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The rules governing VAT for municipalities in Italy changed materially on 1 January 2026, when the consolidated VAT code (Testo Unico IVA) entered into force alongside targeted amendments introduced by the Budget Law 2026 (Legge di Bilancio 2026). Together, these measures redraw the boundaries between taxable supplies, non‑taxable grants and exempt in‑house services that flow between Italian public bodies, foundations and their investee companies (società partecipate). Municipal legal counsels and foundation directors who have not yet updated procurement contracts, invoicing protocols and VAT recovery procedures now face concrete financial exposure, from irrecoverable input VAT to penalties for incorrect reverse‑charge treatment. This guide sets out the practical compliance steps that every affected organisation should prioritise in the second half of 2026.
If your organisation is an Italian municipality, a foundation controlled by or affiliated with a public body, or a company in which either of these holds a participation, the Italy 2026 VAT changes require you to act now. The consolidated VAT code and the Budget Law 2026 VAT provisions have altered the classification of several routine transactions, and the cost of getting it wrong falls on both the supplier and the recipient.
Five priority actions for the second half of 2026:
Organisations that complete these steps by Q3 2026 will significantly reduce the risk of assessment, interest charges and reputational damage from non‑compliance.
The Budget Law 2026, published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale and effective from 1 January 2026, introduced several VAT‑specific amendments aimed at public bodies and their controlled entities. Among the most significant is the expansion of the mandatory reverse‑charge mechanism to additional categories of services procured by municipalities and other public administrations, aligning Italian practice more closely with the EU VAT Directive framework. The law also tightened the conditions under which grants paid by a municipality to a foundation or investee company can be treated as outside the scope of VAT, requiring clearer documentation that the payment does not constitute consideration for a supply.
What this means in practice:
The consolidated VAT code reorganises and, in places, substantively amends the provisions formerly scattered across Presidential Decree 633/1972 and subsequent legislative decrees. For municipalities and foundations, the most consequential changes relate to the definition of “economic activity” carried out by public bodies, the treatment of in‑house supplies between a controlling entity and its investee company, and the procedural requirements for claiming VAT refunds on exempt or partially exempt transactions.
The consolidated code also codifies Agenzia delle Entrate interpretative guidance that had previously existed only in administrative circulars, giving that guidance the force of primary legislation. Industry observers expect this codification to reduce, but not eliminate, disputes over the VAT treatment of shared services and cost‑sharing arrangements between municipalities and their investee companies.
| Date | Measure | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Consolidated VAT Code enters into force | Replaces and amends DPR 633/1972; new definitions of taxable activity for public bodies; revised refund procedures |
| 1 January 2026 | Budget Law 2026, VAT provisions effective | Extended reverse charge for municipal procurement; tighter grant‑vs‑supply classification; updated split‑payment interaction rules |
| 30 June 2026 | First periodic VAT return under new rules | Entities must apply the new pro‑rata calculation methodology; corrective invoices for Q1 errors due |
| 31 December 2026 | Deadline for voluntary remediation of pre‑2026 positions | Reduced penalties available for voluntary corrections filed before year‑end |
When a municipality procures goods or services through a public tender, the transaction is generally subject to VAT at the applicable rate. The consolidated VAT code Italy provisions confirm that the supplier charges VAT on the invoice, and the municipality, as a public body, may be required to apply the split‑payment mechanism, remitting the VAT portion directly to the Treasury rather than paying it to the supplier. For certain construction and maintenance services now captured by the expanded reverse‑charge rules introduced by the Budget Law 2026, the municipality itself must self‑assess the VAT.
Practical tip: Before approving any procurement invoice, finance teams should classify the supply into one of three categories: (1) standard VAT with split payment, (2) reverse charge, or (3) exempt. Misclassification triggers penalties for both parties.
Not every payment from a municipality to a foundation or investee company constitutes consideration for a supply. Genuine grants, payments made without requiring a specific service in return, remain outside the scope of VAT. However, the consolidated code now requires that the absence of a supply relationship be documented at the time of payment, not retrospectively. Where a grant is later found to be linked to a measurable deliverable, the Agenzia delle Entrate may reclassify it as consideration for a taxable supply, with VAT, interest and penalties assessed from the date of original payment.
