Italy VAT guide for digital businesses

Is your product taxable in Italy? Get up-to-date rates, registration thresholds, and more from Anrok’s team of tax experts.

Solve global tax for SaaS
VAT index

2024 nonresident VAT rates for Italy

Reach out to our team to start automating compliance for your business.

Rates and registration

Tax rate
22%
Threshold
First B2C sale

Taxable transactions

B2C sales
Yes

Taxable
products

Digital products
Yes
Your product
Contact us

Table of contents

Are digital products taxable in Italy?

Value Added Tax (VAT) is a consumption tax levied on the supply of goods and services in Italy. Businesses making taxable sales in Italy need to comply with the VAT rules. The standard VAT rate in Italy is 22% which applies to most goods and services, including digital products like ebooks, software, music, etc.

Nonresident businesses must register for VAT in Italy once they make their first business-to-consumer (B2C) sale. For business-to-business (B2B) sales, the customer accounts for the VAT using the reverse charge mechanism. Nonresident businesses are required to charge Italian VAT on all B2C sales of digital products to customers in Italy. The VAT collected must be reported and remitted periodically to the Italian tax authorities.

Determining if your product is taxable in Italy

To determine whether VAT applies to the sale of your digital product or service, there are three main factors to consider:

  1. Customer's location: You need to identify the location of your customer, as tax regulations vary by country. Common pieces of evidence for customer location determination include billing address, customer account address, and credit card country.
  2. Taxability of your product: Your digital product or service needs to qualify as a digital good or service for VAT purposes. This typically means that it is delivered electronically over the Internet or an electronic network, is automated, relies on technology, and is not a physical good.
  3. Customer’s tax registration status: If you sell to other businesses located in Italy, you should collect and validate their tax registration numbers (tax IDs). In Italy, sellers are not responsible for VAT on B2B transactions with the proper documentation, and the responsibility of accounting for tax is transferred to the buyer through a reverse charge mechanism.

Getting VAT compliant in Italy

To ensure compliance with VAT regulations, here are the general steps that a nonresident company selling software or other digital products should take:

  1. Collect customer addresses and tax IDs: Even if you are not registered for VAT, collecting customer tax IDs can save you expenses in the future. This step can be taken right away for customers outside the US.
  2. Understand your VAT obligations: Determine where you have VAT obligations by cross-checking customer locations and the product taxability and registration thresholds in each country. Each country has its own registration threshold, which triggers the requirement to register.
  3. Monitor VAT exposure and register in exposed jurisdictions: If your sales reach the registration threshold in Italy, you are required to register for tax purposes. While each country has its own processes for registration, these procedures are simplified in the European Union through the One-Stop Shop (OSS) process, where you can register with one member state on behalf of the entire EU.
  4. Apply VAT where necessary: Identify transactions that require tax collection and apply the correct rates to those invoices. Though Italy utilizes the reverse charge mechanism for B2B transactions, you should still validate VAT IDs for B2B transactions to confirm the customer’s status, but charge tax if a valid VAT ID is not provided.
  5. File VAT returns, make payments, and keep records: Periodically file tax returns with the jurisdictions in which you sell, reporting the tax collected and remitted. Be prepared for foreign exchange conversions and cross-border payments in various currencies. Many countries also have a legal requirement to keep tax records for a certain period of time.

Risks of delaying compliance

Delaying tax compliance can expose your business to various risks:

  • Audits: As tax legislation for digital goods is relatively new, audits for international sellers are increasing. Facing an audit for which you are not prepared can result in fees and penalties that can significantly impact your business.
  • Paying out of pocket: Regardless of whether your customers pay tax, you are responsible for the tax on the sales you make. If you are audited or register late, you may have to pay the tax out of pocket, along with penalties and fees.
  • Reputational risk: When expanding internationally, your compliance with tax rules may be questioned by potential business partners or customers. Failure to comply with tax regulations can harm your reputation and even lead to blocked business opportunities.

To learn more about tax rules and regulations for nonresident businesses around the world, explore Anrok’s VAT index for digital products.

VAT index

VAT rates for digital products

Up-to-date rates, thresholds, and product taxability for countries that tax nonresident digital businesses, built by Anrok’s team of SaaS tax experts.

Explore the index
What is anrok?

Automated compliance, built for SaaS

Connect your financial stack

Sync your billing and payment systems with just a few clicks

Monitor exposure across the globe

Instantly see how growing sales affect your liability—and quickly take action

Calculate tax in real time

Always collect the right tax, with the most accurate rules for SaaS sales

File and report on autopilot

Pre-built returns, native filing partners, and reconciliation simplify reporting

Get a demo today

Talk to our team to learn more.