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Italy Elective Residency: The €31K/Year Mediterranean Retirement Visa

How retirees and financially independent individuals use Italy's Elective Residency Visa to live in Italy with €31,000/year in passive income.

The Bureaucracy Hacker ·

Italy Elective Residency: The €31K/Year Mediterranean Retirement Visa

Italy’s Elective Residency Visa (Visto per Residenza Elettiva) grants non-EU nationals the right to reside in Italy without working. The requirement is straightforward: proof of stable annual income of at least €31,000 (~$34,000 USD) and suitable accommodation.

Live in Tuscany, the Amalfi Coast, or Sicily — on a retiree budget that would barely cover rent in any US coastal city.

The Requirements

  • Annual income: €31,000 minimum (single applicant). Higher for families.
  • Income source: Pensions, investments, rental income, annuities. Must be stable and recurring.
  • Accommodation: Proof of a rental contract or property ownership in Italy.
  • Health insurance: Private insurance with full coverage in Italy.
  • No work permitted: You cannot be employed or self-employed in Italy under this visa.

The Application

  1. Apply at the Italian consulate in your home country
  2. Documents: passport, income proof, accommodation proof, insurance, criminal record
  3. Processing: 1-3 months
  4. Upon arrival: register with the local Questura (police) within 8 days for a Permesso di Soggiorno
  5. Initial permit: 1 year, renewable for 2-year periods
  6. After 5 years: eligible for EU long-term resident status
  7. After 10 years: eligible for Italian citizenship

The €100K Flat Tax Option

If your income is significantly higher, you can opt into Italy’s flat tax regime (Art. 24-bis):

  • €100,000/year flat tax on all worldwide income
  • Available to new tax residents who haven’t lived in Italy for 9 of the prior 10 years
  • The Elective Residency Visa + flat tax is the premium Italian retirement strategy

The Cost of Living (Southern Italy)

LocationMonthly Total (USD)
Sicily (Palermo, Catania)$800-1,200
Puglia (Lecce, Bari)$800-1,300
Calabria$600-1,000
Sardinia (Cagliari)$900-1,400
Tuscany (non-Florence)$1,000-1,600
Amalfi Coast$1,200-2,000

Southern Italy and the islands offer the best value. Northern cities (Milan, Bologna) are 50-100% more expensive.

The Healthcare

Italy’s Servizio Sanitario Nazionale (SSN) is available to all legal residents who register and pay the annual enrollment fee (€388-€2,000, income-based). Coverage includes:

  • Primary care, specialist referrals, hospitalization
  • Prescription medications (co-pay of €1-4 per prescription)
  • Emergency care (free)

Quality is generally good, with excellent hospitals in Rome, Milan, and Bologna. Smaller towns have adequate but slower care.

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