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Last reviewed: 4 May 2026
Implementing Decree n. 218/2025 entered into force on 19 January 2026, fundamentally reshaping the Italy sports agents rules 2026 landscape by introducing mandatory digital contract deposits, overhauled licensing and registration requirements, and strict new limits on non-resident and EU agent activity. The Decree, published on 2 December 2025, affects every domestic and foreign sports agent operating in Italy, every club engaging athlete representatives, and every athlete who retains intermediary services. This compliance guide breaks down the obligations by entity, provides a practical 10-step playbook, and maps the penalty and dispute-resolution framework so that agents, clubs and federations can act immediately.
Readers seeking specialist sports law guidance or an Italy-based lawyer will find step-by-step checklists, a sample clause and a transition timeline below.
Implementing Decree n.218/2025 provides the detailed operational framework for the broader legislative reform of athlete representation in Italy. It translates the principles set out in the parent statute into binding procedural obligations for all market participants, agents, clubs, athletes and the national sports federations that supervise them. The Decree sits within the wider Italian sports governance architecture overseen by CONI (Comitato Olimpico Nazionale Italiano) and supplements the Code of Sports Justice.
The Decree applies to all sports agent activity conducted in connection with athletes, clubs or sporting organisations governed by Italian federations affiliated to CONI. It defines a sports agent broadly: any natural or legal person who, on behalf of an athlete or a club, negotiates or facilitates the conclusion of a sports performance contract, a transfer agreement or a sponsorship arrangement. Crucially, the definition now captures occasional and cross-border intermediary activity, closing a gap that previously allowed foreign operators to work without domestic registration.
Before the Decree, Italy’s regulation of sports agents was fragmented across individual federation rules and CONI guidelines, with limited central enforcement. Implementing Decree n.218/2025 introduces four structural changes:
Understanding precisely who falls within the scope of the Decree is the first compliance step. The following table summarises the key definitions that determine whether an individual or entity must act.
| Term | Definition under the Decree | Practical implication |
|---|---|---|
| Sports agent (domestic) | Natural or legal person registered on the national register who intermediates athlete contracts in Italy | Must hold a valid licence, maintain insurance, and digitally deposit every representation contract |
| Non-resident / EU agent | Agent domiciled outside Italy who provides intermediary services to Italian clubs or athletes | Subject to activity-duration limits; must designate Italian domiciliation if exceeding permitted window |
| Club | Any sporting organisation affiliated to an Italian federation that engages agents or registers athletes | Must verify agent registration, ensure contract deposit before player registration, conduct due diligence on foreign agents |
| Athlete | Any professional or semi-professional athlete represented by an agent in Italy | Must confirm agent’s registration status; co-signs digital deposit obligations in the representation agreement |
| Domiciliation | Formal designation of a registered address in Italy through which a non-resident agent conducts business | Triggers Italian tax and regulatory obligations; may create a permanent establishment |
Italian-domiciled agents must already appear on the national register to continue practising. Those whose registrations lapsed or who operated informally must submit a new licence application promptly.
Foreign sports agents in Italy may continue to provide services, but the Decree imposes temporal and procedural limits. Industry observers expect that agents who regularly conduct business in Italy, particularly those managing multiple Serie A clients, will need to formalise their presence through domiciliation and full registration rather than relying on short-term exemptions.
Clubs bear a gatekeeping function under the new regime. A player registration submitted without a corresponding digital contract deposit from a duly licensed agent is likely to be refused. Individual federations, such as the Federazione Italiana Pallacanestro (FIP), have begun publishing sport-specific implementing regulations that supplement the Decree’s general framework.
This section provides detailed practical guidance on the three pillars of the new regime: licensing and the national register, mandatory digital contract deposits, and the rules governing non-resident agent activity. Agents, clubs and in-house counsel should use the checklist and comparison table below to map their immediate obligations.
Obtaining or renewing a sports agent licence in Italy now follows a uniform procedure:
The register is publicly accessible, enabling clubs and athletes to verify any agent’s status before entering into a representation agreement. Agents who held a licence under the prior regime should verify their entry on the new unified register within 30 days of the Decree’s effective date to confirm that their credentials have been migrated.
The sports agent registration digital deposit requirement is one of the most operationally significant changes. Every athlete representation contract, amendment or renewal must be uploaded to the authorised digital platform before the related player registration or transfer is processed by the federation. The deposit record must include:
The sports contract deposit Italy obligation runs concurrently for both the agent and the club: the agent initiates the deposit, and the club must confirm receipt and accuracy within the platform before proceeding with player registration. Early indications suggest that federations are implementing sport-specific timelines, for example, FIP’s regulations require deposit before the athlete’s registration request is submitted to the federation.
