Investing taxes in Italy

Tax Guide · Italy

Investing Taxes in Italy (2026):
CGT, regime amministrato, crypto & IVAFE explained

Italy taxes most investment income at a flat 26% — but the real complexity lies in the redditi diversi vs redditi di capitale split, the 2026 crypto rate increase to 33%, the 0.2% IVAFE wealth tax on assets held abroad, and the mandatory annual RW declaration for anyone using a foreign broker like IBKR or DEGIRO.

Dark wood infographic explaining investing taxes in Italy, with sections on dividend tax, capital gains tax, tax-free allowances, wealth tax on foreign assets, and tax planning considerations, alongside the Italian flag and finance-themed visuals.

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Italy’s investment tax — key numbers

Before diving into mechanics, here are the numbers that define the Italian system for ETF investors.

26%
Flat CGT rate (ETFs & stocks)
33%
Crypto CGT rate (from 2026)
0.2%
IVAFE on foreign accounts
4 yrs
Loss carry-forward period
€0
Annual tax-free threshold
Key 2026 changes: The 2026 Budget Law raised the crypto capital gains rate from 26% to 33% (effective 1 January 2026). Euro-denominated stablecoins (EMTs) retain the 26% rate. The Italian Financial Transaction Tax (Tobin Tax) also doubled in 2026 — relevant if you trade individual Italian stocks. Everything else on this page remains at the standard 26%.
Concept What it is Who it affects
Imposta sostitutiva 26% Flat substitute tax on CGT, dividends, and interest All investors
Crypto 33% (2026) Raised rate on most crypto-asset gains from Jan 2026 Crypto investors
White-list bonds 12.5% Preferential rate on Italian BTPs and qualifying sovereign debt Government bond holders
Redditi diversi Capital gains from selling ETFs — losses carry forward 4 years All ETF investors
Redditi di capitale Dividends and distributions — cannot offset redditi diversi losses Distributing ETF holders
Regime amministrato Italian broker withholds and remits tax automatically Italian broker users
Regime dichiarativo Self-declaration in annual Modello Redditi PF Foreign broker users
Regime gestito Annual NAV-based tax via discretionary portfolio manager Private banking / wealth management
IVAFE 0.2% annual wealth tax on financial assets held abroad Foreign broker users
Imposta di bollo 0.2% annual stamp duty on assets at Italian-regulated brokers Italian broker users

The 26% flat tax on investment income

Italy taxes almost all investment income at a single flat rate. Straightforward in principle — with important nuances in practice.

The imposta sostitutiva of 26% applies to capital gains from selling ETFs and stocks, dividends and distributions, and interest income from bonds and deposits. Unlike Germany’s €1,000 Freistellungsauftrag or the UK’s ISA, Italy has no equivalent annual tax-free threshold on general investment accounts. Every euro of gain is subject to the 26% rate from the first transaction.

One carve-out: white-list sovereign bonds. Italian government bonds (BTPs) — and all qualifying sovereign debt issued by countries on Italy’s white list, including US Treasuries and German Bunds — are taxed at a preferential 12.5%. This rate doesn’t apply to sovereign bond ETFs; those are still taxed at 26% on the blended portfolio gain.

Stock pickers: note the Tobin Tax. Italy’s Financial Transaction Tax (IFTT) applies to purchases of Italian-listed equities. In 2026, the rates doubled: now 0.4% on trades through non-regulated venues and 0.2% on regulated exchanges (Borsa Italiana). This is a transaction cost, not a CGT — it applies on purchase regardless of whether you ever make a gain. It does not apply to ETFs or non-Italian stocks.

Country CGT rate Annual exemption
Italy 26% flat (33% crypto) None
Germany 26.375% (18.46% effective on equity ETFs after Teilfreistellung) €1,000 Freistellungsauftrag
France 30% PFU flat PEA account exemption available
Netherlands ~36% on notional 6.04% return (Box 3) €57,000 threshold
Spain 19–28% progressive €6,000 at 19%, up to €300k at 26%

The critical split: redditi diversi vs redditi di capitale

This is the most important — and most misunderstood — aspect of Italian ETF taxation. The two income categories are legally distinct, and losses in one cannot offset income in the other.

