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subsidiary vs branch Italy tax 2026

Subsidiary vs Branch in Italy, Which Is Better for Tax in 2026? a Decision Guide for Investors and Cfos

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Last updated: 13 June 2026

Every foreign investor entering Italy must answer the same structural question: should you incorporate a local subsidiary or register a branch (permanent establishment)? The subsidiary vs branch Italy tax 2026 decision carries higher stakes this year because the Legge di Bilancio 2026 (2026 Budget Law) has reshaped how dividends interact with IRAP, adjusted substitute-tax thresholds, and tightened residency and PE definitions. This guide sets out the full comparison, legal status, tax cost, liability, compliance burden and incentive access, and delivers an actionable decision framework so you can pick the right structure before engaging local counsel.

Option A: The Italian Subsidiary, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal form and setup steps

A subsidiary is a separate Italian legal entity, most commonly a Società a responsabilità limitata (S.r.l.) for mid-market entrants or a Società per Azioni (S.p.A.) for larger operations. The S.r.l. requires minimum share capital of €1 (simplified S.r.l.) or up to €10,000 for a standard S.r.l., while the S.p.A. requires a minimum of €50,000. Incorporation involves notarisation of the articles of association, registration with the Registro delle Imprese (Companies Register), and enrolment for tax, VAT and social-security purposes. The process typically takes two to eight weeks depending on complexity and whether sectoral licences are needed.

Tax posture, resident company taxed on worldwide income

Once incorporated, the subsidiary is an Italian tax resident. It is subject to IRES (corporate income tax) at 24 % on worldwide taxable profit, plus IRAP (regional production tax) at a headline rate of approximately 3.9 % on a separate tax base, the net value of production. Dividends paid upstream to a non-resident parent may benefit from reduced withholding under an applicable double-tax treaty or the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive, which can reduce or eliminate Italian withholding tax on qualifying distributions.

Who it suits

  • Long-term market commitment. Investors planning a multi-year Italian presence with employees, assets and customer-facing operations.
  • Risk-averse parents. The subsidiary’s separate legal personality shields the parent from Italian creditor claims (beyond any guarantees voluntarily given).
  • Incentive seekers. Many national and regional tax credits, R&D incentives and grants are available only to Italian-resident companies, not to branches of foreign entities.
  • Group tax planners. Subsidiaries can join an Italian fiscal-unity (consolidato fiscale) group, offsetting profits and losses among resident entities.

Option B: The Branch (Permanent Establishment), What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal and operational reality of a branch

A branch is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent registered with the Italian Companies Register and the local tax authorities. The parent appoints a legal representative in Italy, files the branch’s financial statements, and remains directly liable for the branch’s obligations. Registration is typically faster and cheaper than full incorporation, often completable within one to three weeks, with lower notarial and formation costs.

PE and residency triggers

Under Italian domestic law (aligned with the OECD Model Tax Convention), a branch creates a permanent establishment when the foreign company maintains a fixed place of business, an office, warehouse, construction site exceeding twelve months, or acts through a dependent agent who habitually concludes contracts on its behalf. The 2026 Budget Law reinforced Italy’s alignment with the OECD’s broader PE definitions, meaning that even commissionnaire arrangements and certain digital activities can trigger Italy permanent establishment tax obligations. If any of these thresholds are met, the PE’s Italian-source profits become subject to IRES at 24 % and IRAP on its Italian production value.

Who it suits

  • Market testers. Companies piloting Italian demand before committing to full incorporation.
  • Short-term project operators. Construction, engineering or consultancy projects with a defined end date.
  • Cost-conscious entrants. Where setup speed and low upfront formation cost outweigh the benefits of a separate legal entity.
  • Entities preferring unified accounting. Branches report under the parent’s consolidated accounts, simplifying group reporting, though Italian PE profit allocation adds its own complexity.

Subsidiary vs Branch Italy Tax 2026, Side-by-Side Comparison

The table below is the centrepiece of the branch vs subsidiary Italy analysis. Each dimension is compared in concise terms; the detailed numeric breakdown follows in the dimension-by-dimension section.