Non-resident agents who provide intermediary services on an occasional basis may operate without full Italian registration, but the Decree restricts this to a limited activity window. Agents who exceed the permitted duration, or whose Italian-source income suggests a habitual Italian presence, must designate formal domiciliation in Italy and register on the national register. Failure to do so exposes the agent to both sporting sanctions and, as highlighted by practitioners analysing permanent establishment (PE) risks, potential Italian tax liability on Italian-source income.
| Obligation | Applies to | Immediate required action and timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Register / hold licence on the national register | Domestic agents and agents practising in Italy | Verify register entry immediately; if absent, submit licence application within 30 days of 19 January 2026 |
| Digital deposit of athlete representation contracts | Agents and clubs (both parties to the contract) | Deposit contracts on the designated platform prior to player registration; club must confirm accuracy |
| Limit on non-resident activity / domiciliation requirement | Non-resident / EU agents | Confirm permissible activity window; if exceeding, register and designate domiciliation in Italy; consult tax adviser regarding PE exposure |
| Insurance and indemnity coverage | All registered agents | Confirm professional indemnity insurance meets minimum thresholds; upload proof during registration or renewal |
| Sponsorship intermediation transparency | Agents and clubs | Disclose all sponsor-related mandates in the digital deposit; review ambush marketing Italy 2026 obligations |
The following playbook translates the Decree’s requirements into concrete actions. Agents should treat this as a prioritised task list for achieving full sports agents compliance 2026.
“Digital Deposit Obligation, The Agent undertakes to file this Agreement on the authorised digital deposit platform designated under Implementing Decree n.218/2025 within [five] business days of execution, and in any event prior to any related player registration or transfer request. The Club/Athlete shall cooperate in confirming the accuracy of the deposited record. Failure to complete the deposit may result in the non-registration of the Athlete and sporting sanctions against both parties.”
Clubs occupy a critical compliance position under Implementing Decree n.218/2025. A failure at the club level, for example, processing a player registration without confirming the agent’s licence or the digital deposit, can block the registration and expose the club to sanctions.
When dealing with foreign sports agents in Italy, clubs must take additional due diligence steps. Confirm whether the agent holds a valid licence in their home jurisdiction, verify whether they have designated domiciliation in Italy (if required) and obtain written confirmation from the agent regarding their PE and tax status. The likely practical effect will be that clubs insist on a compliance certificate before engaging any non-resident intermediary.
The Decree’s transparency requirements extend to sponsorship intermediation. Clubs and their commercial teams must ensure that any agent involved in negotiating sponsorship deals discloses the full mandate in the digital deposit. This measure is designed to combat ambush marketing practices and protect official sponsors. Clubs hosting major events should integrate these requirements into their broader ambush marketing Italy 2026 risk-management framework.
Non-compliance with Implementing Decree n.218/2025 carries consequences across multiple tracks: sporting, administrative, civil and, in certain cases, criminal and tax.
Disputes arising under the new regime may be referred to the Collegio di Garanzia dello Sport at CONI, which serves as Italy’s highest sports arbitration body and has jurisdiction over agent-registration and disciplinary matters. Where a dispute involves an international element, such as a cross-border transfer or a challenge to a federation’s application of the Decree, the matter may escalate to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Lausanne. Industry observers expect that early CAS jurisprudence on the Decree’s non-resident provisions will be closely watched, as it may clarify the boundaries between permissible occasional activity and activity requiring full registration.
The table below maps the key legislative dates against required actions. Agents, clubs and athletes should use this as a diary checklist.
| Date | Event | Required action |
|---|---|---|
| 2 December 2025 | Implementing Decree n.218/2025 published | Read full text; legal teams prepare compliance plan and gap analysis |
| 19 January 2026 | Decree enters into force | All obligations apply: verify register entry, activate platform credentials, begin digital deposits |
| 20 January 2026 | CONI Giunta approves updated agent regulations (e.g., FIP Regolamento Agenti Sportivi) | Review sport-specific federation rules; identify any additional obligations beyond the Decree |
| Within 30 days of 19 January 2026 | Initial compliance window | Agents: confirm register migration, upload insurance, deposit existing contracts |
| Within 60 days | Contract amendment deadline (recommended) | Amend all active representation agreements to include digital-deposit clause |
| Within 90 days | Full audit completion | Clubs: verify all engaged agents are registered and all contracts deposited; document compliance for dispute-readiness |
Given the arbitration and sanction framework described above, every agent and club should maintain a compliance file containing: timestamped platform deposit receipts, licence verification screenshots, insurance certificates, and internal correspondence documenting due diligence on foreign agents. This file will serve as the primary defence in any CONI or CAS proceeding.
| Obligation | Domestic agent | Non-resident / EU agent | Club |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hold valid licence on the national register | Mandatory | Required if exceeding occasional-activity window | N/A (but must verify agent licence) |
| Digital deposit of representation contracts | Mandatory (agent initiates) | Mandatory when acting in Italy | Mandatory (club confirms deposit) |
| Professional indemnity insurance | Mandatory | Mandatory if registered; recommended in all cases | N/A |
| Domiciliation in Italy | N/A (already domiciled) | Required if exceeding activity-duration limit | N/A |
| Fee-structure disclosure | Full disclosure in deposited contract | Full disclosure in deposited contract | Must verify disclosure before registration |
| Data retention | Mandatory (minimum retention period) | Mandatory | Mandatory (archive agent verification records) |
Implementing Decree n.218/2025 has moved Italy’s regulation of sports agents from a fragmented, federation-by-federation model to a centralised, digitally enforced compliance regime. The Italy sports agents rules 2026 demand immediate, concrete action from every market participant. Three priorities stand above the rest:
The regulatory landscape will continue to evolve as individual federations publish sport-specific implementing rules and as early enforcement actions and arbitral decisions clarify ambiguous provisions. Staying ahead requires not just initial compliance but ongoing monitoring. Organisations and individuals navigating these changes are encouraged to consult a qualified sports law specialist to ensure their operations are fully aligned with the new regime.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stefano Bastianon at Studio Legale Bastianon Garavaglia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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