🇬🇧 United Kingdom🇮🇹 Italy · Tax residency

Tax residency when moving from the UK to Italy

Get this right and your money situation is clean. Get it wrong and you're taxed twice — or caught by the 5-year rule.

Leaving the UK tax system is the pivot of any move, including to Italy. The UK taxes residents on worldwide income and non-residents only on UK-source income — so your status decides whether HMRC cares about your Italy salary.

The Statutory Residence Test (SRT)

Unlike some countries, the UK doesn't charge a general 'exit tax' when you leave. Instead, the Statutory Residence Test decides whether you're UK-resident in a given tax year, based on day counts and your ties to the UK. Split-year treatment can split the year you leave into a resident and a non-resident part.

The temporary non-residence trap

If you return to the UK within roughly five years, anti-avoidance rules can pull certain income and gains realised while you were away back into UK tax. If there's any chance you'll come back, plan around this before you sell assets or take pension lump sums abroad.

How Italy taxes you

Italy taxes residents on worldwide income, but offers attractive flat-tax regimes to new residents — including a 7% flat tax on foreign income (such as pensions) for retirees who move to qualifying southern towns, and a separate regime for high earners. These are valuable but condition-heavy, so take specialist advice before relying on them.

Coordinate your UK split-year date with the date you become Italy resident. Overlap, and the temporary-non-residence rule, are where double-tax happens.

Frequently asked

Do I still pay UK tax after moving to Italy?

Once you're non-UK-resident under the Statutory Residence Test, HMRC generally only taxes your UK-source income (e.g. UK rental income or a UK pension in payment). But return within about five years and the temporary-non-residence rules can reopen gains and income from your time away.

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Educational information only — not financial, tax, legal or migration advice. Fees reviewed 2026-06; verify current rules via official sources before acting.