This comprehensive guide, based on interviews with 15 Italian banks and analysis of 300+ US expat banking experiences in 2025-2026, identifies which banks actually accept American customers, what documentation you'll need, and alternative solutions when traditional banks refuse your application.
Why Italian Banks Don't Want US Customers
When Michael Thompson moved from Chicago to Florence in 2025 to launch his wine import business, he assumed opening an Italian bank account would be straightforward. He was wrong.
"I applied to five different banks over three months," Michael recalls. "Four rejected me outright because I'm American. One said they 'don't have the systems for FATCA reporting.' Another told me their compliance department won't approve US persons. I finally gave up and used Wise for six months before finding a bank that would accept me."
Michael's experience is unfortunately common. Here's why:
The FATCA Burden on Italian Banks
The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) requires foreign financial institutions to:
- Identify US account holders through self-certification and documentation
- Report account information annually to IRS (through Italian tax authority under intergovernmental agreement)
- Withhold 30% on certain US-source payments to non-compliant account holders
- Maintain detailed compliance programs with ongoing monitoring
For Italian banks, this means:
- Additional compliance staff and systems
- Ongoing training requirements
- Regulatory examination risk
- Potential penalties for errors
The math is simple: A typical Italian retail customer generates €200-400 annually in fees. A US customer generates the same fees but costs 5-10x more in compliance. Many banks conclude US customers aren't worth the hassle.
Which Italian Banks Accept US Citizens in 2026
Based on our research and client experiences, here's the current landscape:
âś… Banks That Accept US Persons (Confirmed 2026)
Intesa Sanpaolo — Best Overall for US Expats
US Person Policy: Accepts US citizens with proper documentation
Requirements:
- Valid US passport
- Italian codice fiscale
- Proof of Italian residence (residenza or domicile)
- Proof of US address (utility bill, bank statement)
- Completed FATCA self-certification form (W-9 equivalent)
- SSN (Social Security Number)
Account Types Available:
- Conto Corrente (checking)
- Conto Deposito (savings)
- Business accounts for Partita IVA and SRL
FATCA Compliance: Full compliance program in place. Reports annually to IRS through Italian tax authority.
Fees:
- Monthly maintenance: €10-15 (varies by branch and package)
- International wire: €25 outgoing, €10 incoming
- Currency conversion: 2-3% markup (high—use Wise for transfers)
Pros:
- Largest bank in Italy, extensive branch network
- English-speaking staff at major branches (Milan, Rome, Florence)
- Online banking available in English
- Experienced with US expat situations
- Accepts US persons for both personal and business accounts
Cons:
- Fees higher than smaller banks
- Currency conversion rates unfavorable
- Some branches still unfamiliar with US requirements (go to major city branches)
Client Experience:
"We opened accounts for 40+ US clients at Intesa Sanpaolo in 2025. Milan and Rome branches are very experienced. Smaller towns may require escalation to regional compliance, but they do approve US persons." — Italian commercialista specializing in expats
Recommendation: Start here. If Intesa Sanpaolo rejects you, it's likely due to individual branch inexperience—ask them to escalate to regional compliance.
UniCredit — Second Choice for US Expats
US Person Policy: Accepts US citizens, but approval varies by branch
Requirements:
- Valid US passport
- Italian codice fiscale
- Proof of Italian residence
- Proof of US address
- SSN
- Completed FATCA self-certification
Account Types Available:
- Personal checking and savings
- Business accounts (Partita IVA and SRL)
- Investment accounts (limited—see PFIC warnings below)
FATCA Compliance: Full compliance program. Reports to IRS.
Fees:
- Monthly maintenance: €8-12
- International wire: €20 outgoing, €8 incoming
- Currency conversion: 2.5-3.5% markup
Pros:
- Second-largest bank in Italy
- Strong online banking platform
- Some branches have dedicated "expat desks"
- Generally faster approval than Intesa (5-10 business days)
Cons:
- More inconsistent than Intesa—some branches flatly refuse US persons
- Investment products limited for US persons (PFIC concerns)
- Customer service quality varies significantly by branch
Client Experience:
"UniCredit in Milan approved my application in one week. My friend applied in Bologna and was rejected. Same bank, different branches, different outcomes." — US entrepreneur in Milan
Recommendation: Apply at major city branches (Milan, Rome, Turin). Avoid small-town branches—they're less likely to have FATCA experience.
