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Last updated: July 18, 2026
Understanding how to be in a VAT group is one of the most consequential compliance decisions a corporate group operating in Italy can make. Under Italian law, eligible businesses may elect to be treated as a single taxable person for VAT purposes, eliminating VAT on intra-group supplies, consolidating credits and debits, and filing a single periodic return. The mechanism is governed by D. P. R. 26 October 1972, n. 633 (Italy’s core VAT statute) and implements Article 11 of Council Directive 2006/112/EC (the EU VAT Directive).
Critically, the annual filing window for Modello AG/1, the declaration that creates, modifies or terminates a VAT group, runs from 1 January to 30 September, with the grouping taking effect on 1 January of the following calendar year. This guide walks CFOs, tax directors, in-house counsel and advisors through every step: eligibility tests, control-link calculations, filing procedures, representative-member obligations, and the practical traps to avoid.
Italy levies value added tax (imposta sul valore aggiunto, IVA) on the supply of goods and services within its territory, on intra-Community acquisitions and on imports. The standard rate is 22%, with reduced rates of 10%, 5% and 4% applying to specified categories. Every entity that independently carries out an economic activity must register for VAT, there is no registration threshold for non-resident businesses, while resident small businesses benefit from a flat-rate regime below certain turnover limits. How does the VAT tax work in Italy at a structural level? Each taxable person charges output VAT on sales, deducts input VAT on purchases, and remits the net balance to the Agenzia delle Entrate through periodic (monthly or quarterly) returns.
VAT grouping changes this dynamic fundamentally. When two or more persons form a VAT group under the vat grouping rules Italy has adopted, they cease to exist as separate taxable persons for VAT purposes. Instead, the group is treated as a single taxable person. Supplies between members are disregarded for VAT, and only transactions between the group and third parties generate VAT obligations. The representative member files a single consolidated return on behalf of all participants.
For groups with large volumes of intercompany transactions, management fees, shared services, licensing, goods transfers, VAT grouping can eliminate significant cashflow drag. Without grouping, one member charges VAT on an internal supply, the recipient claims a deduction, and both must account for the amounts in their respective returns. Even where the net effect is zero, the administrative burden and timing mismatches are real. Grouping removes these flows entirely: no invoicing obligation for intra-group supplies, no input-tax deduction to track, and consolidated net positions that reduce the overall compliance footprint. Industry observers expect the simplification benefit to be most pronounced for holding structures, financial-services groups and public-body conglomerates with exempt or partially exempt activities.
The vat group requirements Italy imposes are structured around three cumulative tests: a financial link (ownership or control), an economic link (aligned or complementary economic activities) and an organisational link (common governance or coordination structures). All three must be satisfied simultaneously. In addition, each prospective member must be established in Italy or have a fixed establishment there. Non-resident entities without an Italian fixed establishment cannot participate.
Participation is open to bodies corporate (companies limited by shares, limited-liability companies, cooperatives), partnerships, and, subject to conditions, other entities with legal personality such as foundations and public bodies. Natural persons carrying on an economic activity may also participate, although in practice the regime is most relevant to corporate groups.
The financial link is typically demonstrated through direct or indirect ownership of more than 50% of the voting rights or share capital. Consider two worked scenarios:
Public bodies (enti pubblici) that carry out economic activities subject to VAT may in principle participate in a VAT group. The practical challenge lies in demonstrating the financial and organisational links. Where a municipality or public entity holds a majority stake in an investee company (società partecipata), the financial link is present, but the economic and organisational tests require careful documentation, particularly where the investee operates under public-procurement constraints or in-house-providing rules. The interaction between VAT grouping and the split-payment regime (discussed below) adds a further layer of complexity for public-body participants.
| Requirement | What to Produce | Common Pitfalls |
|---|---|---|
| Financial link (>50% ownership or control) | Share registers, shareholder agreements, corporate-governance documents | Indirect holdings overlooked; failure to trace control through intermediate entities |
| Economic link (complementary or interconnected activities) | Description of each member’s activity; intercompany contracts; evidence of integrated supply chains | Members with wholly unrelated activities; dormant entities included without justification |
| Organisational link (common management or coordination) | Board resolutions; management-sharing agreements; evidence of common directors or officers | Purely passive holding companies with no operational management overlap |
| Italian establishment | Certificate of incorporation or fixed-establishment registration | Non-resident entities without a genuine Italian fixed establishment |
| All prospective members agree to participate | Written declarations of intent from each member’s legal representative | Missing signatures; declarations not contemporaneous with the AG/1 filing |
The Modello AG/1 is the official declaration through which a VAT group is created, modified (members added or removed) or terminated. According to the Agenzia delle Entrate, applications can be filed from 1 January to 30 September of any year, and the grouping takes effect from 1 January of the following year. This means that for Italy VAT groups registration effective 1 January 2027, the Modello AG/1 must be submitted no later than 30 September 2026.
The form is filed by the designated representative member (rappresentante del gruppo), typically the parent company or the entity with the broadest VAT activity. It must be submitted electronically through the Agenzia delle Entrate’s Entratel or Fisconline portal, either directly or through an authorised intermediary (intermediario abilitato).