Dimension Subsidiary (local company) Branch (permanent establishment)
Legal status Separate Italian legal person with limited liability Not a separate legal person; extension of the foreign parent
Tax residence Resident, taxed on worldwide income (IRES + IRAP) Non-resident, taxed only on Italian-source profits attributable to the PE
IRES (2026) 24 % on taxable profit 24 % on profit allocated to the PE
IRAP (typical 2026) ~3.9 % on net value of production; 95 % exclusion available for certain dividend/financial income under 2026 measures ~3.9 % on Italian production value; limited IRAP reliefs for non-resident structures
Withholding / dividend flow Dividends to non-resident parent: domestic WHT applies but may be reduced or eliminated under treaty or EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive No formal “dividend”, profits repatriated via accounting allocation; taxation occurs at parent level; treaty relief may limit Italian exit tax
VAT Standard 22 % on taxable supplies; registration required Same 22 % VAT regime; branch must register if making taxable supplies
Liability Limited, parent shielded (absent guarantees) Parent directly liable for all branch obligations
Compliance burden Full company accounts, corporate returns, payroll, possible fiscal unity PE profit-allocation documentation, local tax returns, transfer-pricing analysis
Setup time & cost 2–8 weeks; higher notarial and formation costs 1–3 weeks; lower upfront costs
Ideal use case Long-term presence, asset protection, local incentives, group consolidation Market testing, short-term projects, limited Italian operations

The most decisive 2026-specific trade-off sits in the IRAP and dividend rows. The Budget Law’s expanded 95 % IRAP exclusion for qualifying dividend and financial income benefits resident subsidiaries that receive intra-group dividends, reducing their effective IRAP burden. Branches of non-resident entities generally cannot access the same exclusion on equivalent cash flows, because their profit-repatriation mechanism is not structured as a dividend. For groups planning to channel Italian earnings upstream, the subsidiary route often produces a lower combined tax cost after the 2026 changes.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Tax implications, IRES, IRAP, withholding and dividend flows

Tax is usually the deciding factor. Both structures face the same headline IRES rate of 24 %, but the tax implications of choosing a branch vs subsidiary in Italy diverge sharply once IRAP and cross-border profit flows are considered.

Tax item Subsidiary Branch (PE)
IRES, statutory rate (2026) 24 % of taxable profit 24 % on profit attributed to the PE
IRAP, headline rate ~3.9 % (varies by region); 95 % IRAP exclusion on qualifying dividend/financial income under 2026 Budget Law ~3.9 % on Italian production value; limited access to 2026 IRAP exclusions
VAT 22 % standard rate; registration required 22 % standard rate; registration required if taxable supplies made
WHT on dividends to non-resident parent 26 % domestic rate; often reduced to 5–15 % under treaties; potentially 0 % under EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive Not applicable as a dividend; profits repatriated via allocation, parent taxed in home jurisdiction

Illustrative worked example, €1,000,000 pre-tax profit, €500,000 dividend distribution (subsidiary route):

Step Amount (€)
Pre-tax profit 1,000,000
IRES at 24 % 240,000
IRAP (illustrative, 3.9 % on IRAP base, assume base approximates taxable profit for simplicity) ~39,000
After-tax profit available for distribution ~721,000
Dividend distributed 500,000
WHT on dividend, no treaty (26 %) 130,000
WHT on dividend, with EU PSD (0 %) 0
Net received by parent, no treaty 370,000
Net received by parent, EU PSD 500,000

Note: IRAP base is not identical to IRES taxable profit, it excludes certain financial charges and includes personnel costs. The figures above are illustrative. Actual IRAP liability depends on regional rates and the composition of the entity’s production value. Source: PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries, Italy, and MEF 2026 Budget Law summary.

For the branch, the same €1,000,000 in Italian-source profit would attract IRES of €240,000 and IRAP of approximately €39,000 on the allocated production value. However, repatriation to the parent is not a “dividend”, no Italian withholding applies at the point of remittance. Instead, the parent reports the profit (net of Italian taxes) in its home jurisdiction and claims a foreign-tax credit. The net outcome depends entirely on the parent’s home-country tax rate, the applicable treaty, and whether the home jurisdiction grants full credit for Italian taxes paid. Where the parent sits in a low-tax jurisdiction or one that does not fully credit Italian IRAP, the branch route can be less efficient overall.

Cost and timing, setup, annual compliance, payroll

The cost comparison for establishing a branch vs subsidiary in Italy favours the branch on day one but narrows quickly once ongoing compliance costs are factored in.

Cost item Subsidiary (indicative) Branch (indicative)
Formation / registration fees €3,000 – €10,000 €1,000 – €4,000
Annual accounting & tax compliance €5,000 – €15,000+ €4,000 – €12,000+
Transfer-pricing documentation Often required for intra-group transactions Always required for PE profit allocation
Setup time 2 – 8 weeks 1 – 3 weeks

Ranges are indicative and vary by region, complexity and professional adviser. Verify with a local provider before budgeting.

