specific CCNL provisions carefully. Where notice is not worked, pay in lieu of notice (indennità sostitutiva del preavviso) is due.

TFR, Trattamento di Fine Rapporto

Every employee in Italy accrues TFR throughout their employment. Upon termination, whether individual or collective, the employer must pay out the accumulated TFR. The calculation is standardised: roughly one month’s salary for each year of service, revalued annually. TFR is an entitlement, not a discretionary payment, and must be paid regardless of the reason for termination. Employers seeking detailed calculation guidance can consult our resource on severance packages and termination payments.

When the Collective Process Triggers Mobility Allowances or Incentives

Dismissed employees placed on the mobility list may be entitled to the NASpI unemployment benefit, administered by INPS. Employers commonly offer additional incentive payments (incentivo all’esodo) as part of the collective agreement to encourage voluntary departures and reduce the number of contested dismissals. These incentives are typically tax‑advantaged and represent one of the most effective tools for managing the social impact of collective redundancies in Italy.

Trade Union Consultation Mechanics, How to Run Effective Meetings

The consultation phase is the heart of the collective dismissal in Italy. Employers who approach it as a mere formality expose themselves to procedural challenges. The following practices reduce risk and improve outcomes.

  • Prepare a detailed information pack. Go beyond the statutory minimum. Provide financial data, organisational charts, productivity metrics and a clear rationale for each affected role.
  • Document selection criteria transparently. Use a scored selection matrix based on the statutory criteria (family dependants, length of service, technical/production needs) or criteria agreed with unions. Retain all workings.
  • Avoid discriminatory selection. Ensure criteria do not disproportionately affect protected categories (e.g., pregnant employees, employees on parental leave, disabled workers, trade union representatives with protected status).
  • Keep formal minutes. Record every meeting, proposal and counter‑proposal. Minutes signed by all parties are powerful evidence if the process is later challenged.
  • Engage genuinely. Italian courts scrutinise whether the employer engaged in real negotiation. A purely performative consultation, where the employer attends meetings but refuses to consider any alternative, can be treated as a procedural defect.

When to Involve Works Councils or Safety Representatives

If the establishment has an RSU or RSA, those representatives are the primary interlocutors at company level. Where the dismissal affects roles with specific health and safety responsibilities, employers should also consider whether the Rappresentante dei Lavoratori per la Sicurezza (RLS) needs to be consulted, particularly if roles are being merged or safety coverage is affected. Employers navigating broader workplace compliance changes in Italy, including those related to Decree Law 62, should coordinate the collective dismissal consultation with any parallel regulatory obligations.

Remedies, Penalties and Litigation Risk

The consequences of getting the collective redundancy procedure wrong in Italy are severe. Law 223/1991, as amended by the Jobs Act (Legislative Decree 23/2015), sets out a tiered sanctions regime.

  • Procedural defect (e.g., inadequate notification, failure to consult). For employees hired before 7 March 2015, a procedural defect can result in reinstatement with back pay. For employees hired after that date, the remedy is typically an indemnity of 6–36 monthly salaries (under the regime set out in Legislative Decree 23/2015), though recent Constitutional Court rulings have widened the scope for reinstatement in some circumstances.
  • Violation of selection criteria. Applying criteria that are discriminatory or inconsistent with the statutory defaults (or the agreed criteria) can lead to reinstatement regardless of the employee’s hire date.
  • Failure to notify the Ministry of Labour. Omitting the administrative notification or the final post‑dismissal communication can render the entire procedure void.

Early indications from recent case law suggest that Italian courts are increasingly willing to order reinstatement where the employer’s procedural failings are substantive rather than merely technical. Employers should treat every step of the 75‑day process as litigation‑critical.

Checklist: Documents and Actions for Collective Dismissal in Italy

The following checklist summarises the essential documents and actions at each stage. Employers should adapt it to their specific CCNL and circumstances.

