undefined

Add a bookmark to get started

Global Site
Africa
MoroccoEnglish
South AfricaEnglish
Asia Pacific
AustraliaEnglish
Hong Kong SAR ChinaEnglish简体中文
KoreaEnglish
New ZealandEnglish
SingaporeEnglish
ThailandEnglish
Europe
BelgiumEnglish
Czech RepublicEnglish
HungaryEnglish
IrelandEnglish
LuxembourgEnglish
NetherlandsEnglish
PolandEnglish
PortugalEnglish
RomaniaEnglish
Slovak RepublicEnglish
United KingdomEnglish
Middle East
BahrainEnglish
QatarEnglish
North America
Puerto RicoEnglish
United StatesEnglish
OtherForMigration
4 February 20252 minute read

Italy broadens Digital Services Tax scope

Italy

Company belonging to Euro 750 Mio Group, will pay DST regardless of their digital service turnover in Italy.

The DST is a 3% levy on revenues generated from certain digital services provided in Italy, such as:

  • transfer or placing on a digital interface of advertising messages targeted at users of that interface;
  • making available a multi-sided digital interface that allows users interaction and may also facilitate the supply of goods or services among users;
  • transmission of data collected about users and generated from such users’ activities on digital interfaces.

Businesses subject to the DST must comply to the following payment and reporting requirements:

  • By 30 November of each year, an advance payment of 30% of the DST liability calculated on the previous year’s tax base;
  • By 16 May of the following year, balance of the DST liability must be settled;
  • By the 30 June of each year an annual declaration specifying taxable revenues for the previous fiscal year must be submitted.

The DST applies to both resident and non-resident entities, irrespective of the service recipient’s location or status. Entities subject to DST must, for each fiscal years, calculate their total global revenues from digital services provided to all users (regardless of location) and allocate the portion of these revenues attributable to Italy; in fact, only this allocated portion is subject to Italian DST.

 

Key takeaway

To comply with the DST obligations, entities must obtain an Italian tax code. While this is generally sufficient for EU/EES entities, non-EU/EES entities are generally required to appoint a fiscal representative to obtain the tax code and fulfil their DST obligations. Due to the complexity of the revised DST framework, a thorough case-by-case analysis is crucial. This will ensure the accurate identification of the supplies within the scope, the correct allocation of revenues to Italy and full compliance with the revised DST requirements.

 

Reference

Law No. 207 of 30 December 2024 (Italian 2025 Budget law)