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If you have received an adverse administrative decision in Italy, a denied building permit, an exclusion from a public procurement procedure, a visa refusal, or any other act of the public administration that harms a legally protected interest, the principal judicial remedy is a ricorso al TAR (Tribunale Amministrativo Regionale). This guide explains how to file an administrative appeal in Italy from preliminary assessment through to a decision on the merits, including the documents you need, the deadlines you must meet, and the costs involved.
It also covers the 2026 reforms introduced by DL 19/2026 (Decreto PNRR 2026) and internal organisational decrees of the Giustizia Amministrativa that have reshaped digital filing requirements, silence-assenso rules, and hearing schedules at every TAR across the country.
The Codice del processo amministrativo (Legislative Decree 104/2010) establishes the TAR as the first‑instance court for disputes between private parties and the Italian public administration. Jurisdiction covers challenges to administrative acts that affect interessi legittimi (legitimate interests) and, in defined areas such as public contracts and public services, also diritti soggettivi (subjective rights). A successful ricorso can annul the impugned act, order the administration to act, or award damages.
Italy has twenty‑nine TAR offices, one for each region plus sections in certain major cities. As a general rule, you file with the TAR in whose territorial jurisdiction the administration that issued the act is based. A significant exception applies to visa and immigration refusals issued by Italian consulates abroad: these are challenged before TAR Lazio (Rome), because the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has its seat there.
After a TAR judgment, either party may bring a second‑instance appeal (appello) before the Consiglio di Stato in Rome. The Consiglio di Stato re‑examines the case on the facts and the law and may confirm, reform, or annul the first‑instance decision.
A critical point for anyone considering how to appeal an administrative decision in Italy: lawyer representation is mandatory (patrocinio obbligatorio). Except in narrow circumstances, certain access-to-documents disputes and electoral matters, you cannot appear before the TAR without an advocate admitted to the Italian bar.
Standing to file a ricorso requires a direct, current, and personal interest. The claimant must demonstrate that the administrative act causes (or will imminently cause) concrete harm to a legally protected position. Corporate entities, associations, and foreign nationals can all hold standing, provided the interest threshold is met.
Before filing, confirm the following prerequisites:
A ricorso is inadmissible if it lacks mandatory content (e.g., identification of the impugned act, grounds for challenge, relief sought), if the contributo unificato (court fee) has not been paid, or if the act is not an administrative measure subject to TAR jurisdiction.
The following numbered steps outline the TAR procedure from initial instruction of counsel through to the court’s decision. The timeline table below summarises who acts at each stage and the typical duration.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preliminary case assessment and instruct lawyer | Claimant + counsel | 1–7 days (urgent cases same day) |
| 2. Draft ricorso and compile annexes | Counsel | 3–14 days (depends on evidence gathering) |
| 3. File ricorso via PAT / PEC and pay contributo unificato | Counsel (electronic deposit) | Filing day (timestamp = filing date) |
| 4. Serve the ricorso on the administration and counterparties | Counsel / PEC / postal service | Same day to 3 days |
| 5. Apply for interim relief (misure cautelari) if needed | Counsel (motion with or after ricorso) | Decision within days to weeks |
| 6. TAR decision on the merits | TAR panel | Several months to over one year |
Time is the decisive constraint. The 60‑day filing deadline begins running from the date you receive formal notification of the administrative act (or, in certain cases, from the date of publication). Instruct an Italian administrative lawyer immediately, ideally within the first week of receiving the decision.
During this phase, counsel will evaluate the merits of the challenge, identify the competent TAR, assess whether interim measures are necessary to prevent irreparable harm, and advise on costs and litigation strategy. If the matter involves a public procurement exclusion, accelerated rites with shorter deadlines may apply. If the act concerns a visa refusal, counsel will confirm that TAR Lazio is the correct court.
