Italy Golden Visa real estate searches almost always start from the same wrong assumption: that buying property in Italy opens the door to residency. Property purchase has never qualified under the program’s rules. This is one of the most common misconceptions among prospective investors, and getting it wrong costs real time and money.
Unlike Portugal’s original scheme or Greece’s residency-by-property route, Italy’s Investor Visa is built entirely around productive capital: startups, corporate equity, government bonds, or public-interest donations. Buying a villa in Tuscany, no matter the price, does not open the door to Italian residency on its own.
This matters because the confusion is expensive. Investors who assume property qualifies often lose months researching a route that was never available, or worse, sign a purchase agreement before checking eligibility. Getting this right at the start avoids both.
Italy Golden Visa Real Estate: The Two Routes That Actually Qualify
The Italian Investor Visa recognizes four qualifying investments, and only two are realistic for most applicants:
€250,000 in an innovative startup. The company must be registered on Italy’s official Innovative Startup register, held by the Chamber of Commerce. It needs at least one filed corporate tax return and a deposited balance sheet. The investor cannot control the startup, and cannot be related to whoever does: the committee requires full independence between the two.
€500,000 in an existing Italian company. Shares in an operating business, not a shell or a holding vehicle set up for the visa alone. This route works for investors who want exposure to a functioning enterprise rather than early-stage risk.
[Immagine da inserire qui — skyline Milano o paesaggio toscano, ALT text: “Italy Golden Visa real estate: qualifying investment routes compared to property purchase”]
The other two options exist but see far less uptake: €1,000,000 as a philanthropic donation to a public-interest project (culture, education, research, landscape recovery), or €2,000,000 in Italian government bonds. Both qualify. Neither involves real estate in any form.
None of the four routes accept property purchase, property-backed funds, or real estate investment trusts as the qualifying asset. This is a deliberate structural choice by the Italian government: the visa rewards capital that funds companies and public projects, not capital parked in property. The full list of eligible investments is published on the official Investor Visa for Italy portal, run by the Ministry of Enterprises and Made in Italy.
See how the full eligibility process works: Italy Investor Visa Requirements.
Why Real Estate Keeps Coming Up, and What Advisors Get Wrong
The confusion has a clear source. Portugal’s Golden Visa, before its 2023 reform, ran almost entirely on real estate. Spain’s now-closed scheme worked the same way. Greece still offers a property-based route today, at €400,000 to €800,000 depending on the region. Investors researching “golden visa” as a category naturally assume the same model applies everywhere, including Italy.
Some intermediaries reinforce the mistake, deliberately or not. A generic agent selling Italian property to foreign buyers has a financial reason to imply that a purchase carries immigration benefits, even when it does not. The buyer discovers the truth only when the application is filed, or rejected.
The correct reading is more precise: Italy separates residency from real estate entirely. Buying property in Italy, at any price, requires no visa and confers no immigration status beyond the standard tourist allowance. It remains a real estate transaction under Italian civil law. The Golden Visa runs on a separate, capital-allocation-based track alongside it.
Book a private assessment before committing to any property purchase tied to relocation plans. A written eligibility check costs far less than an unwound transaction.
What HNW Investors Do With Italian Real Estate Alongside the Visa
Once the visa question is settled through one of the two qualifying routes, real estate re-enters the picture, just on a different track.
Investors who secure residency through a startup or company investment frequently buy property afterward, for lifestyle, for a second income stream, or as part of a broader Italian footprint. Milan apartments near the financial district, Tuscan farmhouses with agritourism potential, or coastal properties in Liguria are common choices, chosen independently of the visa timeline.
The sequencing matters. Capital committed to the qualifying investment stays there for the life of the visa: withdraw it, and the residence permit is at risk. Property purchased separately, with funds outside the qualifying investment, carries no such constraint. Keeping the two pools of capital distinct from the outset avoids a structuring problem later.
The Flat Tax Angle: How Golden Visa Real Estate and Residency Work Together
Where real estate and the Golden Visa genuinely intersect is on the tax side, not the immigration side.
Italy’s flat tax regime for new residents, raised to €300,000 per year under the 2026 Budget Law, applies to foreign-sourced income for up to 15 years. It has nothing to do with the visa’s qualifying investment, but it applies to the same person once they become an Italian tax resident, regardless of which route brought them there.
For an investor who obtains residency through the startup or company route and later buys Italian property, the flat tax shelters foreign income, rental yield from properties held abroad, dividends, foreign business income, from Italy’s ordinary progressive rates. Property held inside Italy is taxed under normal Italian rules, but foreign wealth stays protected under the flat regime for as long as it lasts.
This is the structure that actually connects real estate to the Golden Visa: not as a qualifying asset, but as a lifestyle and tax-planning layer that sits on top of a residency secured through capital allocation elsewhere.
Read the full picture: Italy Golden Visa.
BRERA 1901 is the family office behind the Italian Golden Visa. We confirm eligibility, structure the qualifying investment, and coordinate real estate and tax planning around it, so nothing is assumed and nothing is left to a generic agent’s sales pitch.
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