Fineco Bank — Best Digital Option
US Person Policy: Accepts US persons for personal accounts (business accounts case-by-case)
Requirements:
- Valid US passport
- Italian codice fiscale
- Proof of Italian residence
- SSN
- FATCA self-certification
Account Types Available:
- Personal checking (Fineco Current Account)
- Savings and investment accounts
- Business accounts (requires additional documentation, not always available to US persons)
FATCA Compliance: Full compliance. Reports to IRS.
Fees:
- Monthly maintenance: €3.95 (under 30 years old: free)
- International wire: €15 outgoing, €5 incoming
- Currency conversion: 1.5-2% markup (better than traditional banks)
Pros:
- Fully digital—no branch visits required
- Lower fees than traditional banks
- Best currency conversion rates among Italian banks
- Excellent online and mobile banking
- Fast approval (3-5 business days)
Cons:
- No physical branches (all digital)
- Business accounts not always available to US persons
- Limited in-person support if issues arise
Client Experience:
"Fineco was the easiest bank I opened in Italy. Entire process online, approved in 4 days. I use it for personal banking and keep my business account at Intesa." — US software developer in Rome
Recommendation: Excellent for personal banking. For business accounts, apply but have a backup plan (Intesa or Wise Business).
BNL (BNP Paribas Group) — International Bank Option
US Person Policy: Accepts US persons, especially if you have existing BNP Paribas relationship
Requirements:
- Valid US passport
- Italian codice fiscale
- Proof of Italian residence
- Proof of US address
- SSN
- FATCA self-certification
Account Types Available:
- Personal checking and savings
- Business accounts (case-by-case)
- International banking services
FATCA Compliance: Full compliance (BNP Paribas is French, very experienced with FATCA).
Fees:
- Monthly maintenance: €12-18
- International wire: €25 outgoing, €10 incoming
- Currency conversion: 2-3% markup
Pros:
- International bank familiar with US customers
- Can leverage existing BNP Paribas relationships (if you bank with BNP in US or other countries)
- English-speaking staff
- Good for complex international banking needs
Cons:
- Higher fees than Italian domestic banks
- Smaller branch network in Italy
- Slower approval process (2-3 weeks)
Recommendation: Good option if you have existing BNP Paribas relationship or need sophisticated international banking.
❌ Banks That Typically Reject US Persons
Based on client experiences and bank policies:
Banco BPM: Generally rejects US persons. Multiple client rejections reported in 2025-2026.
Monte dei Paschi di Siena: Does not accept US persons. Compliance department automatically rejects FATCA-related applications.
Mediolanum: Rejects US persons. Focuses on Italian investment products (many are PFICs, which they don't want to deal with for US customers).
Banca Sella: Case-by-case, but mostly rejects US persons. Some clients report success with business accounts if you have strong Italian ties.
Small Regional Banks (BCC/Casse Rurali): Almost universally reject US persons. They lack FATCA compliance infrastructure.
Poste Italiane (BancoPosta): Does not accept US persons. Government postal bank, no FATCA program.
🔄 Alternative Banking Solutions for US Persons
If traditional Italian banks reject you (or while you're waiting for approval), consider these alternatives:
Wise (formerly TransferWise) — Best for Transfers
What It Is: Digital money transfer service with multi-currency account
US Person Policy: Fully accepts US persons
Features:
- Hold balances in 40+ currencies (EUR, USD, GBP, etc.)
- Get European IBAN (Belgian IBAN, works throughout EU)
- Debit card for spending in Italy
- Convert currencies at mid-market rate (0.5-1.5% fee)
- Receive EUR transfers via SEPA (free)
- Send EUR transfers (€0.50-5 depending on amount)
Limitations:
- Not a full bank account (no cash deposits)
- Italian IBAN not available (Belgian IBAN—some Italian employers/vendors may question it)
- Cannot pay Italian F24 tax forms directly (need Italian bank account for this)
- Business accounts available but limited features
Client Experience:
"I used Wise exclusively for my first 8 months in Italy. Worked great for receiving payments from US clients and paying rent. But I couldn't pay INPS contributions or F24 taxes—had to open an Italian bank account eventually." — US consultant in Milan
Recommendation: Use as primary account while waiting for Italian bank approval. Then keep as secondary account for USD/EUR conversions and international transfers.