The ricorso must be drafted by a qualified lawyer and must contain, on pain of inadmissibility:
All documents must be compiled as separate PDF files. The ricorso itself and each deposit module must carry a PADES‑format digital signature, this is the only signature format accepted for electronic filing through the Portale dell’Avvocato (PAT). Counsel must also prepare a numbered list of exhibits (elenco documenti) cross‑referencing every annex.
Electronic filing is now the standard route. The Portale dell’Avvocato (PAT), operated by the Giustizia Amministrativa, is the primary platform. The procedure is as follows:
The filing is considered effective at the date and time of the PAT timestamp or the PEC acceptance receipt. Where the PEC transmission encounters technical errors (e.g., exceeding the 30 MB attachment limit), the FormWeb platform provides an alternative web‑based deposit route. Counsel should retain all PEC acceptance and delivery receipts as proof of filing.
Simultaneously with (or immediately after) filing, counsel must pay the contributo unificato. Payment is made via the F24 form or through the online payment systems indicated by the Ministry of Justice. Without proof of payment, the ricorso is inadmissible.
The ricorso must be notified to the administration that issued the impugned act and to any directly affected counterparties (controinteressati), for example, the winning bidder in a procurement dispute. Notification is made via PEC (where addresses are publicly registered) or through a judicial officer (ufficiale giudiziario).
Service must generally be completed within the same 60‑day deadline that governs filing, or, where the code permits, the ricorso may be filed first and notification completed afterwards within the prescribed window. Retain PEC delivery receipts or postal return receipts as proof of service, failure to prove service can result in dismissal.
If the impugned act threatens irreparable harm, for instance, demolition of a building, deportation, or irrecoverable exclusion from a procurement, counsel should request interim measures (misure cautelari). This application can be included in the ricorso itself or filed as a separate interlocutory motion immediately afterwards.
The TAR evaluates two conditions: fumus boni iuris (a prima facie case on the merits) and periculum in mora (risk of serious and irreparable harm pending a final decision). In cases of extreme urgency, the president of the TAR section may grant a decreto monocratico (single‑judge provisional decree) within days, which remains effective until the collegial chamber hears the full application. The court may impose a security bond (cauzione) as a condition of granting interim relief.
Below is the complete checklist of documents required when lodging a ricorso al TAR. All documents must be submitted as separate PDF files via the PAT or PEC, and the deposit module and ricorso must be signed with a PADES digital signature.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Copy of the impugned administrative act (provvedimento) | Full copy including the notification page; if issued in a foreign language, provide a certified Italian translation with any necessary legalisation or apostille. |
| Power of attorney (procura alle liti) | Signed by the claimant and countersigned by the lawyer with PADES digital signature for electronic filing. |
| Numbered list of exhibits (elenco documenti) | Prepared by counsel, each exhibit numbered and described; attached as a separate PDF. |
| Proof of payment of contributo unificato | Ministerial receipt (F24 or online payment confirmation); required for admissibility. |
| Proof of service / notification | PEC acceptance and delivery receipts, or registered‑mail return receipts showing date of receipt. |
| Identity document and company documentation | Copy of ID or passport for individuals; company registry extract (visura camerale) for corporate claimants. |
| Supporting evidence | Contracts, correspondence, photographs, technical reports, each as a separate numbered PDF. |
| Authorisations or permits at issue | E.g., building permit application and decision, licence, or planning approval, include both the application and the final act. |
All files uploaded to the PAT must comply with format and size constraints. Industry observers note that the 30 MB per‑file limit on PEC transmissions remains a frequent source of technical difficulty; where files exceed this threshold, the FormWeb platform or file splitting may be necessary.
