Managing social security contributions across two countries requires understanding which system applies to you, how the Totalization Agreement protects you from double contributions, and how to preserve your future retirement benefits in both systems.

The Two Systems You're Dealing With

United States

Social Security (FICA/SECA)

12.4% combined on wages up to ~$168,600 (2024), split employer/employee. Self-employed pay full 15.3% including Medicare. Retirement eligibility: 40 credits (typically 10 years).

Italy

INPS Contributions

Combined employee+employer rate: ~33% for employees; 25–26% for self-employed (Gestione Separata). Retirement eligibility: 20 years of contributions minimum.

Step 1: Determine Which System Applies

The U.S.-Italy Totalization Agreement determines which country's system applies based on your work situation:

See: Understanding the U.S.-Italy Totalization Agreement for the full framework.

Step 2: Protect Your U.S. Retirement Credits

Many Americans worry that years spent working in Italy will leave them without enough U.S. Social Security credits. The Totalization Agreement addresses this through "totalization" of credits:

Step 3: Build Your Italian INPS Record

If you're going to be in Italy long-term, building an Italian INPS record has real retirement value. Italy's pension system replaces approximately 70%+ of final salary for long-term contributors:

Step 4: Maintain U.S. Coverage If Appropriate

For Americans on temporary assignments or those working for U.S. clients primarily, maintaining U.S. Social Security coverage through the Certificate of Coverage may be strategically better:

See: How to Request Your SSA Certificate of Coverage for Italy — processing takes 60–90 business days.

The Medicare Gap Italy's SSN (universal healthcare) provides excellent coverage while you're resident in Italy, but U.S. Medicare won't cover you abroad. Americans who accumulate fewer than 40 U.S. Social Security credits may need to purchase Medicare coverage (Part A) at retirement at significant cost. For long-term expatriates, this is a critical planning consideration.

Planning Your Retirement Timeline

1

In the Move Year

Determine which system applies. Get a Certificate of Coverage if maintaining U.S. system. Register with Italian INPS if entering the Italian system.

2

Annually

Verify contributions are being applied to the correct system. Keep copies of Italian tax/contribution receipts for U.S. return preparation.

3

5–10 Years Before Retirement

Request Social Security statements from both the SSA (ssa.gov) and INPS to verify your credit history in both systems. Coordinate claim timing for maximum benefit.

U.S. Social Security Benefits While Living in Italy

If you're already receiving U.S. Social Security benefits while living in Italy:

Optimize Your Social Security Strategy

Coordinating two social security systems over a multi-decade career requires long-term planning. Our bilingual team helps Americans in Italy navigate both systems to maximize their retirement security.

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