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TOURISM

Italy’s €500 ‘holiday bonus’ is set to return for summer 2021

The holiday bonus introduced to help Italy’s tourism industry last year is coming back this summer, and it may be easier to use.

Italy's €500 'holiday bonus' is set to return for summer 2021
Italy's tourism businesses are preparing for summer 2021. Photo: Alberto Pizzoli/AFP

Italy’s tourism minister has announced the return of its summer ‘holiday bonus’ scheme under which lower-income households could receive up to €500 each.

First introduced in May 2020 under the ‘Relaunch Decree’, the bonus vacanze or  ‘holiday bonus’ aims to boost Italy’s tourism sector, which accounts for 15 percent of the country’s jobs and has been hard hit by ongoing travel restrictions due to the pandemic.

READ ALSO:  Italy’s tourism industry reports €120 billion loss in 2020

The government set aside 2.6 billion euros to give households earning less than 40,000 euros a year a financial incentive to holiday in Italy rather than go abroad.

But issues with using the scheme last year meant most of the pot has gone unused – and now the payments are being made available for summer 2021.

Tourists at the beach on Rabbit Island in Lampedusa, Sicily. Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI/ AFP

“The holiday bonus has been extended,” Italian Tourism Minister Massimo Garavaglia said on Rai 1, explaining that most of the funds made available in 2020 had not been claimed.

“There was a problem with (the scheme),” he said. “820 million of the 2.6 billion allocated has been spent, so a lot of the funds are still available.”

“If it worked well, it would already have been used,” he said, adding that the ministry had tabled some amendments to the way the scheme works.

While Italy has not yet confirmed whether and how much international tourism will be allowed this summer, Garavaglia stressed the importance of domestic tourism to keeping businesses afloat.

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“It’s clear that this will be a summer of Italian tourism in Italy, even if there is some recovery from abroad as we are moving towards using the European green pass,” he said.

Last year, some small accommodation owners criticised the bonus scheme, saying it only helped large hotel chains or others who had enough resources to be able to absorb financial losses until they could claim tax credits at a later date.

The tourism ministry has proposed the following changes to the way the scheme works under an amendment to the support decree, which is set to be discussed in early May:

  • Postponing the expiry of the scheme from December 2021 to summer 2022;
  • Allowing travel agencies to claim the discounts on behalf of clients
  • Allowing the bonus to be divided between several business or used in installments over several trips.

For now, here’s how the bonus worked in summer 2020:

Who can claim the ‘holiday bonus’?

There are two conditions:

1) It’s for residents, not overseas visitors: you must pay taxes in Italy, since part of the bonus takes the form of a tax deduction.

2) It’s for lower-income households: your combined income, as calculated on your ISEE or ‘Equivalent Economic Situation Indicator’, should total no more than €40,000 per year.

Families, couples and individuals can all apply for the bonus. If you’re applying as a couple or family it will be paid per household, not per person.

It is not yet known if people who used the bonus in 2020 would be eligible to claim a second time in 2021.

How much is it worth?

The government last year offered €150 to people travelling on their own, €300 for two people and €500 for families of three or more.

How does it work?

To claim the holiday bonus, you’ll need to use the government’s IO app and either your electronic ID card or SPID.

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The bonus is paid out in two ways: 80 percent of the cost will be shouldered upfront by your hotel, B&B, agriturismo or other accommodation and should be discounted directly from your bill. 

Under current rules, you’ll only be able to claim the bonus from a single place of accommodation

Accommodation owners must then claim the money back from the government in the form of a tax credit. They’ll need to make a note of your personal codice fiscale (tax code) and issue a complete bill or receipt.

The 2020 decree stated that payment must be made directly by the guest or via a travel agent, but not through any other kind of portal or intermediary such as Airbnb or Booking.com.

It was then up to guests to claim the remaining 20 percent of the bonus, which can be deducted from your tax bill for the financial year.

Some of these rules could change once the extended support decree, known in Italian as the decreto milleproroghe (decree of a thousand extensions), is approved in May.

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TRAVEL NEWS

Aarhus Airport to get easier connections with new code-sharing deal

Passengers travelling from Aarhus Airport using Scandinavian airline SAS are likely to find more convenient onwards connections from September.

Aarhus Airport to get easier connections with new code-sharing deal

Convenient connections to European hub airports in Amsterdam and Paris will become easier to find from Aarhus Airport from September.

A code-sharing agreement between Scandinavian airline SAS and Air France, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and Delta Air Lines means that flight codes from those airlines – and more efficient connections via Copenhagen – will appear at Aarhus, the Jutland airport said in a press release on Tuesday.

The agreement gives Aarhus Airport passengers access to over 1,000 European destinations through so-called SkyTeam network.

For example, the code-sharing networks cuts journey times from Aarhus (via Copenhagen) to Amsterdam Schiphol to 2 hours 50 minutes, and to Paris CDG to 3 hours and 50 minutes.

“We are becoming more global. With only 30 minutes’ driving time from Aarhus, people in the region can save a huge amount of time flying from Aarhus Airport to an impressive number of Air France, KLM or SkyTeam destinations,” the airport’s director Lotta Sandsgaard said in the press release.

The agreement “has great significance for the international business environment in the Aarhus region and in a tourism perspective for a booming sector by attracting travellers from European and overseas markets,” she added.

The SK flight code, one of the codes which will be used at Aarhus under the agreement, is operated by Air France and KLM from their respective hubs. This means destinations including Marseille, Bordeaux, Nantes, Porto, Newcastle, Southampton, Cardiff, Venice and Naples as well as Marrakesh, Tunis and Casablanca in North Africa can be booked.

Destinations including Las Vegas, Denver, Seattle, Orlando, Cincinnati, Montreal, Vancouver, Detroit and Salt Lake City and more can also be booked with Air France and KLM to and from Aarhus Airport.

Travellers in Aarhus will also see new connections between SAS and Delta-operated flights to dozens of destinations across the USA and Canada via Delta’s North American network. The deal means they can travel to these destinations with one check-in at Aarhus Airport’s SAS counter.

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