SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

TAXES

Who needs to pay the Italian TV licence fee – and how to cancel it

Italy's TV licensing fee is applied differently than in many other countries, and the opt-out system means you could be paying it unnecessarily. Here's who needs to pay it, and how to cancel.

Who needs to pay the Italian TV licence fee - and how to cancel it
Photo: Unsplash/Jonas Leupe

Who needs to pay?

If you own a house in Italy and have one or more television sets in it, you’ll have to pay the national TV licence fee (canone).

This goes for both Italian residents and foreign residents who own property in the country.

How do I pay?

Paying the TV licence fee in Italy is relatively straightforward as it’s automatically added to a household’s electricity bill (no prior arrangement is required). 

In most cases, it’ll show up as a seven-euro (previously nine-euro) monthly charge on electricity bills from January to October, for a total of 70 euros.

Some energy providers may occasionally bill it differently, which is why it’s advisable to check exactly how it works with your own supplier.

Your electricity bills can be used as proof of your TV licence payments in the event that an inspector comes to call (they do apparently exist, though they are rarely seen). 

The Italian licence fee was added to homeowners’ electricity bills in 2016 due to previously low numbers of households paying the charge in the face of a high rate of television ownership (around 97 percent of households are thought to have at least one TV set in Italy). 

If for any reason you don’t have an electricity contract but do have a television, you’ll be required to pay by completing and submitting form F24 with the Agenzia delle Entrate (Italy’s tax agency). The deadline to submit the form is January 31st of each year.

The licence (and associated payments) renews automatically every year unless you have the right to opt out.

Do I need more than one licence if I own more than one property?

If you own a second Italian property, such as a holiday home, you won’t need a second TV licence and you’ll pay the fee as part of the electricity bills of the Italian house where you have legal residence.

The Italian tax agency states that the “fee is owed only once in relation to all the devices owned by the members of the same household, regardless of the number of houses where TV devices are located”.

How do I opt out of paying?

While paying the fee is fairly simple, things become more complicated when you don’t have to pay it.

Three categories are exempt from payment:

  • People aged over 75 with an annual household income of 8,000 euros or lower
  • People who don’t own a television
  • Foreign diplomats and military personnel

In order to claim any of these exemptions, you must complete and submit the corresponding form from Italy’s tax agency (Agenzia delle Entrate), which can be downloaded from their website.

For those who don’t own a TV, the deadline to submit the exemption form is January 31st of each year.

Missing the end-of-January deadline is costly as it means you’ll need to pay the licence fee for the following six months, after which you’ll be able to claim an exemption for the second half of the year (the deadline is June 30th).

A non-TV-owner exemption must also be requested annually, meaning you’ll have to resubmit the form at the start of every year.

I don’t have a TV. How do I complete the exemption form?

In order to claim a non-TV-owner exemption for the whole year, you must complete and submit the form (Modello di dichiarazione sostitutiva relativa al canone di abbonamento) from Italy’s Agenzia delle Entrate by January 31st. 

Enter your personal details and then tick the first option within the Quadro A section, which serves as a declaration that “no member of the household owns a TV in any of the owned houses”.

Image: Agenzia delle Entrate.

The form can be submitted online if you have a SPID (electronic ID code) or an electronic ID card (or CIE). If you don’t have either, you can print out the form and mail it to the address provided on the tax agency website along with a copy of a valid ID document.

This type of exemption must be requested annually, meaning you’ll have to resubmit the form at the start of every year.

READ ALSO: What is a SPID and how do you get one?

Missing the end-of-January deadline is costly as it means you’ll need to pay the licence fee for the following six months, after which you’ll be able to claim an exemption for the second half of the year (the deadline is June 30th).

Claiming the other two exemptions 

The process to claim any one of the other two exemptions (people aged over 75s and foreign diplomats or military personnel) is pretty much the same as that for those who don’t own a TV, save for one major difference: these exemptions don’t have to be renewed annually.

The forms for both exemptions can be downloaded from the Italian tax agency website.

What happens if I don’t pay?

Those who fail to pay the TV licence fee (and have no valid exemptions) could face a fine of up to €516, as well as being liable for the payment of up to ten years’ worth of unpaid fees.

The higher fine will be applied if you have submitted an exemption form claiming not to own a television when you actually do.