Redditi diversi — gains from selling

Capital gains realised from selling ETF units, stocks, ETCs, certificates, or other financial instruments.

  • Taxed at 26% on the net gain
  • Losses carry forward up to 4 tax years
  • Losses offset future gains within this category only
Redditi di capitale — income from capital

Dividends and distributions paid out by ETFs and stocks.

  • Taxed at 26% at source on each payment
  • No loss carry-forward available
  • Cannot be offset by redditi diversi losses
The loss offset trap — a worked example

You hold VWCE (accumulating) and VWRL (distributing). In the same year: you sell VWCE at a €2,000 loss, and VWRL pays €1,500 in dividends. You might expect these to net out. They don’t.

  • The €1,500 dividend is taxed at 26% = €390 owed, regardless of your capital loss
  • The €2,000 loss carries forward to offset future capital gains only

Implication: Accumulating ETFs (VWCE, VUAA) are structurally simpler for Italian investors — all returns stay in the redditi diversi category, deferring tax until sale and keeping everything offsettable within one category.

Which instruments can recover your carry-forward losses?

Not all instruments generate losses in the redditi diversi category. This matters for tax-loss harvesting and understanding what actually offsets what.

Instrument Loss category Can offset future capital gains?
ETF capital gain/loss (on sale) Redditi diversi Yes — carries forward 4 years
Individual stocks (capital gain/loss) Redditi diversi Yes — carries forward 4 years
ETCs (commodity ETPs) Redditi diversi Yes — carries forward 4 years
Certificates Redditi diversi Yes — carries forward 4 years
Options / derivatives Redditi diversi Yes — carries forward 4 years
ETF dividends / distributions Redditi di capitale No — taxed at source, no offset
Stock dividends Redditi di capitale No — taxed at source, no offset
The practical implication: If you have carry-forward ETF losses expiring at year-end, you can harvest them against gains from stocks, ETCs, or certificates — not against dividends. Advanced Italian investors sometimes use ETCs or structured certificates tactically for this reason. Using distributing ETFs to “generate income” that absorbs your carry-forward losses doesn’t work.

Regime amministrato vs regime dichiarativo

Italian tax law gives investors two main options for how their taxes are administered. The choice is largely determined by whether you use an Italian broker or a foreign one.

Regime amministrato
Broker handles everything

Your Italian-regulated broker calculates, withholds, and remits all taxes on your behalf. No investment income declaration required in your annual tax return — it’s already settled.

  • Zero tax admin for the investor
  • Automatic loss offsetting via the zainetto fiscale
  • Default at Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo, Banca Mediolanum
  • FIFO applied — cannot choose which lots to sell
  • Broker also collects 0.2% imposta di bollo annually
Regime dichiarativo
You declare everything

All investment income declared in your annual Modello Redditi PF. You calculate taxes, apply losses, and pay via F24. No withholding at source.

  • Required for all foreign brokers (IBKR, DEGIRO, etc.)
  • More flexibility — can choose which lots to sell
  • IVAFE and RW quadro reporting also required
  • Commercialista strongly recommended for first year
The zainetto fiscale: Under regime amministrato, your broker maintains a running internal register of realised gains and losses. Losses automatically offset future gains within your account — no action required. If you switch brokers, the zainetto does not transfer. Losses stay at the original broker and must be claimed manually in your Modello Redditi if that account is later closed.
Trade Republic note: Trade Republic operates in Italy with an Italian IBAN and is progressively implementing regime amministrato functionality for Italian users. Some Italian clients now benefit from partial or full sostituto d’imposta status, eliminating some dichiarativo obligations. Check current status directly with Trade Republic — the landscape here is evolving.
A third regime: risparmio gestito

A third regime — risparmio gestito (discretionary portfolio management) — exists for completeness. Under this model, a portfolio manager makes all investment decisions, and tax is applied annually on the net increase in total portfolio value, regardless of individual realisations. It is used in private banking and discretionary wealth management. For self-directed retail ETF investors, it is not applicable — regime amministrato and dichiarativo are the only two regimes you will encounter in practice.


