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Last updated: 7 July 2026
Understanding how retention of title can protect your business is critical for every supplier trading on credit in Italy, where buyer insolvency can leave unpaid vendors with nothing more than an unsecured claim. Under Article 1523 of the Codice Civile, a properly drafted patto di riservato dominio (reservation of title) allows the seller to retain legal ownership of goods until the buyer pays the full purchase price, but the clause is only as strong as the evidence behind it. The decisive factor in Italian insolvency proceedings is whether the supplier can demonstrate data certa, a date certain at law, for every invoice, contract and delivery note, established before the buyer’s crisis event.
This guide sets out the legal framework, the evidence standards, the drafting requirements and a step-by-step enforcement workflow for judicial liquidation (liquidazione giudiziale) under Italy’s Business Crisis and Insolvency Code (D. Lgs. 14/2019, the CCII).
Retention of title in Italy is governed primarily by Article 1523 of the Codice Civile, which regulates the vendita con riserva della proprietà, a sale in which the seller reserves ownership of the goods until the buyer completes payment. The provision states that in an instalment sale with reservation of title, the buyer acquires ownership only upon payment of the final instalment, even though risk in the goods passes to the buyer at the moment of delivery. The clause therefore creates a powerful separation: the buyer possesses the goods and bears the risk of loss, but the seller remains the legal owner until the last euro is received.
Article 1524 of the Codice Civile adds a further layer concerning opponibilità, the enforceability of the reservation against third parties. For movable property that is not registered, the ROT clause is opposable to third-party creditors of the buyer only if it results from a document bearing data certa that pre-dates any attachment or insolvency proceedings. For goods requiring registration (such as motor vehicles), the clause must also be transcribed in the relevant public register to be effective against third parties.
A practical example illustrates the distinction: a steel supplier ships €150,000 worth of structural beams to a construction company on 90-day payment terms, with a reservation of title clause in the signed supply contract. If the buyer enters judicial liquidation before payment, the supplier can reclaim those beams, but only if the contract (or the invoices referencing it) has data certa pre-dating the insolvency declaration. Without that timestamped proof, the goods fall into the insolvency estate, and the supplier becomes an ordinary unsecured creditor.
For trade suppliers, a well-executed reservation of title in Italy offers three core advantages over relying solely on contractual payment terms:
However, retention of title is not without limits. Industry observers expect the following risks to remain common pain points in 2026:
No aspect of reservation of title Italy practice is more consequential than data certa. Article 2704 of the Codice Civile establishes the general rule: a private writing (scrittura privata) is effective against third parties from the date it can be shown to have existed, that is, from the date the document acquires data certa, and not merely from the date written on its face. Without data certa, a contract or invoice is treated as having no provable date at all when opposed by the insolvency curator or third-party creditors.
Italian law recognises several methods for establishing a date certain at law. Each carries different weight before the court and the curator:
By contrast, a simple private signature, even witnessed, does not automatically produce data certa under Article 2704 CC. A supplier who relies solely on a signed contract without any of the methods above risks having the curator argue that the document could have been created after the insolvency event.
Consider two scenarios to illustrate the difference. In the first, a machinery parts supplier sends invoices by ordinary email and keeps signed delivery notes in a drawer. The buyer enters liquidazione giudiziale. The curator challenges the invoices because they have no data certa; the supplier’s ROT claim collapses, and the parts become estate assets. In the second scenario, the same supplier sends every invoice via PEC, applies a qualified timestamp to the signed framework supply contract, and stores all documents under conservazione a norma. The curator cannot credibly challenge the dates, and the supplier proceeds to revindication. The likely practical effect of systematic timestamping is the difference between recovering goods and writing off the entire receivable.
A retention of title clause must be clear, specific and incorporated into every relevant document in the supply chain, from the framework agreement to individual invoices and delivery notes. Below are two model clauses adapted for Italian law.
“La proprietà delle merci oggetto della presente vendita resta riservata al Venditore ai sensi dell’art. 1523 c.c. fino all’integrale pagamento del prezzo. Il Compratore acquisisce la proprietà delle merci solo al momento del saldo completo di tutti gli importi dovuti.”
(Translation: Ownership of the goods sold hereunder is reserved to the Seller pursuant to Art. 1523 CC until full payment of the price. The Buyer acquires ownership only upon complete settlement of all amounts due.)
“1. La proprietà delle merci è riservata al Venditore fino al pagamento integrale del prezzo, comprensivo di interessi ed eventuali spese accessorie. 2. In caso di rivendita delle merci da parte del Compratore prima del pagamento integrale, i crediti derivanti dalla rivendita si intendono ceduti al Venditore fino a concorrenza dell’importo dovuto. 3. Il Compratore è tenuto a conservare le merci separatamente e in modo identificabile, indicando che sono soggette a riserva di proprietà.”
When early warning signals suggest a buyer may be heading towards insolvency, delayed payments, requests for extended terms, rumours of financial distress, suppliers should act immediately to preserve their retention of title position. The following numbered steps form a practical checklist:
Once a buyer enters judicial liquidation under the CCII (D.Lgs. 14/2019), the supplier’s enforcement of a ROT clause in Italy insolvency follows a structured procedure. The process differs from insolvency enforcement in other jurisdictions, for instance, the procedural comparators in statutory demand vs winding-up proceedings, because Italian law places a specific burden of proof on the curator.