  • Pre‑notification phase: Internal board/management resolution authorising the collective dismissal; selection criteria matrix; analysis of alternatives considered and rejected; list of affected roles and headcount.
  • Day 1 notification: Written communication to RSU/RSA and territorial trade unions; simultaneous copy to the territorial office of the Ministry of Labour; proof of delivery (certified email / PEC).
  • Phase 1 consultation (Days 1–45): Meeting agendas; information packs for unions; minutes of each meeting (signed); any counter‑proposals received and employer responses; draft collective agreement (if negotiations progress).
  • Phase 2 mediation (Days 46–75): Ministry convocation letter; updated proposals; final minutes of mediation; signed agreement or record of non‑agreement.
  • Post‑consultation: Individual dismissal letters (compliant with CCNL notice periods); final communication to Ministry, INPS and unions within 7 days; TFR calculation sheets; any incentive payment agreements.

Conclusion

Running a lawful collective dismissal in Italy demands meticulous procedural compliance at every stage, from the initial threshold assessment through the 75‑day consultation timeline to the post‑dismissal filings with the Ministry of Labour and INPS. The stakes are high: a single procedural misstep can result in reinstatement orders, substantial compensation and reputational damage. Employers navigating this process should begin preparation well before Day 1, engage meaningfully with trade unions during consultation and document every step. For businesses facing workforce reductions in Italy, early engagement with a qualified Italian labour law specialist, searchable through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory, is the most effective way to protect the organisation and its people throughout the collective redundancy procedure.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Piercarlo Antonelli at AMTF Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Law 223/1991, Normattiva (Gazzetta Ufficiale)
  2. Ministry of Labour (Italy), Official Guidance
  3. INPS, Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale
  4. Lexology, Termination of Employment in Italy
  5. CMS, Expert Guide to Dismissals (Italy)
  6. Beny‑Boatti Avvocati, Collective Dismissal in Italy
  7. Pietro Ichino, Collective Dismissal (Background)
  8. EUR‑Lex, EU Legislation and Case Law

FAQs

How does redundancy work in Italy?
A collective dismissal under Law 223/1991 is triggered when an employer with more than 15 employees intends to dismiss at least 5 employees within the same production unit or province within 120 days. It requires formal trade union consultation and notification to the Ministry of Labour before any dismissals can be finalised.
Employers must follow Law 223/1991: identify affected roles, send a written notification to trade unions and the Ministry of Labour, carry out a mandatory two‑phase consultation process (up to 45 days with unions, then up to 30 days of Ministry mediation) and respect objective selection criteria throughout.
The five core stages are: (1) preliminary internal assessment and selection criteria design; (2) formal notification to unions and authorities; (3) Phase 1 trade union consultation; (4) Phase 2 Ministry of Labour mediation (if needed); and (5) issuance of individual dismissal notices and post‑dismissal filings.
Following completion of the consultation, the employer issues individual written dismissal letters applying the agreed or statutory selection criteria. Each letter must observe the CCNL notice period, and the employer must pay TFR and any agreed severance or incentive amounts.
Notice periods are not set by a single statute but are governed by the applicable CCNL. They vary by the employee’s professional level, seniority and length of service. Where notice is not given, the employer must pay an equivalent indemnity in lieu.
The Ministry of Labour oversees the administrative procedure and facilitates Phase 2 mediation. INPS is involved when social security funds (such as CIGS) are engaged. Ultimately, Italian labour courts enforce compliance, and employees or unions may bring claims challenging procedural defects or discriminatory selection.
The 75‑day clock begins on the date the employer sends the formal written notification to trade unions and the Ministry of Labour simultaneously. Specific counting rules apply, and the period may be shortened (to 45 days total) where fewer than 10 dismissals are planned.
Dismissed employees are entitled to accrued TFR, any contractual notice period (or pay in lieu), and access to the NASpI unemployment benefit via INPS. Many collective agreements also include additional incentive payments negotiated during the consultation phase.
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Collective Dismissal in Italy: Thresholds, Consultation Steps and the 75‑day Timeline

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