Liability and asset protection

This dimension often settles the question for risk-averse groups. A subsidiary’s separate legal personality means Italian creditors can reach only the subsidiary’s own assets, the parent is shielded unless it has given personal guarantees or parent-company undertakings. A branch offers no such ring-fencing: the parent is directly and fully liable for every obligation the branch incurs. In sectors with significant litigation or product-liability exposure, this makes the liability trade-off between a branch vs subsidiary in Italy a decisive factor favouring incorporation.

Criminal-law exposure also differs. Italian directors and legal representatives of a subsidiary face personal liability under Italian corporate-governance rules. A branch’s legal representative carries similar exposure, but liability flows upward to the parent’s directors under Italian and home-country rules simultaneously.

Regulatory burden and local incentives

Italy offers a range of national and regional incentives, R&D tax credits, Patent Box regimes, investment tax credits for specific regions (notably the Mezzogiorno investment credit) and innovation grants. Many of these are restricted to Italian-resident entities, which means only a subsidiary can claim them. Branches of foreign entities are typically excluded or face additional qualification hurdles.

Conversely, certain sectoral licences (banking, insurance, financial services) impose their own establishment requirements that may or may not align with the subsidiary/branch distinction. Industry observers expect Italian regulators to continue tightening substance requirements for both structures under EU anti-avoidance frameworks.

Transfer pricing and profit attribution

Branches face a unique compliance challenge: Italian tax authorities require PE profits to be determined on an arm’s-length basis, as if the branch were a separate enterprise dealing independently with its head office. This profit-attribution exercise, governed by Article 7 of the OECD Model Tax Convention and Italy’s domestic implementation, demands robust transfer-pricing documentation, functional analysis and benchmarking studies.

Subsidiaries also face transfer-pricing obligations for intra-group transactions, but the legal framework is more straightforward: the subsidiary is a distinct taxpayer, and each related-party transaction is documented individually. The Agenzia delle Entrate actively audits PE profit allocations, and under-allocation is a common audit trigger. Groups choosing the branch route should budget for annual transfer-pricing compliance from day one.

What Changes in 2026, Key Budget Law Measures

The Legge di Bilancio 2026 introduced several measures directly relevant to the subsidiary vs branch Italy tax 2026 decision. The following changes took effect from 1 January 2026 unless otherwise noted:

  • IRES rate unchanged at 24 %. The headline corporate income tax rate remains stable.
  • IRAP, expanded 95 % exclusion for dividend and financial income. Resident companies (subsidiaries) can exclude 95 % of qualifying dividend and financial income from the IRAP tax base. This materially reduces the IRAP cost for holding and investment vehicles receiving intra-group dividends. Branches of non-resident entities generally cannot access this exclusion on equivalent flows.
  • Substitute tax and residency thresholds adjusted. The flat substitute tax available to high-net-worth individuals transferring tax residence to Italy has been increased, and residency criteria have been tightened. While primarily an individual measure, it affects the structuring decisions of owner-managed businesses and family offices choosing between personal relocation and corporate presence.
  • PE definition tightened. Italy’s PE rules now more closely mirror the OECD’s post-BEPS definition, expanding the scope of activities that create a taxable presence. Commissionnaire arrangements and certain preparatory or auxiliary activities that previously fell outside PE scope may now trigger Italian taxation.
  • Dividend withholding, treaty and directive interaction clarified. MEF guidance confirms that the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive continues to provide 0 % withholding on qualifying dividends between EU parent and Italian subsidiary, provided anti-abuse conditions are met.

Sources: MEF, Main measures of the 2026 Budget Law; PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries, Italy; A&O Shearman, Italy’s 2026 Budget Law: Practical Takeaways for Businesses.

Decision Framework: Which Is Better, Subsidiary or Branch?

The table below maps common investor priorities to a recommended structure. Use it as a starting checklist, then verify with an Italian tax adviser for your specific fact pattern.

If your priority is… Choose…
Asset protection and limiting parent liability Subsidiary
Access to Italian tax credits, R&D incentives or regional grants Subsidiary
Efficient dividend repatriation under EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive Subsidiary
Group fiscal-unity consolidation in Italy Subsidiary
Lowest effective IRAP on dividend/financial income (2026 measures) Subsidiary
Fast market testing with minimal upfront cost Branch
Short-term project (construction, consulting) with defined end date Branch
Avoiding Italian withholding on profit repatriation Branch (but parent-level taxation applies)
Unified group accounting without a separate Italian entity Branch

Choose a subsidiary when:

  • You plan a permanent Italian presence with employees, assets and local contracts.
  • You need to shield the parent from Italian creditor claims.
  • You want access to Italian and EU tax incentives and the 2026 IRAP dividend exclusion.
  • Your home jurisdiction fully credits Italian taxes, making dividend repatriation via the EU directive efficient.
  • You anticipate joining or forming an Italian fiscal-unity group.

