On April 10, 2026, the Sicilian Regional Government approved a measure to reimburse 50% of IRPEF — Italy’s personal income tax — to anyone who relocates their tax residence to Sicily from abroad. The headline number is striking. The details, as always with Italian tax law, matter enormously.
Signed by Regional Economic Assessor Alessandro Dagnino and announced by Regional President Renato Schifani, the measure is described as the first initiative of its kind in Italy: a region using its constitutional fiscal autonomy to refund a share of a national tax to attract new residents.
The Numbers at a Glance
- Standard reimbursement: 50% of IRPEF paid annually
- Small commune bonus: Up to 60% for municipalities with fewer than 5,000 residents
- Annual cap: €100,000 per beneficiary per year
- Duration: Three consecutive tax years
- Total potential benefit: Up to €300,000 over the full period
At a 50% rate, a beneficiary paying €40,000 in IRPEF annually would receive €20,000 back from the Region each year — €60,000 over three years.
How It Works
This is a direct cash reimbursement, not a deduction or a reduced withholding. You pay your IRPEF to the Italian state in full, and the Region of Sicily refunds 50% separately from the regional budget. The net effect is that you pay approximately half the income tax you would otherwise owe for up to three years.
The legal basis is Sicily’s Legge di Stabilità 2026 (the regional Stability Law), underpinned by a July 2025 national Council of Ministers decree that reinforced Sicily’s special-statute fiscal autonomy. The measure was approved by the Budget Committee of the Assemblea Regionale Siciliana (ARS) and is currently awaiting formal publication in the Gazzetta Ufficiale della Regione Siciliana before implementing regulations and application procedures are issued.
Who Qualifies
You must transfer tax residence from abroad to Sicily. Both Italian citizens returning from abroad and foreign nationals relocating for the first time are eligible. Individuals already resident elsewhere in Italy do not appear to qualify — the benefit is designed for genuine international relocations.
You must have qualifying taxable income in Italy: employment income (including remote employees of foreign companies), self-employment or business income, or pension income. Digital nomads are explicitly included in the policy’s stated scope.
You must purchase or renovate a residential property in Sicily within 12 months of establishing residency. Renting does not satisfy this requirement. You must also retain the property through at least December 31 of the second year following your move.
You must maintain Sicilian residency through December 31 of the year following your transfer.
The property purchase window is 12 months from the date you establish residency. If you plan to rent first and observe before buying, you may find yourself outside the eligibility window. Consider whether completing a purchase concurrent with your residency transfer is strategically preferable.
The Critical Question: Can You Stack This with the Impatriati Regime?
If you know Italian tax incentives, this is the first thing you will ask. The honest answer: we don’t know yet.
The implementing regulations have not been published, and the approved text does not explicitly address whether the Sicily reimbursement can be combined with Italy’s national impatriati regime — which reduces your taxable base by 50% to 90% for qualifying returning workers. It is entirely possible that the final regulations will prohibit stacking, permit it, or impose conditions that make the question moot. Until those regulations are issued, any definitive answer is speculation.
What we can say is that the two benefits target overlapping populations, and Italian tax authorities have historically been reluctant to allow cumulative incentives. If stacking is not permitted, the planning question becomes which path is worth more — and that depends entirely on your income level, income sources, and residency history. For some people the impatriati discount produces a greater net benefit; for others the Sicily reimbursement is comparable or superior, particularly after the impatriati period expires.
This is a planning decision that needs to be mapped out before you establish residency in Italy, not after. The difference between the two paths, over a five-year horizon, can easily be six figures.
What We Don’t Know Yet
The measure has been approved by the ARS Budget Committee, but several critical details remain unresolved:
- Implementation timeline. The measure awaits publication in the Gazzetta Ufficiale della Regione Siciliana and subsequent implementing regulations. No dates have been given for either step.
- Reimbursement mechanics. How you apply, what documentation is required, and how the Region will process payments are all undefined. Sicily’s regional bureaucracy has a well-documented history of slow disbursements — the region has struggled with timely payment of existing subsidies and EU-funded programs. A 50% reimbursement on paper means little if it takes years to arrive.
- Budget constraints. The reimbursement comes from the regional budget. If the program proves more popular than projected, funding caps or processing delays could effectively limit the benefit even for qualifying applicants.
- Interaction with other incentives. As noted above, whether this can be combined with the impatriati regime or other national tax benefits has not been clarified.
None of this means the measure won’t work as advertised. But anyone making a relocation decision based on this benefit should plan for the possibility that the money arrives late — or that the final rules differ from the announcement.
What You Should Do Now
The direction is clear enough to plan around, even with the unknowns. Here is what matters:
Assess your income structure. The value of the benefit depends on how much IRPEF you will actually pay in Sicily — which depends on your income sources, applicable tax treaties, and any existing Italian tax position.
Map the impatriati question. If you have been outside Italy for the required period, you may theoretically qualify for both regimes. Whether they can be stacked remains unclear, but understanding which path is worth more for your specific situation — and having both options modeled — is the first planning question to answer.
Think about property timing. The 12-month window to purchase or renovate runs from the date you establish residency. If you are planning to rent and observe before buying, you may find yourself outside the eligibility window. Consider whether completing a purchase concurrent with your residency transfer is strategically preferable.
Consider a smaller town. The 10-point bonus for municipalities under 5,000 residents is not trivial. Sicily has no shortage of beautiful, historically rich small towns where the 60% rate would apply — and where property prices remain accessible.
Monitor the Official Gazette. We will update this article and notify clients as implementing regulations are released. Being ready to move quickly when those regulations drop — with your tax position already mapped and your property situation resolved — could mean claiming from Year 1 rather than missing the window.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. The Sicily IRPEF reimbursement described here had not yet been published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale della Regione Siciliana as of the date of this article. Consult a qualified cross-border tax professional before making any relocation or planning decisions.
Sources: ANSA Sicilia (April 10, 2026); Gazzetta del Sud (April 10, 2026); Boccadutri International Law Firm; Italian Real Estate Lawyers; official statement of Regional President Renato Schifani.
Get Your Tax Position Mapped Before You Relocate
We model both the Sicily reimbursement and impatriati paths so you can make the right call for your situation.
Book a Free Consultation →