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Italy’s 2026 Budget Law (Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025) introduced sweeping corporate tax changes Italy-based entities must now navigate, from restructured IRPEF brackets and revised substitute tax rules to the Rottamazione Quinquies amnesty programme and sector-specific IRAP increases. The law, published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale and operative from 1 January 2026, demands immediate compliance decisions from investee companies recalibrating dividend policies, foundations reassessing donor treatment under the reformed lump-sum regime for new residents, and municipalities managing public receivables under the new amnesty window. This guide translates the legislative text into entity-specific action plans, compliance timelines and checklists so that CFOs, in-house counsel, foundation officers and municipal finance teams can identify what to do, and by when.
Whether your organisation needs to update withholding calculations, elect into a substitute tax regime or determine which municipal receivables qualify for settlement under Rottamazione Quinquies 2026, the 30/60/90-day framework below provides a structured path forward. For a detailed look at how these measures affect financial reporting, see also the pay transparency obligations now in force for Italian employers.
The 2026 Budget Law Italy enacted through Law No. 199/2025 contains several interlocking tax measures. Each targets a different constituency, individual taxpayers, corporations, non-profits and local authorities, but all share a common effective date of 1 January 2026. The following summary identifies the provisions most relevant to the three entity types addressed in this guide.
The primary legal text is Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025, published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale on the same date and effective from 1 January 2026. The Ministero dell’Economia e delle Finanze (MEF) has published an official summary of the law’s main measures. Implementing circulars from the Agenzia delle Entrate provide operational guidance on filing deadlines, election procedures and offset restrictions.
All provisions of the 2026 Budget Law took effect on 1 January 2026 unless a specific article states a different commencement date. The Rottamazione Quinquies programme operates according to its own application and instalment deadlines, which are set out in the implementing provisions of the law.
For investee companies, the 2026 Budget Law creates a matrix of interconnected compliance tasks. The corporate tax changes Italy’s legislature enacted affect dividend distributions, substitute tax elections, IRAP exposure and offset strategies simultaneously. CFOs and in-house tax counsel must treat these as an integrated compliance programme rather than isolated adjustments.
The standard IRES (corporate income tax) rate remains at 24%, but the practical tax burden for many investee companies will increase due to the combination of higher IRAP rates in affected sectors, restricted offset mechanisms and revised substitute tax treatment of certain financial income. Industry observers expect the cumulative effect to be particularly significant for energy-sector investee companies and holding structures distributing dividends to individuals who previously benefited from the old lump-sum regime.
The 2026 Budget Law adjusts the substitute tax treatment applicable to dividends and certain capital gains distributed by investee companies. Under the revised framework, the substitute tax on qualifying financial income has been recalibrated, requiring companies to update withholding calculations applied at the point of distribution.
Consider a simplified example: an investee company distributing €100,000 in dividends to an individual shareholder under the prior regime would have applied a 26% substitute tax, yielding a €26,000 withholding. Under the revised rules, the applicable rate or the base on which the substitute tax is calculated may differ depending on the shareholder’s residency status and whether they have elected into the lump-sum regime. Tax teams must now verify each shareholder’s status before processing distributions.
Immediate actions for dividend-distributing companies include:
| Measure | Pre-2026 Position | Post-2026 Position & Effective Date |
|---|---|---|
| Substitute tax on qualifying dividends to individuals | 26% flat rate on gross dividend | Revised calculation base; verify shareholder regime status, effective 1 Jan 2026 |
| Lump-sum regime substitute tax (new residents) | €100,000 annual flat tax on foreign-source income | Increased annual amount with tightened eligibility, effective 1 Jan 2026 |
| IRAP, energy sector | Standard 3.9% | Increased sector-specific rate, effective 1 Jan 2026 |
| Tax credit offset rules | Broad offset permitted with standard limits | New prohibitions and procedural requirements, effective 1 Jan 2026 |
The IRAP increase for energy companies represents one of the most immediately impactful corporate tax changes Italy introduced in the 2026 Budget Law. Companies operating in the energy sector must recalculate their regional tax liability and update quarterly provisional payment estimates accordingly.