UCITS vs non-UCITS ETFs: why it matters for Italian investors

The 26% imposta sostitutiva applies cleanly to UCITS-compliant ETFs. Non-UCITS ETFs — primarily US-listed funds like VOO or VTI — sit in a legally different category and can trigger ordinary IRPEF income tax instead. This is not a hypothetical risk.

UCITS ETFs (EU-harmonised)
Standard 26% treatment

VWCE, VUAA, VWRL, CSPX, and virtually every ETF available on European exchanges are UCITS-compliant. These receive the flat 26% substitute tax treatment under Italian law, with the redditi diversi / redditi di capitale split described above.

  • 26% on capital gains + dividends
  • Losses carry forward 4 years (redditi diversi)
  • Ireland-domiciled UCITS ETFs dominant (better WHT treaties)
  • Available on IBKR, DEGIRO, Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo
Non-UCITS ETFs (US-listed)
Different and worse treatment

US-listed ETFs like VOO, VTI, and SPY are not UCITS-compliant. For Italian tax residents, they can fall outside the standard substitute tax framework, potentially being taxed as ordinary income under IRPEF — at your marginal rate, which could be substantially higher than 26%.

  • Not accessible to EU retail investors via MiFID II (no KID)
  • Available only to professional investors or non-EU residents
  • Potential ordinary IRPEF treatment on gains
  • Practically irrelevant for standard Italian retail accounts
Why this rarely affects you in practice: EU retail brokers are legally required to comply with MiFID II / PRIIPs — they cannot offer US ETFs to retail clients without a KID document, which US fund providers don’t produce for European markets. IBKR, DEGIRO, and all EU-regulated platforms will not allow Italian retail users to purchase VOO or VTI. The risk only exists if you use a non-EU broker or hold US ETFs from a prior period of non-Italian tax residency. Stick to UCITS ETFs: VWCE and VUAA for global equity, CSPX for S&P 500.

Accumulating vs distributing ETFs for Italian investors

Both are taxed at 26%, but the income category and administrative complexity differ — with accumulating ETFs clearly preferable for most Italian investors.

Accumulating (VWCE, VUAA) Distributing (VWRL, VUSA)
Annual taxation None until sale 26% on each distribution
Income category Redditi diversi only (on sale) Redditi di capitale (divs) + redditi diversi (gains)
Loss offsetting Losses offset future capital gains Capital losses cannot offset dividend income
Tax deferral Full deferral until sale No deferral on dividend portion
Compounding effect Pre-tax capital compounds uninterrupted 26% tax leakage on each dividend interrupts compounding
Admin complexity Low — one category only Higher — two categories to track
For Italian investors, accumulating ETFs are structurally preferable: full tax deferral until sale, uninterrupted compounding, and cleaner loss offsetting within a single income category. The distributing structure adds complexity with no tax rate advantage. When choosing between equivalents: prefer VWCE over VWRL, VUAA over VUSA. The compounding drag from recurring dividend taxation compounds against you over a 20–30 year horizon in a way that isn’t visible in any single year.

IVAFE: the 0.2% wealth tax on foreign financial assets

If you invest through IBKR Ireland or DEGIRO Netherlands, IVAFE applies to your entire account value each year. It’s an ongoing overhead to factor into the total cost of using a foreign platform.

IVAFE calculation — worked example

Italian resident, IBKR account worth €50,000 at start of year and €58,000 at end of year.

  • Average account value: (€50,000 + €58,000) ÷ 2 = €54,000
  • IVAFE rate: 0.2%
  • IVAFE owed: €54,000 × 0.002 = €108

On a €100,000 portfolio: ~€200/year. On a €200,000 portfolio: ~€400/year. Declared in quadro RW and paid via F24 by the standard deadline (30 June for the prior tax year).

IVAFE vs imposta di bollo — a common misconception

A frequent mistake: assuming that Italian brokers are “free from wealth tax” compared to foreign ones. They’re not — the mechanism is just different.

Italian-regulated brokers (Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo) collect a 0.2% imposta di bollo annually on the value of your portfolio. The rate is identical to IVAFE. The difference is administrative: imposta di bollo is collected automatically by the Italian broker as sostituto d’imposta, so you never see it in a tax form. IVAFE is self-declared via quadro RW.

