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MOVING TO ITALY

Moving to Italy: The digital nomad visa explained and working remotely from Italy

Moving to Italy, a country infamous for its red tape, can seem like a daunting task. Our new newsletter is here to answer your questions - this time we're looking at the new digital nomad visa and the realities of working remotely from Italy.

Moving to Italy: The digital nomad visa explained and working remotely from Italy
What's involved in applying for Italy's digital nomad visa? Photo by David L. Espina Rincon on Unsplash

Here at The Local we’re an international team living in Italy – which means we’ve either grown up navigating Italian bureaucracy or been through the simultaneously exciting and nerve-wracking process of moving countries.

Our new newsletter is aimed at people who are in the process of moving, have recently moved and are still grappling with the paperwork or perhaps are just thinking about it – and we’ll share a regular selection of practical tips. Our team is also available to answer questions from subscribers to The Local.

Applying for the digital nomad visa

If you’d like to move to Italy but haven’t yet found a suitable visa, you may have seen reports that the country has made a new one available: the ‘digital nomad’ visa or visto per nomadi digitali e lavoratori da remoto.

News that this long-awaited visa, first approved back in 2022, had finally been implemented sparked excitement in international circles, but questions remain about when applications open and how to access it.

We spoke to Nick Metta of Studio Legale Metta, an expert in Italian immigration law, who told us that the decree is already in force and you should already be able to book an appointment and apply through your local Italian consulate.

However, he notes, some consulates “might be particularly strict and just refuse to take it in. Then at that point, you just need to wait a little bit.”

Italy’s new digital nomad visa gives a new option to people hoping to work and travel in the country. Photo by Tanya Lapko on Unsplash

How easy is it to get the DNV?

At face value, the digital nomad visa looks like the first real chance for non-EU nationals of working age to move to Italy without a job offer from an Italian company – but how easy is it to obtain in practice?

Metta told us that as it stands, the law seems relatively lenient, but he anticipates that future amendments will tighten eligibility restrictions.

“So people who want it, I recommend go for it,” he told us.

That doesn’t mean that the law as it stands doesn’t contain various hurdles, or that individual consulates can’t throw up a few of their own.

We discussed some of the ways in which the requirements for this visa were more generous than experts would have predicted, as well as potential obstacles to making a successful application.

Italy’s digital nomad visa has generated significant buzz – but how easy is it to get? Photo by Ling App on Unsplash

What’s it like to work remotely from Italy?

Getting an Italian digital visa may be a dream for many – but what are the realities of working remotely from Italy?

Our reporter Silvia Marchetti recommends that if you depend on 24/7 access to a high-speed internet connection to make a living, you’ll want to do some careful research before you land.

Silvia lives in the Lazio countryside, not far from Rome, where she says “I had to forsake all internet providers because there was simply no wifi infrastructure.

“I was forced to subscribe to Starlink, which is a satellite provider used by yachts and campers that constantly move around in isolated places like the sea, mountains, and canyons.”

That doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of ways to work around these issues, or that you can’t get a decent internet connection in many parts of the country; but it’s best to come prepared.

Questions

The Local’s Reader Questions section covers questions our members have asked us and is a treasure trove of useful info on all kinds of practical matters. If you can’t find the answer you’re looking for, head here to leave us your questions.

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MOVING TO ITALY

Readers recommend: Eight books you must read to understand Italy

After we published our own recommendations of some of the best books to read for those considering a move to Italy, The Local's readers weighed in with suggestions of your own.

Readers recommend: Eight books you must read to understand Italy

In our previous guide to some of the best books to read before moving to Italy, we asked our readers to get in touch with your recommendations.

A number of you responded with your favourite reads about Italy; here’s what you suggested:

Ciao Bella – Six Take Italy

An anonymous reader describes this as “a delightful book about an Australian radio presenter who takes her husband and four children Bologna for a year which turns into two years (one being Covid).”

Kate Langbroek’s comic memoir “had me laughing and crying,” they write.

A Small Place in Italy

An apt choice for those considering their own rural Italian renovation project, Sam Cross recommends this book by British writer Eric Newby about buying, remodelling and moving into a cottage in the Tuscan countryside.

Cross also recommends Newby’s earlier work, ‘Love and War in the Appennines’, about his time as a British prisoner of war captured in Italy by the Germans in WWII.

READ ALSO: Eight of the best books to read before moving to Italy

Here, the author tells of his escape assisted by local partisans, “including a girl, Wanda, who became his future wife. A beautiful story,” says Cross.

The Italians

The Italians is written by veteran Italy correspondent John Hooper, who formerly wrote for the Guardian and is now the Economist’s Italy and Vatican reporter.

From politics to family traditions and the Mafia, the book tackles a range of aspects of Italian history and culture without getting lost in the weeds.

Simone in Rome describes it as “the best single volume on Italian customs and culture there is”.

READ ALSO: Nine things to expect if you move to rural Italy

Venice

It may be more than six decades old, but Jan Morris’s Venice is still considered one of the definitive English-language works on the lagoon city.

Book, Venice, library

A woman reads a book in Venice’s famous Acqua Alta library. Photo by Clay Banks on Unsplash

Though a work of non-fiction, the book has been compared to Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited for its nostalgic, evocative tone.

“A personal view, beautifully written,” recommends reader Mary Austern.

Thin Paths

Described as a mix of travel book and memoir, Thin Paths is written by Julia Blackburn, who moved with her husband into a small house in the hills of Liguria in 1999.

Despite arriving with no Italian, over time she befriended her elderly neighbours, who took her into their confidence and shared stories of the village’s history under the control of a tyrannical landowner and the outbreak of World War II.

“Write it down for us,” they told her, “because otherwise it will all be lost.”

READ ALSO: Six things foreigners should expect if they live in Rome

In Other Words

If you’re currently learning Italian, consider Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri’s In Other Words / In Altre Parole, which discusses the writer’s journey towards mastery of Italian through full immersion.

Reader Brett says, “The book is written in both Italian and English, presented on opposite pages, so it’s also a nice learning tool!”

Lahiri has since written Racconti Romani, or Roman Tales, a series of short stories set in and around Rome riffing off Alberto Moravia’s 1954 short story collection of the same name.

A Rosie Life in Italy

Ginger Hamilton says she would “highly recommend the ‘A Rosie Life in Italy’ series by Rosie Meleady.”

It’s “the delightfully written true story of an Irish couple’s move to Italy, purchase of a home, the process of rehabbing it, and their life near Lago di Trasimeno.”

The Dark Heart of Italy

Reader William describes The Dark Heart of Italy by Tobias Jones as an “excellent” book.

The product of a three-year journey across the Italy, Jones takes on the darker side of Italian culture, from organised crime to excessive bureaucracy.

Though it was published in 2003, Dark Heart stands the test of time: “twenty-odd years old but the essential truth of it hasn’t changed,” William writes.

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