Before making any formal filing, prepare the complete evidence package: the signed supply contract (with data certa), all invoices referencing the ROT clause (with PEC delivery receipts or qualified timestamps), delivery notes, transport documents, and any PEC correspondence asserting the reservation. This package must demonstrate an unbroken chain from contract through delivery to the insolvency declaration date.
The supplier must formally notify the court-appointed curator (curatore) of the ROT claim and file an azione di rivendica (revindication action) requesting return of the goods. This filing should identify each item claimed (by invoice number, description, serial number where available) and attach the evidence packet. The claim must be filed within the deadlines for creditor claims established by the court in its liquidation order.
This is where Italian law offers a significant advantage to well-prepared suppliers. Under established Corte di Cassazione jurisprudence (notably Cass. n. 36541/2021 and Cass. n. 3746/2023), the burden of proof operates as follows: the supplier must prove the existence of the ROT clause and its data certa pre-dating the insolvency; once that threshold is met, the curator bears the burden of proving that the buyer had made full payment (integrale pagamento) for the goods. If the curator cannot produce evidence of complete payment, the revindication succeeds.
This allocation of the proof burden is critical. The curator typically controls the buyer’s records and bank statements. If those records show outstanding invoices, which they usually do, given the buyer has defaulted, the curator will struggle to discharge the burden. Early indications suggest that curators increasingly concede ROT claims when confronted with properly timestamped evidence, rather than expend estate resources on litigation they are likely to lose.
| Stage | Typical Timeline | Likely Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Court opens liquidazione giudiziale | Day 0 | Deadline for creditor claims set (usually 30–120 days) |
| Supplier files revindication claim with evidence | Within creditor claim deadline | Claim registered; curator reviews evidence |
| Curator examines evidence and responds | 30–90 days after filing | Curator admits claim (goods returned) or contests it |
| Judicial hearing (if contested) | 3–9 months from contest | Court rules on revindication; goods returned or monetary equivalent awarded |
| Physical return of goods or monetary claim | Following court order or curator agreement | Supplier recovers goods or receives priority claim for proceeds if goods were sold by curator |
If the goods have already been sold by the curator before the revindication is resolved, the supplier is generally entitled to the proceeds of that sale, effectively stepping ahead of unsecured creditors. The mechanics resemble, at a high level, enforcement of court orders in other jurisdictions, though the procedural detail is specific to Italian insolvency law.
A complete evidence packet for enforcing retention of title in Italy should include the following documents, all maintained under conservazione a norma (certified digital preservation) to ensure the integrity of the chain of custody:
The critical principle is the preservation chain: every document must be traceable from creation through timestamping to storage. A gap in the chain gives the curator grounds to challenge the evidence. The approach parallels best practices in prepackaged insolvency procedures globally, where documentation quality often determines procedural outcomes.
Suppliers often ask whether a retention of title clause offers better protection than a registered security interest or a statutory preferential claim. The comparison table below summarises the key differences under Italian law:
| Mechanism | How It Works (Ownership / Security) | Enforcement in Insolvency |
|---|---|---|
| Retention of title (ROT) | Seller retains full ownership until final payment (Art. 1523 CC). Buyer has possession; risk passes on delivery. No registration required for most movables, but data certa is essential. | Supplier files azione di rivendica; must prove ROT clause and data certa. Curator must prove full payment to defeat the claim. Goods physically recoverable or proceeds claimed. |
| Registered charge / mortgage (ipoteca or pegno) | Creditor holds a security interest registered on a specific asset. Requires public filing and, for pledges, delivery or registration. | Secured creditor enforces through auction or set-off. Priority depends on registration date. Creditor does not own the asset, only holds a right over its value. |
| Preferential claims (crediti privilegiati) | Statutory priority granted by law to specific categories (e.g., employee wages, tax authorities). No contractual action needed. | Paid in priority from liquidation proceeds per CCII ranking. No right to recover specific goods. ROT can outperform this by enabling physical recovery before distribution. |
The key distinction: ROT is a proprietary right, not merely a security right. When properly evidenced, it removes goods from the insolvency estate entirely. A registered charge, by contrast, gives the creditor priority over the proceeds of sale, but the goods remain in the estate. For suppliers of identifiable, high-value goods, retention of title in Italy therefore provides categorically stronger protection. For a broader comparison of enforcement remedies across jurisdictions, see the procedural analysis in insolvency enforcement practice on this site.
Implementing a defensible ROT system involves modest upfront costs that are dwarfed by the potential recovery in insolvency:
Best practice is to automate the entire workflow: integrate PEC dispatch of invoices, qualified timestamping of contracts and delivery notes, and conservazione a norma archiving into the supplier’s ERP or invoicing system. The marginal cost per transaction is minimal; the protection in insolvency is transformative.
The question of how retention of title can protect your business in Italy ultimately comes down to evidence discipline. The legal framework under Article 1523 CC and the CCII is supplier-friendly, once a ROT clause is proven with data certa, the curator bears the burden of demonstrating full payment. But that framework is only activated by proper documentation: timestamped contracts, PEC-transmitted invoices, delivery notes with ROT references, and certified digital preservation. Suppliers who integrate these steps into their standard commercial workflows gain a proprietary exit route from buyer insolvency, recovering goods rather than joining the queue of unsecured creditors. Those who do not risk discovering, at the worst possible moment, that a clause they relied upon for years is unenforceable.
The practical steps outlined in this guide provide a defensible, cost-effective system for making retention of title work in Italy’s current insolvency landscape.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maurizio Orlando at Orlando E Associati – Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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