Without the Totalization Agreement, Americans working in Italy could face social security contributions in both countries simultaneously. The agreement eliminates double contributions — but the rules differ significantly based on employment type and where your employer is based.

What Is the Totalization Agreement?

The U.S.-Italy Social Security Totalization Agreement is a bilateral treaty that:

Without this agreement, a U.S. citizen working in Italy for an Italian employer could owe both U.S. self-employment tax (15.3%) AND Italian INPS contributions (25–33%) on the same earnings.

The Basic Rule: Where You Work

Under the agreement, social security contributions generally follow the location of work — not citizenship or residency:

Scenarios

Employee of Italian Company

Pay Italian INPS Only

Your employer contributes ~23% and you contribute ~9–10% to INPS. No U.S. Social Security tax owed.

U.S. Employer Assignment

May Keep U.S. Coverage

Short-term assignments (under 5 years) can maintain U.S. Social Security contributions. Requires a Certificate of Coverage from the SSA. See: How to Request Your Certificate of Coverage.

Self-Employed in Italy

Italian INPS Applies

Self-employed workers registered in Italy generally pay INPS. This exempts from U.S. self-employment tax — but coordination with your Italian commercialista is essential.

Dual Employment

Complex — Requires Planning

Working simultaneously for employers in both countries requires careful analysis to avoid double contributions. The agreement provides specific rules for this situation.

Benefit Totalization: Qualifying for Benefits

The agreement also helps workers who have split their careers between the U.S. and Italy qualify for retirement benefits in both countries. If you don't have enough credits in either country alone:

Important Limitation INPS contributions paid in Italy are generally NOT eligible for the U.S. Foreign Tax Credit (Form 1116). They're social security contributions, not income taxes. However, the totalization agreement exempts qualifying workers from owing both, which is the primary protection. The distinction matters when calculating your total U.S. tax liability.

How to Claim Exemption

To document your exemption from one country's system, you'll need:

What the Agreement Doesn't Cover

Navigating U.S. and Italian Social Security

The totalization agreement provides significant protection — but only if you document and apply it correctly. Our bilingual team ensures your social security obligations are optimized across both systems.

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