Understanding the administrative appeal timeline is critical. The ordinary deadline of 60 days is strictly enforced and cannot, in the vast majority of cases, be extended.
| Purpose | Deadline | Start point |
|---|---|---|
| Ordinary ricorso to TAR | 60 days | Date of formal notification (PEC receipt date or postal delivery date) |
| Longer term (where no individual notification) | Up to 6 months | Date of publication in the Official Gazette or other statutory publication method |
| Appeal to Consiglio di Stato (ordinary) | 60 days | Date of notification of the TAR judgment |
| Appeal to Consiglio di Stato (short‑form) | 30 days | Applicable to certain expedited proceedings (e.g., procurement rites) |
| Application for interim relief | No separate deadline | Filed with the ricorso or by separate motion at any time before the merits hearing |
The 60‑day term is calculated as calendar days, excluding the dies a quo (the day of notification) but including the dies ad quem (the sixtieth day). If the sixtieth day falls on a public holiday, the deadline is extended to the next business day. Where an administrative act is notified by PEC, the date of receipt recorded in the PEC delivery receipt is the start date.
The 2026 reforms under DL 19/2026 have modified certain provisions of Law 241/1990 regarding silence-assenso (deemed consent) and the conferenza di servizi (inter‑agency conference). The likely practical effect is that some administrative procedures now conclude faster or are deemed approved by silence sooner, which in turn shifts the point at which the 60‑day clock begins. Practitioners should confirm the applicable computation rules for the specific category of act challenged.
Several cost items apply when filing a ricorso al TAR. The table below provides indicative figures; exact amounts should be confirmed with current ministerial fee schedules before filing.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Contributo unificato (court fee) | Varies by case type and amount in controversy | Governed by D.P.R. 115/2002, Art. 13, comma 6‑bis; ranges from modest amounts for access‑to‑documents cases to significantly higher sums for procurement disputes. Confirm the applicable tariff with the Ministry of Justice schedule. |
| Lawyer fees | Market rate, fixed fee or hourly | Varies by complexity; a straightforward ricorso may cost from approximately €1,000 upward; complex procurement or multi‑party cases are substantially higher. Agree terms in advance. |
| PEC account and digital signature | Low fixed cost | PEC subscription and qualified digital signature certificate; one‑off issuance costs for firms. PAT deposit itself carries no platform fee. |
| Translation and legalisation | Variable | Required only for foreign‑language documents; certified translator fees depend on volume and language pair. |
| Security / bond for interim measures | Court‑determined | The TAR may order a cauzione as a condition of granting interim relief; the amount is set at the judge’s discretion. |
If the ricorso succeeds, the court ordinarily orders the losing administration to reimburse the claimant’s legal costs (in whole or in part). Conversely, an unsuccessful claimant risks a costs order against them.
Two sets of 2026 reforms directly affect how to file an administrative appeal in Italy.
DL 19/2026 has introduced amendments to Italy’s general administrative procedure statute (Law 241/1990), with particular impact on silence-assenso and the conferenza di servizi. The revised silence-assenso provisions tighten the timeframes within which an administration must respond to applications; where the administration fails to act within the new deadlines, the application may be deemed approved. For parties challenging such deemed approvals, or challenging an administration’s failure to recognise a deemed approval, the point at which the 60‑day ricorso deadline begins may shift. These changes also affect SCIA (segnalazione certificata di inizio attività) procedures, where the administration’s window to intervene has been recalibrated.
The Giustizia Amministrativa’s own Decreto n.2/2026 introduced organisational measures designed to improve the efficiency of administrative courts. Early indications suggest the decree addresses staffing stabilisation, hearing‑schedule rationalisation, and enhanced telematic infrastructure across the TAR network and the Consiglio di Stato. The likely practical effect is more predictable hearing dates and faster case progression in courts that had accumulated significant backlogs.
The PAT (Portale dell’Avvocato) and FormWeb platforms are now the primary deposit routes. The PADES digital signature format is mandatory for all deposit modules and the ricorso itself. Paper filing is no longer the default and is accepted only in limited, exceptional circumstances. Practitioners should verify their digital signature certificates are current and test PAT access well before the filing deadline.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Carlo Merani at M E R A N I A M M I N I S T R A T I V I S T I, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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