CFOs should model the following scenarios:
For companies outside the energy sector, the standard IRAP rate remains unchanged, but the new offset prohibition rules may still affect how IRAP liabilities interact with available tax credits. Every investee company should confirm that its offset strategy remains compliant.
The 2026 Budget Law requires investee companies to revisit their deferred tax calculations. Where deferred tax assets or liabilities were recognised based on prior substitute tax rates or IRAP rates, these must be remeasured at the new rates as of the date the law became effective. For entities reporting under IAS 12, the remeasurement should be reflected in the period in which the law was substantively enacted, which, for Law No. 199/2025, is the financial year beginning 1 January 2026.
Tax provisioning for interim and annual financial statements must also incorporate the revised offset rules. Where a company previously planned to offset a tax liability against a specific credit, it must now verify that the offset remains permitted under the new Agenzia delle Entrate guidance. For more on the accounting implications, see the detailed analysis in the comparison of trusts and foundations which addresses structural considerations relevant to holding entities.
Italian foundations and non-profit entities face a distinct set of compliance challenges under the 2026 Budget Law. While foundations are generally exempt from IRES on institutional income, they remain subject to tax on commercial income, investment returns and certain financial distributions. The revised substitute tax rules and the recalibrated lump-sum regime for new residents create ripple effects that foundation governance teams must address promptly.
The lump-sum regime for new residents, which allows qualifying individuals to pay a flat annual substitute tax on all foreign-source income, has been significantly tightened. The annual flat-tax amount has been increased, and eligibility conditions now require a longer period of prior non-residency before an individual can elect into the regime.
For foundations, the practical impact is twofold. First, donors who relocated to Italy under the previous regime may face higher tax burdens on their foreign-source income, potentially reducing their capacity or willingness to make charitable contributions. Second, foundation board members or key personnel who are lump-sum regime beneficiaries must reassess their own tax position and determine whether continued participation in the regime remains advantageous.
Foundation governance officers should:
Where foundations receive investment income, such as dividends from investee companies, interest or capital gains, the applicable substitute tax treatment has changed. Foundations must review the classification of their income streams and apply the correct revised rates. This includes verifying whether any tax credits previously claimed remain available under the new offset prohibition rules.
Foundations holding equity stakes in investee companies should coordinate with those companies’ tax teams to ensure consistent treatment of dividend withholdings and to obtain updated withholding certificates reflecting the new rates.
The 2026 Budget Law does not introduce entirely new reporting forms for foundations, but the changed tax parameters mean that existing returns and declarations must be updated. Foundations should review their annual tax filings (Modello UNICO ENC) to ensure that income classifications, substitute tax calculations and credit claims reflect the post-reform position. Grant agreements with conditions tied to tax-efficient structures, such as matched-giving programmes linked to donor tax benefits, should be reviewed for continued viability. For background on structural distinctions, the guide to trusts versus foundations provides useful context.
Municipal finance offices face their own distinct compliance burden under the 2026 Budget Law. The introduction of Rottamazione Quinquies, the fifth iteration of Italy’s facilitated tax-debt settlement programme, combined with updated offset prohibition rules, requires municipalities to review their receivables portfolios and adapt collection strategies.
Rottamazione Quinquies allows taxpayers to settle outstanding tax debts by paying the original tax amount (the “capital”) while benefiting from the cancellation or substantial reduction of penalties, interest and ancillary charges. The programme covers debts entrusted to the collection agent (Agenzia delle Entrate-Riscossione) within a defined reference period set out in the implementing provisions of Law No. 199/2025.
For municipalities that have entrusted local tax collection to the national agent, this means a potential reduction in the face value of receivables on their balance sheets. Municipal finance officers must:
Taxpayers wishing to access the programme must submit an application by the deadline specified in the law and may pay in instalments over a defined period. Municipal finance teams should monitor application volumes and instalment compliance to maintain accurate receivables reporting.
The new offset prohibition rules affect municipalities in two ways. First, municipal taxpayers who previously offset local tax liabilities against national tax credits may find that route blocked, increasing the likelihood of direct payment or settlement through Rottamazione Quinquies. Second, municipalities themselves must ensure that any credits they claim against national levies comply with the revised procedural requirements.
Municipal finance teams should review all pending offset claims and verify their continued validity with the Agenzia delle Entrate. Where an offset is no longer permitted, alternative payment or collection strategies must be developed promptly to avoid compliance gaps in municipal tax compliance Italy’s regulatory framework now demands.
