It's a narrow technical rule with sweeping consequences: under U.S. law, S-Corporations cannot have shareholders classified as Non-Resident Aliens — and Italian citizens residing in Italy fall squarely in that category.
A common question in cross-border tax and corporate planning: can an Italian citizen living in Italy own shares in a U.S. S-Corporation? The straightforward answer is no. Under U.S. law, S-Corps cannot have shareholders classified as "Non-Resident Aliens," and Italian citizens residing in Italy fall into this category.
Understanding U.S. Business Entity Types
Before examining the restriction, it helps to understand the four primary U.S. entity types and how they differ on ownership rules.
Partnerships
Similar to Italian SNC structures, with direct taxation at the partner level (pass-through taxation) and unlimited liability for partners. No citizenship/residency restrictions.
Limited Liability Companies (LLCs)
LLCs provide limited liability and are typically taxed as pass-through entities. These "check-the-box" entities can elect various tax treatments. Non-Resident Aliens may hold LLC ownership interests.
S-Corporations
An S-Corp elects pass-through tax treatment with limited liability. S-Corps are the only U.S. entity category that restricts ownership based on citizenship and residency. An LLC may elect S-Corporation treatment for federal tax purposes.
C-Corporations
Traditional corporations pay corporate tax on profits. Anyone — including Non-Resident Aliens — can hold C-Corp shares.
Why S-Corp Ownership Is Restricted
Under U.S. tax rules, S-Corp shareholders must be:
- U.S. citizens
- U.S. resident aliens
- Certain qualifying trusts and estates
A person who is "not a U.S. citizen and not a U.S. resident" qualifies as a Non-Resident Alien and cannot be an S-Corp shareholder. The policy rationale: S-Corps receive favorable tax treatment targeting individuals with substantial U.S. ties. Permitting foreign, non-resident owners would undermine this approach.
Therefore, an Italian citizen residing in Italy cannot legally own S-Corp shares, regardless of existing U.S. business relationships. This applies even to dual citizens if they have established Italian residency.
Three Real-World Problem Scenarios
Case 1: Converting a C-Corp into an S-Corp
When a C-Corp elects S-Corp status, it must confirm it has no Non-Resident Alien shareholders. If even one shareholder is ineligible, the election fails — and the company may face adverse tax consequences from the failed conversion.
Case 2: Renouncing U.S. Citizenship
If an S-Corp shareholder living abroad holds dual citizenship and later renounces U.S. citizenship, they immediately become a Non-Resident Alien and ineligible to remain a shareholder. This problem is often discovered months after renunciation, creating compliance issues for both the individual and the corporation.
Case 3: Moving Back to Italy
A foreign individual previously classified as a resident alien (such as someone living in the U.S. on a visa) becomes a Non-Resident Alien upon relocating to Italy. At that moment, they no longer qualify to hold S-Corp shares — even if they held them for years prior.
What Italian Residents Can Own Instead
While S-Corp ownership is prohibited, Italian residents can freely hold interests in:
- Disregarded LLCs
- Partnerships
- C-Corporations
Each entity type carries distinct tax and reporting obligations for Italian residents. For instance, LLC ownership while living in Italy creates complex foreign income and disclosure issues requiring careful planning — but none of these are outright prohibited.
Anyone considering U.S. business investment from abroad should carefully evaluate appropriate entity structures and understand cross-border tax implications before proceeding — not after the structure is already in place.
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