Choose a branch when:

  • You are testing the Italian market before committing to a long-term presence.
  • Your project has a defined end date and limited Italian assets at risk.
  • You prefer not to maintain a separate legal entity and its associated governance costs.
  • Your parent’s home jurisdiction offers a full foreign-tax credit, making direct PE taxation and profit repatriation more efficient than dividend flows.
  • Your Italian activity is genuinely limited and unlikely to trigger enhanced PE scrutiny under the tightened 2026 rules.

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Subsidiary vs Branch Decision

Most investors can narrow the choice using the framework above, but certain situations demand specialist Italian tax and corporate counsel before any registration steps are taken:

  • Complex agency or commissionnaire arrangements that may inadvertently create a PE under the tightened 2026 definitions, incorrect structuring can result in unexpected Italian tax liability for the entire foreign group.
  • M&A transactions where the target is an existing Italian company or branch, and the acquirer must model post-acquisition tax efficiency under the new IRAP and dividend rules.
  • Regulated sectors (banking, insurance, energy, pharmaceuticals) where the choice of structure affects licensing, capital requirements and supervisory obligations.
  • Multi-jurisdictional tax planning involving holding structures, IP arrangements, or transfer-pricing models that interact with Italian, EU and OECD anti-avoidance rules.
  • High-value dividend repatriation (generally above €500,000 annually) where treaty shopping risk, anti-abuse provisions or beneficial-ownership challenges could block withholding-tax relief.

If any of these scenarios applies, a tailored tax-modelling session with an Italian tax specialist will typically save multiples of its cost in avoided tax exposure and compliance penalties.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paolo Pizzocri at Paolo Pizzocri Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministero dell’Economia e delle Finanze (MEF), Main measures of the 2026 Budget Law
  2. PwC, Italy: Corporate Tax Summary (Worldwide Tax Summaries)
  3. Agenzia delle Entrate, Official Tax Guidance
  4. Global Law Experts, Italy 2026 Dividend Tax and IRAP Changes
  5. A&O Shearman, Italy’s 2026 Budget Law: Practical Takeaways for Businesses
  6. TaxRavens, Italy Corporate Taxation
  7. OECD, Model Tax Convention and Commentary
  8. European Commission, Parent-Subsidiary Directive

FAQs

Is it better to set up a branch or a subsidiary in Italy?
It depends on your timeline, liability tolerance and profit-repatriation strategy. Choose a subsidiary for long-term presence, asset protection and access to Italian tax incentives. Choose a branch for short-term projects, fast setup and lower formation costs. The decision framework above maps specific priorities to each structure.
Both face the same 24 % IRES rate. The subsidiary usually wins on IRAP efficiency (particularly under the 2026 expanded 95 % exclusion for dividend income) and on dividend repatriation via the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive (potentially 0 % withholding). The branch avoids Italian withholding on profit remittance, but the parent must report and pay tax in its home jurisdiction, so the net tax outcome depends on the home-country rate and credit mechanisms.
Yes. A registered branch is, by definition, a permanent establishment. Italy taxes the PE on profits attributable to its Italian activities at the standard IRES rate of 24 % plus IRAP. The 2026 Budget Law tightened PE definitions, so even activities previously considered preparatory or auxiliary may now trigger full taxation.
For straightforward, single-jurisdiction entries with modest revenue projections, the decision framework in this guide may suffice for initial planning. However, cross-border structures, regulated industries, M&A scenarios and high-value dividend flows all carry sufficient complexity and risk to warrant professional advice before registration.
Yes. Conversion is possible through a contribution-in-kind of the branch’s assets and liabilities into a newly incorporated Italian company. The process involves notarisation, valuation, re-registration and potential tax consequences, including a deemed disposal of assets that may trigger capital-gains tax at the branch level. Early planning with a tax adviser can structure the conversion to minimise these costs, but the process typically takes two to four months and incurs professional fees comparable to a new incorporation.
Choosing the wrong structure can lead to unexpected double taxation (where both Italy and the home country tax the same income without adequate credit relief), loss of access to Italian incentives and tax credits, increased IRAP exposure, full parent-company liability for Italian creditor claims (in the branch scenario), or transfer-pricing audit adjustments on PE profit allocations. Remediation, converting from branch to subsidiary or vice versa, is possible but involves transaction costs, potential exit taxes and a period of regulatory uncertainty. The most cost-effective approach is to model both options with current 2026 rates before committing.
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Subsidiary vs Branch in Italy, Which Is Better for Tax in 2026? a Decision Guide for Investors and Cfos

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