While the Modello AG/1 itself is a structured electronic form, the Agenzia delle Entrate may request supporting documentation to verify the three control links. Groups should prepare and retain the following:
To file the Modello AG/1 online, the representative member (or its intermediary) logs in to the Agenzia delle Entrate portal, navigates to the “Servizi per” section and selects the VAT group declaration service. The form requires identification data for every member (VAT number, fiscal code, registered office), a description of the control links, and the designation of the representative member. Once completed and digitally signed, the declaration is transmitted electronically. The portal issues a receipt confirming submission, retain this as proof of timely filing.
| Field in Form | Who Completes It | Supporting Documents |
|---|---|---|
| Identification of the representative member | Representative member | VAT registration certificate; fiscal code; articles of association |
| List of all participating members | Representative member (with data from each member) | Share registers; ownership charts; member declarations of intent |
| Description of financial link | Representative member | Shareholder agreements; corporate-governance documents |
| Description of economic link | Representative member (input from each member) | Intercompany contracts; business-activity descriptions |
| Description of organisational link | Representative member | Board resolutions; management-sharing agreements |
| Effective date requested | Representative member | N/A, automatically 1 January of the following year |
Once a VAT group is established, it receives a single VAT identification number. All external transactions, supplies to third-party customers, purchases from non-members, are invoiced under this group VAT number, with the representative member responsible for filing the consolidated periodic and annual VAT returns.
Intra-group supplies are disregarded for VAT purposes: no output VAT is charged, no input VAT is deducted, and no invoice is required for VAT purposes (although members may still need internal documentation for accounting, transfer-pricing or corporate-tax reasons). For external supplies, each member acts in the name of the group. The representative member collects data from all participants, consolidates output and input VAT, and files a single return.
Consider a simplified example: Member A sells consulting services to a third-party client for €100,000 plus 22% VAT (€22,000). Member B purchases raw materials from an external supplier for €50,000 plus 22% VAT (€11,000). The group’s net VAT liability for the period is €22,000 minus €11,000 = €11,000, which the representative member remits. Any internal supply from A to B is invisible for VAT.
The representative member bears primary responsibility for VAT compliance on behalf of the group. Under the provisions of D.P.R. n. 633/1972, all members of the group are jointly and severally liable for the VAT debts of the group. This joint-liability exposure is a critical governance consideration: a default by any member in providing accurate data can trigger penalties and interest for the entire group. Robust internal-governance protocols, data-sharing agreements, reconciliation procedures, and clear allocation of compliance tasks, are essential to manage this risk effectively.
VAT grouping is not universally advantageous. Decision-makers should weigh the benefits against the constraints and consider whether Italy’s split-payment regime (scissione dei pagamenti) or remaining as separate taxable persons produces a better outcome.
The split-payment mechanism requires certain purchasers, primarily public administrations and listed companies, to pay VAT directly to the Treasury rather than to the supplier. Where a public body participates in a VAT group, the interaction between grouping and split payment can be complex: supplies from the group to external public administrations may still fall under split-payment rules, while intra-group supplies to the public-body member are disregarded. Early analysis is essential to avoid unexpected cashflow consequences.
| Situation | VAT Grouping Impact | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Two wholly-owned subsidiaries with large intercompany flows | Intra-group supplies not VAT taxed; single return simplifies compliance | Strongest case for grouping; watch consolidated tax-base effects |
| Public body and investee company | Grouping possible where control and organisational link clear; split payment may still apply to transactions with external public administrations | Carefully assess split-payment override and public-procurement rules |
| Cross-border member (non-Italy resident) | Generally not eligible unless fixed establishment in Italy; place-of-supply rules must be analysed | Seek specialist VAT advice early; can complicate EU VAT obligations |
| Financial-services group with exempt supplies | Grouping eliminates VAT on intercompany services; but may affect the group’s overall input-VAT recovery ratio | Model the pro-rata impact before electing, grouping can reduce deductible input VAT if exempt activities dominate |
| Group member in VAT-credit position | Credit consolidated at group level; may offset other members’ liabilities | Beneficial for cashflow but the credit cannot be recovered separately by the individual member |
The Agenzia delle Entrate may audit a VAT group to verify that the eligibility conditions continue to be met and that intra-group transactions are correctly excluded from VAT returns. Groups should maintain a comprehensive audit file, updated annually, containing at minimum the following:
For groups targeting a 1 January 2027 effective date, the following action plan provides a practical roadmap. Each step should be assigned to a responsible person (typically the group tax director or external adviser) with a clear deadline.
| Milestone | Deadline | Responsible |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility assessment complete | 31 March 2026 | Group Tax Director / External Adviser |
| Documentation gathered | 31 May 2026 | Company Secretaries / Legal Team |
| Modello AG/1 prepared | 30 June 2026 | Representative Member / Tax Adviser |
| Internal review completed | 31 August 2026 | Legal Counsel / External Tax Adviser |
| AG/1 filed with Agenzia delle Entrate | 30 September 2026 | Representative Member / Intermediary |
| Systems and processes aligned for group operations | 31 December 2026 | Group Finance / IT / Accounting |
Forming a VAT group in Italy offers substantial compliance and cashflow benefits for corporate groups, holding structures, public bodies and their investee companies, but only if the eligibility conditions are met and the procedural steps are followed precisely. The single most important deadline is 30 September: file Modello AG/1 by that date for a grouping effective the following 1 January. Understanding how to be in a VAT group requires methodical preparation, from verifying control links and gathering documentation to aligning internal systems for consolidated reporting. For groups considering this step, engaging specialist tax advisers with experience in Italian VAT grouping is essential to navigate the eligibility tests, manage joint-liability risks and ensure a smooth transition.
Those seeking qualified assistance can explore tax lawyers in Italy through 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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