The following consolidated timeline provides entity-specific tasks organised by urgency. Each entity type, investee companies, foundations and municipalities, faces different deadlines, but the 30/60/90-day framework ensures that the most critical decisions are addressed first.
Beyond immediate compliance, the corporate tax changes Italy introduced in the 2026 Budget Law create medium-term planning opportunities and risks. Investee companies should consider whether restructuring dividend timing, accelerating or deferring distributions, could optimise the substitute tax outcome for shareholders. Transfer pricing documentation should be reviewed where cross-border intercompany flows interact with the revised IRAP treatment, particularly for energy-sector multinationals.
The IRPEF 2026 changes also have payroll implications. Companies employing senior executives whose compensation packages include equity-linked elements or deferred bonus structures must recalculate the personal tax impact and adjust gross-up provisions in employment agreements accordingly. Early engagement with payroll providers is essential. For employers also navigating the new pay transparency rules, coordinating tax and employment-law compliance into a single project plan is recommended.
Foundations considering investment reallocations should model the after-tax return under the new substitute tax reduction 2026 parameters before committing capital. Where a foundation’s investment portfolio includes Italian real estate, the interaction between revised property taxation rules and the foundation’s tax-exempt status should be examined, readers can find relevant background in the guide to residential lease agreements in Italy.
Entities facing ambiguous application of the new rules, particularly around the scope of the offset prohibition or the eligibility criteria for the revised lump-sum regime, should consider filing a ruling request (interpello) with the Agenzia delle Entrate. Ruling requests are appropriate where the financial exposure is material, the legal text is open to multiple interpretations and the entity needs certainty before making an irrevocable election. Timing is critical: the Agenzia delle Entrate typically responds within 90 days, so applications should be submitted as early as possible.
The following table summarises the key new or changed reporting obligations and elections introduced by the 2026 Budget Law, organised by entity type. Use this as a quick-reference compliance matrix.
| Entity Type | Key New/Changed Obligations or Elections | Timing / Deadline / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Investee companies | Update dividend withholding and substitute tax election; reassess IRAP exposure (energy sector); verify offset claims against new prohibitions; remeasure deferred tax | Review immediately; include in Q1 tax calendar; elections typically exercised within the annual tax return filing period |
| Foundations / Non-profits | Reassess lump-sum donor/resident status impacts; apply revised substitute tax rates to investment income; update grant agreements with tax-linked terms | Update governance and grant agreements within 60 days; file Modello UNICO ENC by standard deadline |
| Municipalities | Identify receivables eligible for Rottamazione Quinquies; monitor offset prohibition and enforcement rule changes; update revenue forecasts | Municipal finance to confirm by next council cycle; complete receivables audit within 30 days; full implementation within 90 days |
Effective documentation is the foundation of audit-readiness. For each material tax decision taken in response to the 2026 Budget Law, entities should create a contemporaneous written record that includes the legal basis relied upon, the factual analysis performed, the financial impact modelled and the decision reached. Board minutes should reflect that the governing body considered the tax reforms and approved the entity’s compliance response.
For investee companies, this means preparing a tax memorandum for each significant election, such as a substitute tax choice or an IRAP recalculation, and retaining copies of any correspondence with the Agenzia delle Entrate. Foundations should document the donor-status review and its impact on projected revenues. Municipalities should maintain records of the receivables audit, Rottamazione Quinquies eligibility assessments and budget revision approvals. All entities should archive recalculation worksheets showing the before-and-after impact of the new rules, as these will be the first documents requested in any audit or inspection. Consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with professionals who can assist with audit preparation.
Certain scenarios arising from the corporate tax changes Italy implemented in the 2026 Budget Law warrant bespoke legal advice rather than general guidance. These include complex Rottamazione Quinquies elections involving multiple tax periods, large-scale corporate restructurings where IRAP and substitute tax interactions create material uncertainty, cross-border dividend flows requiring treaty analysis and any situation where an interpello (ruling request) to the Agenzia delle Entrate is contemplated. Entities facing penalties, disputes or time-sensitive elections should engage specialist tax counsel promptly to protect their position.
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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