Municipalities often provide administrative, IT or facility‑management services to their investee companies (or vice versa) through cost‑sharing arrangements. The VAT treatment of investee companies in these scenarios depends on whether the arrangement constitutes a supply for consideration. Under the consolidated code, a recharge at cost, without any margin, may still be treated as a taxable supply if the recipient could have obtained the same service from a third party on the open market. The likely practical effect is that more shared‑service arrangements will require VAT invoicing than was previously assumed.
| Transaction Type | VAT Treatment Under Consolidated Code (2026) | Practical Implication for Municipalities / Foundations |
|---|---|---|
| Public works contract (tendered) | Generally taxable at standard rate; split payment or reverse charge may apply depending on supply category | Review each procurement invoice; confirm correct mechanism before payment |
| Grant (non‑consideration) | Outside scope of VAT, but only if genuinely gratuitous and documented as such | Prepare and retain contemporaneous documentation evidencing grant purpose |
| Shared service between municipality & investee | Likely taxable where a supply for consideration exists, even if recharged at cost | Assess each arrangement against the “open market” test; issue VAT invoices where required |
| Foundation performing exempt public‑interest activity | Exempt under specific consolidated code provisions; no input VAT recovery on related costs | Segregate exempt activities in accounting records; apply correct pro‑rata deduction |
Many existing contracts between municipalities or foundations and their investee companies were drafted under the old DPR 633/1972 framework. Where those contracts specify a price “inclusive of VAT” or allocate reverse‑charge responsibility based on superseded rules, both parties face the risk that the price no longer reflects the correct tax treatment. If the municipality has been absorbing VAT that should have been reverse‑charged, or if the investee company has been charging VAT on what is now an exempt supply, the financial exposure can be substantial.
Quick risk: A single misclassified reverse‑charge obligation on a large infrastructure‑services contract can generate a six‑figure VAT exposure within one reporting period.
VAT recovery for foundations is particularly sensitive. Under the consolidated code, a foundation that performs a mix of taxable and exempt activities must recalculate its pro‑rata deduction percentage using the methodology now codified in the primary legislation. Foundations that have continued to apply the old methodology risk either over‑deducting (triggering penalties) or under‑deducting (losing legitimate refund entitlements). Investee companies providing services to multiple public‑body shareholders face the same issue where different shareholders attract different VAT treatments.
Where an investee company provides services across multiple municipalities, particularly through seconded staff or dedicated on‑site offices, the consolidated code’s revised definition of economic activity may create an argument that a separate taxable presence exists in each location. While this risk is most acute for cross‑border arrangements, it can also arise domestically where municipal boundaries define different regulatory or reporting obligations.
Decision tree, who invoices whom?
Municipal procurement VAT compliance begins at the contract‑drafting stage. The following clause types should be flagged for immediate review in every active and template contract:
The following illustrative clauses are provided as starting points for legal review. They must be adapted to the specific facts of each transaction.
Clause 1, VAT Gross‑Up:
“The Contract Price is exclusive of VAT. The Supplier shall add VAT at the rate applicable under the Consolidated VAT Code (Testo Unico IVA) in force at the date of the relevant taxable event. If the applicable VAT rate or mechanism changes during the term of this Contract, the invoiced amount shall be adjusted accordingly without requiring a contract amendment.”
Clause 2, Reverse‑Charge Allocation:
“Where the supply falls within the scope of the reverse‑charge mechanism under Article [X] of the Consolidated VAT Code, the Supplier shall issue an invoice without VAT, noting ‘reverse charge, Article [X] Testo Unico IVA.’ The Municipality shall self‑assess the VAT and record it in the appropriate VAT register within the period prescribed by law.”
Clause 3, VAT Audit Cooperation:
“Each party shall cooperate promptly and in good faith with any VAT audit or enquiry initiated by the Agenzia delle Entrate in relation to transactions under this Contract, including by providing copies of invoices, delivery notes and internal memoranda within 15 business days of a written request.”