Bottom line: On a €100,000 portfolio, the annual 0.2% wealth tax applies whether you use Fineco or IBKR. The cost is the same. What changes is who does the admin — and the fact that IBKR users also face the annual Modello Redditi PF filing burden on top.

Subject to IVAFE
  • IBKR Ireland accounts
  • DEGIRO Netherlands accounts
  • Trading 212, Lightyear, any non-Italian broker
  • Foreign bank accounts
  • Crypto held at foreign exchanges
  • Foreign life insurance and pension products
Not subject to IVAFE (imposta di bollo applies instead)
  • Italian-regulated brokers (Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo)
  • Italian bank accounts
  • Italian pension funds (fondi pensione)
  • PIR accounts

Quadro RW: mandatory declaration of foreign accounts

Every Italian tax resident holding assets at a foreign broker must complete quadro RW annually. This is a monitoring requirement — mandatory every year, even in years with no taxable events.

What you must report in quadro RW
  • Name and country of the foreign institution (e.g. “Interactive Brokers Ireland Ltd — Ireland”)
  • Account value at 1 January of the tax year
  • Account value at 31 December of the tax year
  • Average value during the year (used to calculate IVAFE)
  • Income produced during the year
  • Whether the account is jointly held
Reporting thresholds by asset type

Not all foreign assets have the same threshold. The rules differ between investment accounts and cash accounts:

  • Investment accounts (IBKR, DEGIRO, ETFs, stocks, crypto): €0 threshold — report from the first euro. No minimum balance applies.
  • Foreign bank accounts (cash): Only reportable if the average balance exceeds €5,000 or the peak balance at any point exceeds €15,000 in the year.
Penalties for non-declaration are substantial: 3%–15% of the unreported asset value for unintentional errors, and higher for intentional evasion. This is not a technicality to skip — it is mandatory regardless of whether any gains were realised or taxes owed. If you have missed a filing, see the ravvedimento operoso section below.
CRS: the Agenzia delle Entrate already knows about your IBKR account

Italy participates in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) — an automatic financial information exchange framework between over 100 countries. Under CRS, foreign financial institutions report account holder information, balances, and income to their local regulator, which then shares that data with Italy’s Agenzia delle Entrate annually.

  • IBKR Ireland reports Italian account holders to Irish Revenue → shared with Agenzia delle Entrate
  • DEGIRO Netherlands reports Italian clients to Dutch authorities → shared with Agenzia delle Entrate
  • Trade Republic, Revolut, and Lightyear operate under the same CRS framework
  • The data reported includes: account holder name, TIN, account balance, dividends, interest, and gross proceeds from asset sales

The implication: Assuming that a foreign brokerage account is invisible to Italian tax authorities is a costly mistake. The Agenzia has CRS data before you even file your return. Non-declaration is a detectable discrepancy, not a hidden oversight.

Annual filing checklist for foreign broker users
  1. January: Download annual tax statement — IBKR: Tax Forms section (Annual Activity Statement + Consolidated 1042-S equivalent); DEGIRO: Annual Account Statement from the Documents section.
  2. January: Export transaction history as CSV for the full year — needed for P/L calculation and lot matching. If you hold ETFs at multiple foreign brokers, a portfolio tracker like Sharesight can centralise transaction history and simplify the P/L reconstruction needed for quadro RT.
  3. By April–June: File the Modello Redditi PF — not the 730 (cannot use the 730 if you hold foreign assets).
  4. Quadro RL: Declare redditi di capitale — dividends received from foreign ETFs.
  5. Quadro RT: Declare redditi diversi — capital gains and losses. Apply any carry-forward losses from prior years.
  6. Quadro RW: Declare all foreign account balances and calculate IVAFE on the average balance.
  7. F24 payment: Pay imposta sostitutiva on gains + IVAFE by 30 June (or 30 July with a 0.4% surcharge).
  8. Archive: Keep all broker statements, transaction CSVs, and filed tax returns for at least 5 years.
Missed a filing? Ravvedimento operoso reduces the penalty

If you missed a quadro RW declaration or underpaid taxes in a prior year, ravvedimento operoso allows you to self-correct with a significantly reduced penalty — provided you act before the Agenzia delle Entrate initiates an audit.

