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Last updated: 8 May 2026
The smart working rules Italy employers must follow changed significantly on 7 April 2026 when Law No. 34/2026 entered into force. The statute introduces mandatory annual written information notices, strengthened health and safety duties for home-office arrangements, tighter data-protection requirements, and a graduated sanctions framework that includes administrative fines and, in the most serious cases, criminal liability. This guide sets out every obligation, walks through the practical steps for updating contracts and policies, and maps the penalties employers face for non-compliance.
Law No. 34/2026 replaces the lighter-touch framework that governed lavoro agile (smart working) since Law No. 81/2017. The core changes that demand immediate employer action are:
| Priority Action | Owner | Suggested Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Deliver annual written information notice to all smart workers and RLS | HR / HSE Manager | Immediate (enforceable since 7 Apr 2026) |
| Review and update individual smart-working agreements | Legal / HR | Within 60 days of entry into force |
| Conduct or refresh remote-work-specific risk assessment | HSE Manager / RSPP | Within 90 days |
| Audit IT security and GDPR measures for remote devices | IT / DPO | Within 90 days |
| Update hybrid work policy and communicate to workforce | HR / Legal | Within 90 days |
Law No. 34/2026 is the first comprehensive overhaul of Italy’s smart working framework since the concept was introduced by Law No. 81/2017. The statute was published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale and entered into force on 7 April 2026, giving employers no transitional grace period for most obligations.
The statute retains the existing legal definition of lavoro agile: a flexible mode of performing subordinate employment, carried out partly inside and partly outside the employer’s premises, without a fixed external workstation and within the limits of maximum daily and weekly working hours. It is critical to distinguish smart working from classical telelavoro (teleworking), which involves a fixed remote location and is governed by a separate regulatory framework (including the 2004 inter-confederal agreement). Law No. 34/2026 applies exclusively to lavoro agile arrangements, though industry observers expect that enforcement authorities will scrutinise employers who label arrangements as “telework” to circumvent the new obligations.
The obligations created by Law No. 34/2026 apply to all employment relationships governed by Italian law and, more broadly, to any situation where the employee habitually performs work in Italy. Foreign employers with Italian-based staff, whether through a branch, a subsidiary or direct employment, must comply. Multinational groups with matrix reporting structures should review whether their Italian headcount triggers the new duties even where the employing entity is incorporated abroad.
The statute introduces or strengthens five categories of employer duty:
| Date | Event | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| 11 March 2026 | Law No. 34/2026 approved by Parliament | Begin preparing updated policies and annual notices |
| 7 April 2026 | Law No. 34/2026 entered into force | All mandatory obligations enforceable, annual notice and H&S duties apply immediately |
| Next annual cycle (rolling) | Employer must deliver written information notice at least once per year | Set recurring calendar action (owner: HR / HSE) |
Law No. 34/2026 significantly expands the contractual and documentary requirements for employer obligations in smart working arrangements. The statute mandates three distinct compliance layers: the individual written agreement, the annual information notice, and ongoing record-keeping.
Every smart-working arrangement must be underpinned by a written agreement between employer and employee. Under the new rules, these agreements must now include, at a minimum:
Agreements already in place before 7 April 2026 must be reviewed and, where necessary, amended to incorporate these mandatory terms. The likely practical effect will be that employers need to issue addenda or replacement agreements rather than draft entirely new contracts.
The most publicised innovation of Law No. 34/2026 is the mandatory annual written information notice. Employers must deliver this document to each smart worker, and to the Rappresentante dei Lavoratori per la Sicurezza (RLS), at least once every twelve months. The notice must identify:
INAIL guidance recommends that employers tailor this notice to individual roles rather than issuing a generic company-wide document. Early indications suggest that labour inspectors will review whether notices are genuinely role-specific during routine inspections.
Employers must retain copies of individual agreements, annual notices and risk-assessment documentation. Ministry of Labour reporting obligations, already in place for the electronic communication of smart-working agreements, continue unchanged. Employers should ensure that their HR information systems are configured to generate reminders for annual-notice renewal and to archive proof of delivery.
Health and safety duties represent the most operationally demanding aspect of the smart working rules Italy employers must navigate under Law No. 34/2026. The statute integrates remote-work-specific obligations into the existing framework of Legislative Decree No. 81/2008, creating clear expectations for risk assessment, worker engagement and equipment management.
Employers must carry out, or update, a specific risk assessment (Documento di Valutazione dei Rischi, DVR) that addresses hazards unique to remote work. INAIL guidance identifies the following priority risk categories:
The risk assessment must be documented in writing, reviewed at least annually and updated whenever there is a material change to the employee’s working arrangements or equipment.
