How exactly you get 90% tax exemption in Italy?
If you're not Italian, or if you're Italian but haven't had your residency in Italy for the past 5 years (or 10, can't remember), then you can move to Italy and get a 70% tax exemption regardless of where you move to. If you move to some specific regions, the exemption is raised to 90% of your income.
For this, you need to open a sole proprietorship/freelancing (ditta individuale/partita IVA), the income you receive needs to be invoiced through it, but it goes to your account as regular, and you can spend it however you like.
The exemption can be extended to 10 years at 90% if you buy a house in your first year, and if you have three children in your first five years.
If you only buy a house in your first year, then the tax exemption still gets extended to 10 years, but after five years it's reduced to 50% instead of 90%.
Meanwhile, I've talked to my accountant and he clarified what he meant. He didn't mean that I'd lose the tax exemption after a certain threshold, he simply meant that after a certain threshold, maybe we could work out a different scheme that could be even more beneficial.
If you're not Italian, or if you're Italian but haven't had your residency in Italy for the past 5 years (or 10, can't remember), then you can move to Italy and get a 70% tax exemption regardless of where you move to. If you move to some specific regions, the exemption is raised to 90% of your income.
For this, you need to open a sole proprietorship/freelancing (ditta individuale/partita IVA), the income you receive needs to be invoiced through it, but it goes to your account as regular, and you can spend it however you like.
The exemption can be extended to 10 years at 90% if you buy a house in your first year, and if you have three children in your first five years.
If you only buy a house in your first year, then the tax exemption still gets extended to 10 years, but after five years it's reduced to 50% instead of 90%.
Meanwhile, I've talked to my accountant and he clarified what he meant. He didn't mean that I'd lose the tax exemption after a certain threshold, he simply meant that after a certain threshold, maybe we could work out a different scheme that could be even more beneficial.
As a simple example:
You make €100,000 per year
90% is exempt (€90,000)
You are taxed on €10,000
The tax rate for someone making 10K per year is 23%
You pay €2,300 in annual taxes, which is 2.3% of what you really made
It's quite silly how they don't promote this more, and how not many people know about it, I'm glad I found out about it.