The penalty reduction scales with how quickly you act: corrections within 90 days of the deadline attract the lowest rates; corrections in the second or third year attract progressively higher (but still reduced) rates compared to the standard 3%–15% assessment. A commercialista can calculate the exact amounts due. This is not a route to avoid liability — but it is substantially cheaper than waiting to be audited.


Crypto taxation in Italy: the 33% rate and RW obligations

The 2026 Budget Law made Italy’s crypto tax treatment materially different from standard investment assets. If you hold both ETFs and crypto, they are now taxed at different rates.

Most crypto — 33% (from Jan 2026)
Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, and most tokens
  • 33% flat rate on capital gains (raised from 26%)
  • Applies to Bitcoin, Ethereum, altcoins, dollar-stablecoins (USDT, USDC)
  • No €2,000 annual de minimis in 2026 — check current rules
  • Gains classified as redditi diversi — losses carry forward 4 years
Euro-stablecoins (EMTs) — 26% carve-out
EURC, EURS, and euro-pegged EMTs
  • Electronic Money Tokens pegged to the euro remain at 26%
  • Applies to EURC (Circle), EURS (Stasis), and equivalent euro EMTs
  • Dollar-stablecoins (USDT, USDC) do not qualify — taxed at 33%
  • The distinction is the reference currency, not the issuer
2026 cost basis reset: the 18% substitute tax option

The 2026 Budget Law introduced a one-time option to reset the tax cost basis of crypto holdings as of 1 January 2026 by paying an 18% substitute tax on the market value at that date. This allows investors sitting on large unrealised gains accumulated under the old 26% regime to step up their cost basis before the 33% rate applies to future gains.

Whether this makes sense depends on your position size, expected future gains, and cash flow for the lump-sum payment. Consult a commercialista before acting — this is a one-time election with permanent consequences for your tax position.

Quadro RW applies to all crypto holdings: Crypto held at foreign exchanges (Coinbase, Binance, Kraken) must be declared in quadro RW annually from the first euro — the same €0 reporting threshold as foreign investment accounts. The 0.2% IVAFE applies to the average balance of those holdings during the year. Crypto held at Italian-regulated providers may have different treatment — verify with the specific platform. For tracking gains, cost basis, and generating Italian-compatible tax reports across multiple exchanges, Divly is a strong option for Italian investors with native EU localisation and a human expert review tier. Read the Divly review → Koinly and Blockpit also support Italian tax formats and are worth considering for broader DeFi coverage. Read the Koinly review → | Read the Blockpit review →

Which setup fits your situation?

The right broker–regime combination depends on your portfolio size, tax tolerance, and how much annual admin you’re willing to handle. Here’s a direct mapping.

Your situation Likely best setup Why
Beginner — want zero tax admin Fineco or Directa (regime amministrato) Broker handles everything; no annual filing; zainetto fiscale automatic
Large portfolio (>€100k) + comfortable with admin IBKR (regime dichiarativo) Lowest commissions, best FX rates, widest UCITS ETF range
Passive ETF investor, want low cost DEGIRO or IBKR + accumulating ETFs Narrow per-trade spread; VWCE/VUAA keeps everything in redditi diversi
Want zero paperwork + Italian stocks BG Saxo (regime amministrato) €2 flat trades, 0% custody, Tobin Tax handled automatically as sostituto
Active trader needing flexibility IBKR (regime dichiarativo) Lot selection flexibility; can time which gains to realise in which year
Want international diversification IBKR or DEGIRO Broadest UCITS ETF access; some Italian platforms limit to Borsa Italiana-listed products
The choice between Italian and foreign broker is not primarily about tax rates — the 26% rate applies regardless. It is about tax administration cost: your annual time investment, whether you need a commercialista, and whether you’re comfortable with the Modello Redditi PF filing. For most investors starting out, regime amministrato is the right default. Switching to dichiarativo as the portfolio grows is straightforward; the reverse — closing an IBKR account to move everything to Fineco — is messier.