Law No. 34/2026 requires employers to consult the RLS before finalising the remote-work section of the DVR. The RLS must also receive a copy of each annual written information notice. Employers with more than 15 employees that have not yet elected an RLS should take steps to facilitate that election, as the absence of an RLS does not relieve the employer of its consultation duty, in such cases, the territorial RLS (RLST) must be engaged.
| H&S Obligation | Responsible Party | Suggested Employer Action |
|---|---|---|
| Remote-work-specific risk assessment (DVR update) | RSPP / HSE Manager | Commission assessment within 90 days; schedule annual review |
| Annual written information notice (risk + measures) | HR / HSE Manager | Draft role-specific notices; deliver to each smart worker and RLS annually |
| RLS consultation on DVR update | Employer / RSPP | Convene meeting with RLS; document consultation and any feedback |
| DSE-specific health surveillance | Competent Doctor (Medico Competente) | Ensure smart workers are included in the DSE surveillance programme |
| Equipment safety checks | Employer / IT | Provide or verify compliant equipment; document condition and issuance |
| Training on remote-work risks | HR / HSE | Deliver targeted training module; record attendance |
Where the employer provides equipment (laptops, monitors, ergonomic chairs), it remains responsible for ensuring that the equipment meets applicable safety standards. Where employees use their own devices (BYOD), the employer must still assess whether the equipment is suitable and may be required to reimburse reasonable costs incurred to achieve a compliant workstation. Applicable national collective bargaining agreements (CCNL) may contain sector-specific provisions on reimbursement amounts and methods; employers should check their applicable CCNL as well as any supplementary company-level agreements.
Smart working Italy 2026 obligations extend well beyond employment law into the domain of data protection. Remote work creates new data-processing scenarios that employers must assess under the GDPR and under the guidance of the Garante per la protezione dei dati personali (the Italian Data Protection Authority).
When employees access personal data or business-critical systems from outside the corporate network, the risk profile changes. Employers should consider whether a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) is required under Article 35 of the GDPR, particularly where:
The Garante has emphasised that employee monitoring must comply with Article 4 of the Workers’ Statute (Law No. 300/1970) and that any monitoring tool must be agreed with trade union representatives or authorised by the labour inspectorate before deployment.
Employers face a practical choice between issuing corporate devices and permitting BYOD. Each model carries different compliance implications:
A compliant IT framework for smart working should include:
HR and IT departments should coordinate to ensure that the data and compliance infrastructure supporting pay transparency and other regulatory reporting obligations is equally robust for remote-access scenarios.
Moving from legal obligation to practical implementation requires a structured workflow. The following step-by-step approach is designed for HR directors, general counsel and business owners updating their hybrid work policy Italy framework under Law No. 34/2026.
A compliant smart-working policy should contain the following sections as a minimum:
The following illustrative clauses can be adapted into individual agreements or policy documents:
Employers operating in sectors covered by specific collective agreements should cross-check these clauses against their applicable CCNL provisions. Broader trends in labour rights and gig-worker protections may also inform how flexible-work arrangements are structured.
The sanctions framework introduced by Law No. 34/2026 is the sharpest departure from the prior regime. Employers that fail to comply with the new smart working rules Italy face a tiered system of administrative, criminal and civil consequences.
| Type of Breach | Possible Sanction (Range) | Likely Enforcing Body |
|---|---|---|
| Failure to deliver annual written information notice | Administrative fine (per worker affected) | Labour Inspectorate (Ispettorato Nazionale del Lavoro) |
| Absence of written individual smart-working agreement | Administrative fine; risk of agreement being treated as standard on-site employment | Labour Inspectorate |
| Failure to conduct or update remote-work risk assessment (DVR) | Administrative fine; criminal liability for RSPP / employer in case of injury | Labour Inspectorate / Prefecture / Criminal courts |
| Failure to provide or verify safe equipment | Administrative fine; contributory liability for workplace injury | INAIL / Labour Inspectorate |
| Breach of data-protection obligations (GDPR) | Administrative fine up to €20 million or 4% of global turnover (GDPR Art. 83) | Garante per la protezione dei dati personali |
| Violation of employee-monitoring rules (Art. 4, Workers’ Statute) | Criminal sanction (fine or imprisonment under Art. 38, Workers’ Statute) | Criminal courts / Labour Inspectorate |
Employers that identify compliance gaps should prioritise the following mitigation actions:
Beyond regulatory enforcement, employers face exposure to civil claims by employees who suffer injury or illness attributable to non-compliant smart-working conditions. Industry observers expect that the most common dispute scenarios will include:
Employers with operations in Italy who are also navigating other compliance reforms, such as recent changes to residential lease frameworks relevant to employer-provided housing, should consider a holistic legal review.
The following ten-point checklist consolidates every employer action required under Law No. 34/2026 into a single implementation roadmap. Industry observers recommend completing all items within 90 days of the statute’s entry into force.
Employers looking for additional guidance on engaging Italian labour-law practitioners can consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with specialists.
The smart working rules Italy employers face under Law No. 34/2026 demand prompt, structured action. The three non-negotiable immediate steps are: delivering the annual written information notice to every smart worker and the RLS; reviewing and updating individual smart-working agreements to incorporate all mandatory clauses; and commissioning a remote-work-specific risk assessment. Employers that move quickly to close compliance gaps will not only avoid the statute’s sanctions framework but will also build a more defensible, transparent and productive remote-work programme. Those operating in Italy’s evolving regulatory landscape, including the parallel reforms around pay transparency, should treat 2026 as the year to future-proof their employment-law compliance infrastructure.
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Employers should seek qualified legal counsel before acting on any of the matters discussed.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Piercarlo Antonelli at AMTF Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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