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How to avoid hidden traps when buying an old property in Italy

Buying a cheap home to renovate in Italy sounds like the dream, but it can quickly turn nightmarish amid restrictions, red tape, and bickering relatives. Silvia Marchetti explains some of the most unexpected pitfalls and how to avoid them.

How to avoid hidden traps when buying an old property in Italy
Italian towns have been selling off old houses, like this one in the village of Lecce dei Marsi - but purchases are often blocked by bureaucracy. Photo: Gregory Macera

With so many Italian towns offloading cheap old properties for sale, lots of people have been tempted by the chance to buy a fixer-upper in a sunny, rural area and live in the perfect idyll. And most are oblivious at first of what risks the purchase might entail. 

The older the properties are, the more potential traps along the way.

There have been several villages in Italy eager to sell €1 and cheap homes that have had to give up on their plans once hidden issues came to light.

Back in 2014, the towns of Carrega Ligure, in Piedmont, and Lecce nei Marsi, in Abruzzo, tried hard to sell their old properties off at a bargain price but just couldn’t get past Italy’s labyrinthine red tape, hellish property restrictions, and scores of bickering relatives.

Both towns’ mayors found themselves chasing after the many heirs of unknown property owners who had emigrated in the 1800s. All existing relatives, who technically owned small parcels of the same house (whether they knew it or not), had to all agree on the sale.

Under Italian law, over time and generations a property ‘pulverizes’ into many little shares depending on how many heirs are involved (if one single heir is not named).

You can end up in a situation where you agree with two owners that you’ll buy their old house, and then one day another five knock at your door saying they never gave their consent, nullifying your purchase. So it’s always best to check beforehand the local land registry to see exactly who, and how many, are the owners, and where they are. 

READ ALSO: ‘It’s so frustrating’: My 25-year Italian property renovation nightmare

In Carrega Ligure and Lecce nei Marsi, families had long ago migrated across the world and the many heirs to some properties were impossible to track down.

But there were also other obstacles.

“We wanted to start the renovation project by selling dilapidated one euro houses, and then move on to cheap ones, but the tax office would not agree on the price – saying that the old properties had a greater value, that they weren’t classified as abandoned buildings but as perfectly livable houses in good shape”, says Lecce nei Marsi mayor Augusto Barile. 

This meant buyers would have ended up spending tons of money in property sale taxes.

“Even if these were just small houses, potential property taxes start at €700, and could have been much higher,” he explains.

READ ALSO: The hidden costs of buying a home in Italy

“This would have been a nightmare for any buyer finding out about this at a later stage, after the purchase”.

Barile says the town hall had not made a prior agreement with the tax office to reclassify and ‘downgrade’ the value of the old buildings, which also required an update of the land registry. 

Council officials in the village of Carrega Ligure faced a wall of red tape when they tried to sell off abandoned properties. Credit: Comune di Carrega Ligure

Several potential buyers I spoke to back then said that when they found out about the tax office’s involvement by word of mouth (mostly thanks to village gossip at the bar while sipping an espresso), they fled immediately without even taking a look at the houses. 

The best advice in this case is to pay a visit to the local tax bureau ahead of any formal purchase deal and make sure that the old, dilapidated house you want to buy is actually ‘accatastata’ (registered) as such, or you might end up paying the same property sale taxes as you would on a new home. Hiring a tax lawyer or legal expert could be of huge help.

In Carrega Ligure, where old shepherds’ and farmers’ homes are scattered across 11 districts connecting various valleys, a few abandoned homes located near pristine woods came with a nice patch of land – which turned out to be another huge problem.

Old estates often cannot be disposed of due to ‘vincoli’ – limitations – either of environmental or historic nature, that do not allow the property to be sold, or simply due to territorial boundaries that have changed over time, particularly if the original families haven’t lived there for a long time.