The most common Italian investor tax mistakes

These errors come up repeatedly in Italian investor forums and from commercialisti dealing with first-time Modello Redditi PF filers. Most are easily avoidable once you know the rules.

Skipping quadro RW because “nothing happened this year”

RW is a monitoring obligation, not a tax declaration. If you hold assets at a foreign broker — even in a year where you made no trades, no gains, and no losses — you must still file quadro RW. Skipping it because the account was “inactive” is one of the most common errors and triggers automatic penalties.

Assuming DEGIRO handles your Italian taxes

DEGIRO is not an Italian sostituto d’imposta. It withholds nothing, reports nothing to the Agenzia delle Entrate on your behalf, and provides no pre-filled Italian tax form. It provides an annual account statement — you do the rest. Confusing DEGIRO with an Italian broker under regime amministrato is a recurring mistake among first-year users.

Losing carry-forward losses when switching brokers

Your zainetto fiscale does not transfer when you move from one Italian broker to another, or when you close an Italian broker and open a foreign one. Losses stay at the originating broker. If you close that account before using them, they are permanently lost unless you claim them in your Modello Redditi PF in the year of closure. Check your zainetto balance before switching.

Missing the 4-year loss expiry deadline

Carry-forward losses expire after 4 tax years. They don’t roll over indefinitely. Losses from 2022 expire at the end of 2026 if unused. Keep a simple spreadsheet with each loss, the year it was incurred, and its expiry year. This is especially important under dichiarativo, where no broker system alerts you automatically.

Filing a 730 instead of the Modello Redditi PF

The 730 is the simplified pre-filled tax return used by employed workers. Italian residents with foreign financial assets — IBKR, DEGIRO, foreign cash accounts above threshold — cannot use the 730. They must file the Modello Redditi PF (formerly UNICO). Using the 730 and excluding foreign asset declarations is not a minor error.

Assuming foreign crypto exchanges are invisible

Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance all participate in CRS and AML reporting frameworks. Italian tax residents holding crypto at foreign exchanges are subject to the same quadro RW obligations as those with stock brokerage accounts. The assumption that crypto is “off the grid” for Italian tax purposes has not been accurate since the 2022 reporting reforms and is even less so today.


Practical tips for Italian ETF investors

Default to accumulating ETFs

VWCE over VWRL, VUAA over VUSA. All returns stay in redditi diversi, deferring tax entirely until sale and eliminating the redditi di capitale complication. Same index, simpler Italian tax profile, better long-term compounding.

If simplicity is the priority, use an Italian broker

Fineco or Directa under regime amministrato means zero annual tax admin — the zainetto fiscale handles everything automatically. Trade-off: slightly higher commissions and a narrower UCITS ETF catalogue. The imposta di bollo (0.2%) applies here the same as IVAFE does on IBKR — the tax cost is equal.

Model the IVAFE + commercialista overhead honestly

On a €50,000 IBKR portfolio: IVAFE ~€100 + commercialista ~€150–200 = ~€300/year overhead. At this size, IBKR’s lower commissions typically more than compensate — but run the numbers for your portfolio size and trading frequency before switching.

Harvest losses before year-end — but only into the right instruments

If you have carry-forward losses expiring, realise gains in redditi diversi instruments (stocks, ETCs, certificates) to absorb them before they expire. ETF dividends (redditi di capitale) do not help — the categories don’t mix. Plan this in November, not late December.

Don’t switch brokers without checking your zainetto

Carry-forward losses in your zainetto fiscale do not transfer when you change platforms. If you have €3,000 in losses at Fineco and you move to IBKR, those losses stay at Fineco — and can only offset future gains there, or be claimed manually when you close that account.

Explore PIR if eligible

PIRs (Piani Individuali di Risparmio) offer CGT exemption after a 5-year hold. Significant restrictions apply — most PIR products invest primarily in Italian small/mid caps — but they’re worth understanding as a tax-advantaged complement to a core UCITS ETF portfolio.


Brokers for Italian ETF investors

IBKR and DEGIRO offer broader UCITS ETF access and lower commissions than most Italian platforms — at the cost of annual IVAFE and Modello Redditi PF filing. Fineco and Directa handle all taxes automatically under regime amministrato. See our full reviews before opening an account.

