SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

LIVING IN ITALY

MAP: Where do all the native English speakers live in Italy?

Have you ever wondered how many native English speakers there are in Italy, and where they choose to live? We looked at the most - and least - popular parts of the country.

Burano, Venice
A woman walks past colourful houses in Burano, Venice, in September 2023. Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP

According to the latest data from Italian statistics office Istat, Italy is currently home to over five million foreign nationals, who make up around 8.7 percent of the country’s total population. 

This data only refers to people who have officially registered their status as residents with local authorities, and doesn’t include foreign nationals who only spend part of the year in Italy or dual citizens.

But exactly how many of these residents come from English-speaking countries and where do they all live? 

Brits are the largest English-speaking community

There are some 51,870 residents from Anglophone countries across Italy – that’s around one percent of the total foreign population.

For context, the Romanian community, which is the largest in the country, is made up of well over a million residents and accounts for roughly 21 percent.

Out of all the native English-speaking residents, Brits are by far the most represented group as around 27,760 UK nationals – that’s over half of Italy-based Anglophones – are known to live in the country.

The top three is completed by the US with 15,580 residents and Ireland with 3,660. 

Then there’s Canada (2,230), Australia (1,520), South Africa (770) and New Zealand (350).

Lombardy is the most popular region

Lombardy, which boasts the largest job market in the country and includes Italy’s financial capital Milan, is home to some 9,220 native English-speaking residents, making it the most popular region for Anglophones.

The UK is once again the most represented country here as around 4,890 British nationals – that’s nearly 18 percent of all Brits in Italy – live in the northern region.

But Lombardy also has a sizeable US community as 2,610 Americans live in the area.  

Lazio, which includes Italy’s capital, Rome, is ‘only’ the second-most popular region for Anglophones to move to. 

While it has a lower number of English-speaking residents in total, Lazio is the first choice for Americans (2,940 residents) and Canadians (430).

Tuscany’s the third-most popular destination for all English-speaking communities except South Africans.

Other regions with notable numbers of English speakers are: Emilia-Romagna, which includes Bologna; Veneto, home to Venice; and Piedmont, including its industrial hub, Turin.

Rome’s appeal

While it might not have the slick economy of the northern metropolises, Rome's tourism industry, government institutions and cultural cachet are enough to make it the single top city for native English speakers. 

READ ALSO: Moving to Italy: How much does it cost to live in Rome in 2024?

Around 7,000 Anglophones live in the Eternal City, with Brits (3,130 residents) and Americans (2,550) being the largest communities. 

Interestingly, Rome acts as a magnetic pole for the entire region as over 80 percent of UK and US nationals living in Lazio are concentrated in the city. 

After Rome, Milan and Florence are Anglophones’ favourite city destinations.

Milan is home to 4,640 native English speakers, with over half of them being originally from the UK, whereas Florence has around 2,500 English-speaking residents.

Anglophones tend to avoid southern regions…and the Aosta Valley

All of Italy’s southern regions have comparatively lower numbers of native English-speaking residents, with the lack of job opportunities in the area likely being the main determining factor.

Basilicata and Molise are the second- and third-least popular regions, with just 188 and 221 English-speaking residents respectively.

That said, the region where you're least likely to hear English spoken is not in the south of the country.

In fact, the Aosta Valley, a small autonomous region in the north-west of the peninsula, is home to as few as 151 Anglophones – though this shouldn't come as much of a surprise, as this is the least populous region in Italy.

Member comments

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

LIVING IN ITALY

Why isn’t Pentecost Monday a public holiday in Italy?

Italy is known for being a particularly religious country, so why isn't Pentecost Monday a public holiday here?

Why isn’t Pentecost Monday a public holiday in Italy?

May 20th will mark Pentecost Monday (or Lunedì di Pentecoste in Italian) – an important observance in the Christian calendar which commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon Jesus’s disciples.

Pentecost Monday is a movable feast (or festa mobile) in the Christian liturgical calendar, meaning that its date changes each year depending on when Easter is celebrated: Pentecost – which marks the exact day the Holy Spirit descended on the disciples – falls on the seventh Sunday after Easter, with Pentecost Monday following right after.

But while Pentecost Monday (also known as Whit Monday elsewhere) is a public holiday and therefore a non-working day in a number of European countries, including Austria, Germany, France, Spain and Switzerland, Italy – a country known for being overwhelmingly Catholic – doesn’t consider the date a festa nazionale.

But why is that so?

Pentecost Monday was long a public holiday in Italy. In fact, the Tuesday following Pentecost Sunday was also a national holiday up until the late 18th century. 

But in 1977 the Italian government then led by Giulio Andreotti removed Pentecost Monday along with four other Catholic-related feasts (these included St Joseph’s Day on March 19th and the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul on June 29th) from its list of public holidays. 

The official reason behind the change was to speed up public administration work and increase businesses’ productivity as the Italian calendar had featured nearly 20 different national holidays up to that point.

It could be argued however that a nationwide shift towards secularism in the second half of the 20th century also played a non-negligible role in the change.

That said, a number of political parties and Catholic associations have asked for the holiday to be restored over the years, with a proposal backed by the League party and centre-left Democrazia Solidale making it all the way to parliament in 2016 but being ultimately scrapped. 

Pentecost Monday isn’t the only important date on the Christian calendar not marked with a public holiday in Italy. 

READ ALSO: How to make the most of Italy’s public holidays in 2024

Good Friday may be a holiday elsewhere in Europe, but not in Italy, where it’s seen as a day of mourning. Ascension Day, which marks the day Jesus ascended into heaven and falls on the sixth Thursday after Easter every year, is also not a public holiday in the country.

Curiously, while Pentecost Monday is not a public holiday on the Italian calendar, there is one area of the country where the observance does grant residents a day off: South Tyrol (or Alto Adige), in northern Italy.

South Tyrol, which includes the city of Bolzano, is an autonomous Italian province, meaning that local authorities have the freedom to decide on a number of economic, political and civil matters, including the local holiday calendar. 

If you’re one of South Tyrol’s 530,000 residents, you will enjoy a three-day weekend this week.

SHOW COMMENTS