READ ALSO: How Italy’s cheap homes frenzy is changing rural villages

In Carrega Ligure it turned out that “a few dwellings located in the most ancient district couldn’t be sold because of hydrogeological risks. State law forbade rebuilding them from scratch, as floods and mudslides had hit the area in the past”, says Carrega Ligure mayor Luca Silvestri.

Meanwhile, other properties were located within or close to the protected mountain park area where the village districts spread, and where there are strict rules against building to preserve the surroundings.

Another issue was that a few old homes came with a patch of land which was quite distant, on the opposite side of the hill, says Silvestri, making it inconvenient for buyers looking for a house with a back garden.

In this case, checking territorial maps, and speaking to competent bodies such as park authorities if there are ‘green restrictions’ in place, can spare future nuisances.

See more in The Local’s Italian property section.

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Reader question: What’s the latest on Italy’s building superbonus?

Italy’s building ‘superbonus’ has been in the news again after a vote on a new amendment. So what exactly is changing this time and what does this mean for homeowners?

Reader question: What’s the latest on Italy’s building superbonus?

If you’re reading this article, there’s a good chance you’re already familiar with at least some of the history behind Italy’s ‘superbonus’, a hugely popular government scheme offering generous discounts to homeowners carrying out renovation works.

The bonus has been in the news again this week after parliament approved a new amendment last Wednesday, leaving many homeowners wondering exactly what is changing this time and what this means for them.

The superbonus has been plagued by credit transfer issues ever since 2021, when banks stopped buying up credits following the introduction of tighter rules aimed at preventing fraudulent claims. 

This created major bottlenecks within the system which ended up stalling thousands of renovation projects and leaving thousands of construction businesses at risk of bankruptcy.

Blocked credits and the scheme’s rising costs (the superbonus’ bill may ultimately stand at 150 billion euros, more than 100 billion over initial estimates) led the government to first slash the maximum available rebate and then scrap the most popular claiming routes for all new claims.

READ ALSO: Can you still buy Italy’s one-euro homes in 2024?

But after some national banks resumed buying credits last summer, albeit under stringent conditions, the changes approved by parliament last week may once again bring the transfer system to a standstill, putting homeowners and businesses at risk of not being able to claim the bonus (or not doing so in time to avoid default).

As of January 1st 2025, banks and other financial intermediaries will no longer be able to offset superbonus credits bought from homeowners or businesses with social security (INPS) and occupational insurance (INAIL) contributions, according to the latest decree.

Scaffolding on the facade of a building undergoing renovation work in Rome

Scaffolding on the facade of a building undergoing renovation work in Rome. Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP

This is under plans to prevent superbonus-related fraud (Italy seized ‘fake’ credits for a total of 8.5 billion euros last week), with banks flouting the rule facing fines of up to 30 percent of the unduly offset credit.

The ban will essentially strip banks of one of the most popular instruments used so far to ‘digest’ superbonus credits and will be retroactive, meaning it will apply to credits accrued prior to its introduction next January.

According to Antonio Patuelli, president of Italy’s banking association ABI, banks “will absolutely have to stop” buying superbonus credits as a result of the measure, which in turn may land businesses and homeowners “in situations leading them to default”.

Italy’s campaign group Associazione Esodati del Superbonus has estimated that some 1.5 million families may be left without a way to claim the rebate if no alternative solution is found. 

Last Wednesday, Patuelli stressed the importance of creating “an instrument” capable of purchasing blocked credits and involving both public and private parties.

READ ALSO: Five things non-residents need to know about buying property in Italy

The right-wing Forza Italia party – a member of Italy’s ruling coalition – has also recently advanced plans for the creation of a new credit institution directly controlled by the Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF), though there are no further details on the proposal at present. 

Plans to create a credit-trading platform to unclog blockages are by no means new.

Last April, the government identified the creation of a new trading platform by energy giant Enel X as one of the main solutions to the logjam, but the project was permanently scrapped in early September.  

Blocked or as-yet-unclaimed credits relative to all of Italy’s building bonuses were estimated to stand at a total of 135 billion last November.

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