IBKR and DEGIRO use regime dichiarativo — IVAFE + annual Modello Redditi PF required. For zero tax admin, Italian-regulated platforms (Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo) under regime amministrato may be a better fit.



Frequently asked questions

What is the capital gains tax rate in Italy for ETF investors?

Italy applies a flat 26% substitute tax (imposta sostitutiva) on capital gains from selling ETFs, dividends received, and interest income. There is no annual tax-free threshold. Losses from ETF sales (classified as redditi diversi) can be carried forward for up to four years to offset future capital gains in the same category.

What is regime amministrato in Italy?

Regime amministrato is the tax administration regime where your Italian-regulated broker calculates, withholds, and remits all investment taxes on your behalf. You do not need to declare investment income in your annual tax return — it is already settled at source. The broker also maintains your zainetto fiscale, automatically offsetting realised losses against future gains within your account. This is the default at Fineco, Directa, BG Saxo, and other Italian-regulated platforms.

What is the difference between redditi di capitale and redditi diversi for ETFs?

Redditi di capitale covers income from capital — dividends and distributions paid out by ETFs. Redditi diversi covers gains from the disposal of financial instruments — capital gains from selling ETF units. The critical practical constraint: losses in redditi diversi cannot offset income in redditi di capitale. ETF capital losses from a sale cannot reduce the tax owed on dividends received in the same year or prior years.

What is IVAFE and who pays it?

IVAFE (Imposta sul Valore delle Attività Finanziarie all’Estero) is an annual 0.2% wealth tax on the average value of financial assets held at foreign brokers by Italian tax residents. It applies to IBKR, DEGIRO, Trading 212, Lightyear, and any other non-Italian platform. IVAFE is declared in quadro RW of the Modello Redditi PF and paid via F24. Assets held at Italian-regulated brokers are not subject to IVAFE — but those brokers collect an equivalent 0.2% imposta di bollo on your behalf. The wealth tax cost is 0.2% either way; the difference is administrative.

Do I need to declare my IBKR or DEGIRO account in Italy?

Yes. Italian tax residents with financial assets at foreign brokers must declare them annually in quadro RW of the Modello Redditi PF. You report account values at start and end of year, calculate IVAFE on the average value, and cross-reference income in quadro RL (dividends) and quadro RT (capital gains). This is mandatory every year — even in years with no gains and no capital gains tax owed. Penalties for non-declaration range from 3% to 15% of the unreported asset value. Note also that IBKR and DEGIRO report Italian account holders to the Agenzia delle Entrate annually via CRS — the declaration is not optional.

What is the crypto tax rate in Italy in 2026?

As of 1 January 2026, most crypto-assets — including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and dollar-stablecoins like USDT — are taxed at 33% on capital gains, raised from 26% by the 2026 Budget Law. A carve-out applies for Electronic Money Tokens (EMTs) pegged to the euro, such as EURC or EURS, which remain at 26%. Crypto holdings at foreign exchanges must be declared in quadro RW annually from the first euro, with 0.2% IVAFE applying to the average balance. Gains are classified as redditi diversi and can be carried forward 4 years.

Can the Agenzia delle Entrate see my foreign broker account?

Yes. Italy participates in the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS), under which foreign financial institutions — including IBKR Ireland, DEGIRO, Trade Republic, and Revolut — automatically report account holder information, balances, and income to the relevant national tax authority, which then shares it with the Agenzia delle Entrate. Assuming that a foreign brokerage or crypto exchange account is invisible to Italian tax authorities is a common and costly mistake.

What is risparmio gestito and does it apply to ETF investors?

Risparmio gestito is a third tax administration regime used in discretionary portfolio management, typically in private banking. Tax is applied annually on the net increase in the total portfolio value, regardless of whether individual positions were sold. It is not applicable to self-directed retail ETF investors using standard brokerage accounts — regime amministrato and regime dichiarativo are the two relevant regimes for DIY investors.

QuantRoutine provides educational content only. Nothing on this page constitutes tax or investment advice. Italian tax rules are subject to change — consult a commercialista for advice specific to your situation. Investments can lose value and past performance does not guarantee future results.