The table below provides a phased remediation plan that municipal legal teams, foundation directors and investee‑company CFOs can adapt to their specific circumstances. The plan assumes the organisation has not yet completed a full review of its 2026 VAT position.
| Task | Owner | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Map all active contracts with public bodies, foundations and investee companies; flag VAT clauses for review | Municipal legal / procurement | Within 30 days |
| Identify invoices issued since 1 Jan 2026 that applied incorrect VAT treatment; prepare corrective credit notes | Finance / accounting | Within 30 days |
| Confirm VAT registration status of each investee company and foundation under the consolidated code | Tax / compliance | Within 30 days |
| Recalculate pro‑rata VAT deduction percentages for mixed‑activity entities | Finance / external tax adviser | Within 90 days |
| Amend template procurement contracts and tender documents to incorporate 2026 VAT clauses | Municipal legal / procurement | Within 90 days |
| Deliver training sessions for procurement officers, invoice approvers and finance staff | HR / compliance | Within 90 days |
| File voluntary corrections for any pre‑2026 VAT positions identified as incorrect | Tax / external tax adviser | By 31 December 2026 |
| Conduct annual VAT health check across all municipal and foundation entities | Internal audit / external counsel | Annually (Q1) |
Where VAT has been incorrectly charged, for example, a supplier invoiced standard‑rate VAT on a supply that should have been subject to reverse charge, the correction process depends on whether the error is identified by the parties or by the Agenzia delle Entrate. If the parties identify the error, the supplier should issue a corrective credit note (nota di credito) and a new invoice with the correct treatment. The recipient must adjust its input VAT records accordingly. If the error is identified during an audit, the Agenzia may impose penalties and interest, though reduced penalties are available for voluntary remediation filed before the audit concludes.
The right to claim a VAT refund for overpaid or incorrectly charged VAT is subject to a limitation period that, under the consolidated VAT code, is generally aligned with the standard assessment period. Organisations should be aware that the limitation clock starts from the date the return was filed (or should have been filed), not from the date of the invoice. The most common trap for foundations pursuing VAT recovery is failing to segregate exempt and taxable activities in their accounting records, which makes it difficult to substantiate the correct pro‑rata deduction in the event of a challenge.
Italy’s financial transaction tax (imposta sulle transazioni finanziarie) applies to transfers of equity participations in Italian companies. Where a municipality or foundation disposes of shares in an investee company, the transaction may trigger this tax in addition to any capital gains liability. The current rate structure and exemptions should be verified against the most recent Agenzia delle Entrate guidance, as thresholds have been adjusted periodically.
VAT for municipalities in Italy should not be confused with local property and income taxes. The Imposta Municipale Unica (IMU) is a property tax levied by municipalities on real estate holdings, while regional and municipal surcharges (addizionali) apply to personal and, in some cases, corporate income. These levies operate independently of VAT and are not affected by the consolidated VAT code changes, but they form part of the broader tax environment that investee‑company finance teams must manage.
A municipality provides centralised IT support to its wholly owned waste‑management company. Under a cost‑sharing agreement, the municipality recharges the investee company at cost, with no margin. Before 2026, this arrangement was treated as outside the scope of VAT on the basis that no consideration existed. Under the consolidated VAT code, the Agenzia delle Entrate’s codified guidance means the recharge is likely to be treated as a taxable supply, because the investee company could have procured the same service on the open market. The municipality must now issue a VAT invoice for the recharge, and the investee company can deduct the input VAT, provided the service is used for its own taxable activities.
Journal entry (investee company): Debit IT services expense; debit input VAT recoverable; credit accounts payable to municipality.
A cultural foundation receives an EU structural fund grant to renovate a historic building. The foundation subcontracts the renovation work to an investee construction company. The grant itself is outside the scope of VAT (no supply from the foundation to the EU). However, the construction services supplied by the investee company to the foundation are taxable. The foundation, performing predominantly exempt cultural activities, has a low pro‑rata deduction percentage and can recover only a fraction of the input VAT on the construction invoices. The irrecoverable VAT becomes a real project cost that should have been budgeted at the grant‑application stage.
Practical tip: Foundations applying for grant funding should include irrecoverable VAT as an eligible cost in the project budget wherever the grant rules permit.
The 2026 changes to VAT for municipalities in Italy, driven by the Budget Law 2026 and the consolidated VAT code, are not theoretical. They require concrete action from every municipality, foundation and investee company that transacts with public bodies. The five most important steps remain: audit active contracts, correct open invoices, confirm registration status, recalculate pro‑rata deductions and train the people responsible for day‑to‑day compliance. Organisations that delay risk financial penalties, irrecoverable VAT costs and reputational exposure in an environment where the Agenzia delle Entrate has signalled increased enforcement attention to public‑sector VAT compliance.
A tailored legal review, conducted by counsel experienced with the intersection of Italian tax law and public procurement, is the most effective way to identify and close compliance gaps before they become liabilities. Readers seeking guidance specific to their organisational structure can find a specialist lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
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.
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