For more details about paying the canone, see the Agenzie delle Entrate website.

 

Member comments

  1. This article is too simplistic. I do not have TV sets in my property, but I do have flat screen monitors to which I attach computers. I do not watch Italian TV (who with half a brain would?), but I could stream it via the Internet. I am not a lawyer, but I can only imagine that it would be very difficult to make a case for not paying the TV license fee if you have any kind of Internet connection.

  2. We set up an electricity account with ENEL when we moved into our house in November (2020). However I don’t see any amount labelled ‘canone’ or for €9 on any of the three bills we have received to date. Is there some kind of free period, or is this likely to be an oversight? We have 2 TV sets.

  3. What if I am not a resident? I own a property with electric and have been paying the canone. Do I need to as a non-resident? I only spend a few weeks a year at the house. If I dont need to pay, how do I opt out?

  4. The ‘over 75’ exemption is in fact for people over 75 with a low annual income that is currently set at €8000 p.a. I can’t imagine this applies to many overseas residents which makes it good news that the proposal is to drop the annual fee to €70.

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

ROME

Why Rome has been ranked among the least ‘smart’ cities in the world

A new global report ranks Italy's capital among the least 'smart' cities worldwide. What exactly does this mean?

Why Rome has been ranked among the least 'smart' cities in the world

There are many things that make the Eternal City an enduring draw for millions of tourists every year, as well as for new residents – but modern innovations are not generally known to be among them.

So the results of a new study ranking Rome as among the least ‘smart’ cities in the world may not come as too much of a surprise to anyone familiar with it.

In fact, you might think this was appropriate enough for a city where people live amidst 3,000 years of history.

Still, Rome’s particularly low ranking at 133rd place out of 142 cities worldwide – placing between Sao Paolo and Lima – might also seem a little harsh.

The result was in stark contrast to other major European cities: Zurich in Switzerland took the number 1 spot, while Oslo, Geneva, Copenhagen, London and Helsinki all featured in the top ten.

READ ALSO: Milan and Rome ranked ‘worst’ cities for foreigners to move to – again

Madrid was ranked 35th, while Paris came in 49th place. Athens however scored less well, in 120th place, and the Bulgarian capital Sofia came 113th.

Italian cities rank poorly overall, as Milan – seen as Italy’s technological and business hub – came in at a lacklustre 91st, and the university city of Bologna came 78th.

What is this ranking?

The 2024 Smart Cities Index (SCI) is produced by the Smart Cities Observatory – part of the IMD’s Global Competitiveness Center – in partnership with the World Organization for Smart and Sustainable Cities (WeGO). 

Researchers combined real-world data and survey responses from residents of 142 cities around the world to show how technology allows cities to improve the quality of life of their population.

However, as the study’s authors point out, it is not just (or strictly) about the cities’ technological aspects.

The survey’s “balanced focus’” was also on “humane dimensions” of smart cities.

They include the overall quality of life, infrastructure, environment, health and safety, public transport, services available to the population, as well as governance.

READ ALSO: Why Milan is a much better city to live in than Rome

The ‘winners’ — cities that ranked the highest — are all “located in areas where social and economic environments are relatively predictable, even against the overall climate of global uncertainties,” the report states.

“They are also cities in which visible initiatives have been taken to facilitate the lives of citizens (e.g., by developing public transport networks or ‘eco compatible’ transport solutions), and to improve the overall ‘quality of life’.”

In that case, this survey seems similar to the many other ‘quality of life’ rankings in which Rome (and Milan) also fares badly every year.

The ranking ranges from ‘AAA’ for ‘smartest’ cities to ‘D’ — the lowest. Rome had a ‘CCC’ rating while Milan was awarded a ‘B’.

Interestingly, included in the survey are not only the best aspects of each city, but also the areas that its residents have designated as ‘priorities’ — that is, the ones that need improvement.

In Rome, the major concerns for residents were recycling, which was a priority for 64 percent according to the study, and public transport, for 62 percent.

Priorities highlighted also included road congestion and air pollution, which were factors bringing down the overall score for Milan, too.

Health services, school education and green spaces were not seen as issues for most Rome residents, meanwhile.

What do you think? Is this criticism justified and, if you live in Rome, do you find the positives outweigh the negatives? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.

SHOW COMMENTS