SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

WHAT CHANGES IN ITALY

What changes about life in Italy in October 2023

From the 2024 budget plan to Covid booster jabs, here's what people living in Italy can expect in the coming month.

Here's what's in store for people living in Italy this October.
Photo by FABIO MUZZI / AFP.

Budget plan

Italy’s government is currently busy working on its 2024 budget law, with the first draft due to be presented to the EU by October 15th and to Italian parliament by October 20th.

This initial outline is likely to be far from the final version, however, as Italy’s lower house and senate have until the end of the year to sign off on the budget, which is likely to undergo many rounds of revisions and amendments.

The government faces the challenge of trying to meet high voter expectations based on its 2022 electoral campaign promises with slow growth and a shrinking GDP.

Income tax declaration deadline

The window to submit the modello 730, Italy’s main income tax return form for employees and retirees, will close on October 2nd.

Once they’ve submitted the form with the national Revenue Agency (Agenzia delle Entrate), taxpayers will have until June 30th of next year to pay the first instalment of the total amount payable, with the second instalment due by November 30th 2024.

The main tax dates for the remainder of 2023, including the deadline for the modello persone persone fisiche (generally used by foreign residents and the self-employed), can be found in our tax calendar.

Covid vaccination campaign

Italy’s autumn Covid booster drive is expected to be rolled out from October 2nd, with dates likely to vary by region.

The health ministry has recommended that the most at-risk categories in society, including people with serious health conditions and over-60s, get the booster vaccine, which gives better protection against the virus variants currently circulating in Italy, as well as lowering the risk of becoming seriously ill or dying from the virus.

Health Minister Orazio Schillaci said last week that the Covid vaccine remained a “fundamental device” after Italy saw a marked uptick in infections in September, with some 43.5 percent of cases attributable to a new variant dubbed ‘Eris’.

Italy’s health authorities have said current variants are not a cause for concern.

Transport strikes

There are more strikes planned in October as a walkout by public transport staff set for September 9th has been postponed to October 9th.

Airline, rail and public transport passengers could also face delays or cancellations on Monday, October 20th due to a 24-hour general strike.

Autumn heritage days

On Saturday October 14th and Sunday 15th, more than 700 cultural sites across Italy open their doors to the public with Giornate FAI d’Autunno, or ‘FAI Autumn days’, a programme organised by the cultural heritage society Fondo Ambiente Italiano (the Italian equivalent of the UK’s National Trust).

READ ALSO: Seven reasons autumn is the best time to visit Italy

Many of the participating sites, including villas, castles, churches, abbeys, parks, and theatres, are not usually open to the public or are otherwise difficult to visit.

Keep an eye on FAI’s website, which is due to be updated in the first week of October with the list of sites to be included in this year’s Autumn Days.

Clocks go back

The clocks fall back on the night of October 28th-29th, as we switch from Daylight Savings Time (or summer time) to standard time.

Luckily, this means you’ll get an extra hour in bed on Sunday, but the evenings will feel a lot darker after the time change.

Digital clocks on computers or phones should update automatically, but get ready to frantically search for the manual to your oven so you can figure out how to change its display on the 29th.

Member comments

  1. You can make appointments via website: https://prenotavaccino.sanita.toscana.it/#/home There is a glitch in entering info on dates: “Calendar” menus are stuck on “September.” You have to use “back/forward” arrows, counting the months in your head to find correct month/dates. I’ve seen this in scheduling menus on other websites. Not sure if they’re aware of the problem. Vaccination dates were time-critical for me because of travel, but others without a deadline might just give up.

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

WHAT CHANGES IN ITALY

What changes in Italy in July 2024

From transport strikes to summer music festivals, here’s what to expect in Italy over the coming month.

What changes in Italy in July 2024

Deadline to switch energy supplier

Customers on certain types of Italian electricity contracts have until Monday, July 1st to switch to a new provider or contract of their choice.

Italy’s mercato tutelato, or ‘protected market’ contracts based on state-controlled tariffs are being phased out this year under an EU push to liberalise the Italian energy market, meaning customers on this type of contract are being asked to choose a mercato libero, or ‘free market’ contract instead.

Those who don’t make the switch themselves by the start of July will be automatically assigned to a new supplier and placed under a three-year ‘gradual protection contract’ (or servizio a tutele graduali). 

Rome metro A closures and fares going up

The cost of a standard 100-minute ticket for Rome’s public transport network is set to jump from €1.50 to €2 from Monday, July 1st.

A day pass will go from €7 to €9.30, a two-day ticket from €12.50 to €16.70, a 72-hour ticket from €18 to €24, and a weekly ticket from €24 to €32.

READ ALSO: The rail and metro closures to expect in Rome this summer

Meanwhile the Spagna stop on the city’s metro A line is set to close from Monday, July 15th to October 3rd, while the Ottaviano stop will close from Monday, July 22nd to September 9th.

Start of summer sales

Italy has two major government-regulated sales seasons in the summer and winter. For all Italian regions except the autonomous provinces of Trento and Bolzano, this year’s summer sales will start on Saturday, July 6th. 

The saldi estivi are by far the favourite time of the year for shoppers as retailers apply generous discounts (from 20 to 50 to 70 percent in some cases).

READ ALSO: When do Italy’s sales start in summer 2024?

Trento and Bolzano decide their own sales periods independently from the rest of the country, with start and end dates often varying from town to town: you can find the dates for individual towns in Bolzano here.

A pedestrian walks by a shop window displaying sales notices in Turin

A pedestrian walks by a shop window displaying sales notices in Turin. Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP

Travel disruption

Airline, rail and public transport passengers are all set to face further travel disruption in July as Italian unions have already called a number of strikes for the coming weeks. 

Besides several local and regional walkouts, the following three national demonstrations are currently expected to cause the greatest amount of disruption to people in the country:

READ ALSO: Key dates: The transport strikes to expect in Italy in summer 2024

  • Friday, July 5th: airport handling staff strike affecting a number of Italian airports.
  • July 6th-7th: 24-hour national train strike from 9pm on Saturday, July 6th to 9pm on Sunday, July 7th. 
  • Thursday, July 18th: four-hour nationwide local transport strike.

For further details about these and ther summer walkouts and how they may affect your travel plans, see our summer strike calendar

Special evening openings of national heritage sites  

From villas and manors to castles and abbeys, a number of attractions around the country will be open outside of normal opening hours this month as part of the Italian National Trust’s Sere d’Estate (‘Summer Evenings’) initiative.

Historic gems such as Castello della Manta in the Cottian Alps, Milan’s Necchi-Campiglio Villa, and the beautiful Kolymbethra Garden in Agrigento, Sicily will be just some of the attractions letting visitors in after sundown in July.

The Sere d’Estate project is set to run until early September.

Castello della Manta is one of the sites opening to visitors after hours in July. Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP.

Summer festivals

Summer in Italy is full of events and festivals celebrating music and culture, and July is when many of them kick off in earnest.

Italy residents and visitors can look forward to the Umbria Jazz Festival, held in Perugia from July 12th-21st, and the Two Worlds Festival in Spoleto from June 28th-July 14th.

READ ALSO: Nine unmissable events in Italy in summer 2024

Running throughout the month of July and into the start of August, Rome’s outdoor Caracalla Festival features opera, dance and orchestral performances; while Verona’s celebrated Arena Opera Festival, held in an ancient Roman amphitheatre, runs until early September.

SHOW COMMENTS