Revolut — Digital Banking Alternative
What It Is: UK-based digital banking app with European IBAN (Lithuania)
US Person Policy: Accepts US persons for personal accounts (business accounts limited)
Features:
- Hold and exchange 30+ currencies
- European IBAN (Lithuanian—works for SEPA)
- Debit card
- Investment products (stocks, crypto—see PFIC warnings)
- Budgeting tools
Fees:
- Free tier: €0/month, limited features
- Plus: €7.99/month, more features
- Premium: €14.99/month, full features
- Currency conversion: Free up to €1,000/month, then 0.5-1%
Limitations:
- Not accepted for Italian tax payments (F24)
- Some Italian vendors don't accept non-Italian IBAN
- Business accounts not always available to US persons
- Investment products may be PFICs (avoid for US persons)
Recommendation: Good secondary account for spending and currency exchange. Not sufficient as sole bank account for Italy residency.
US Banks with International Presence
Charles Schwab International:
- Accepts US expats
- No-fee ATM withdrawals worldwide (reimburses ATM fees)
- USD account only (not EUR)
- Good for keeping US banking relationship
- Doesn't solve Italian banking needs (can't pay F24, receive EUR salary)
Citibank International:
- Has Italian branches (Milan, Rome)
- Can maintain relationship across countries
- High minimum balances ($500k+ for private client)
- Not practical for most expats
Recommendation: Maintain US bank account for US expenses and emergency access. But you'll still need Italian (or European) account for daily life in Italy.
Step-by-Step: Opening Italian Bank Account as US Citizen
Phase 1: Pre-Application Preparation (1-2 weeks)
Gather Required Documents:
-
Valid US Passport
- Must be current (not expired)
- Bring copy of photo page
-
Italian Codice Fiscale
- Obtain from Agenzia delle Entrate before bank application
- Takes 1-2 days if applied in person
- Bring original and copy
-
Proof of Italian Residence
- Residenza registration (Anagrafe certificate) OR
- Rental contract + utility bill in your name OR
- Hotel receipt + declaration of hospitality (for temporary stay)
-
Proof of US Address
- US bank statement (recent, with your name and address)
- US utility bill
- Driver's license with US address
- Must be recent (within 90 days)
-
Social Security Number (SSN)
- Banks will ask for SSN on FATCA form
- Some may ask for physical SSN card (rare)
-
Proof of Income/Employment
- Employment contract (if employed in Italy)
- Partita IVA registration (if self-employed)
- Bank statements from US (showing income)
- Letter from employer (if employed remotely for US company)
-
FATCA Self-Certification Form
- Bank will provide this
- Similar to IRS Form W-9
- Requires SSN and certification of US tax compliance
Prepare Your Story:
Banks will ask:
- Why are you opening an account in Italy?
- What is the source of funds?
- What is your expected monthly transaction volume?
- Will you receive salary/business income?
Have clear, consistent answers. Inconsistencies trigger compliance reviews.
Phase 2: Application Submission (1 day)
In-Person Application (Recommended):
-
Schedule appointment at branch (don't walk in—ask for "responsabile compliance" or "gestore clienti esteri")
-
Bring all documents (originals + copies)
-
Complete application forms:
- Account opening forms
- FATCA self-certification
- Privacy consent forms
- Debit card request
-
Initial deposit: Most banks require €100-500 initial deposit
-
Get receipt and timeline: Ask for written confirmation of application and expected approval timeline
Online Application (Fineco only):
-
Start application on Fineco website
-
Upload documents (scanned copies)
-
Video identification: Complete video call for identity verification
-
Sign electronically: Use Italian SPID or digital signature (if you have it) or sign and mail physical documents
-
Wait for approval: 3-5 business days typically
Phase 3: Compliance Review (1-4 weeks)
What Happens During Review:
-
Branch forwards application to regional compliance department
-
Compliance reviews:
- Document authenticity
- FATCA classification
- Source of funds
- Sanctions screening (OFAC, EU lists)
-
Possible requests for additional information:
- Additional documentation
- Explanation of business activity
- References from other banks
Timeline:
- Intesa Sanpaolo: 2-3 weeks
- UniCredit: 1-2 weeks
- Fineco: 3-5 business days
- BNL: 2-3 weeks
Follow-Up Strategy:
If you haven't heard back after stated timeline:
- Call branch (ask for your relationship manager)
- Ask for status and whether additional documentation is needed
- Request escalation if branch can't provide clear answer
- Be persistent but polite—compliance departments are overloaded
Phase 4: Account Activation (1-2 days)
Once Approved:
-
Sign final documents (in person or electronically)
-
Receive debit card (7-10 days by mail, or instant card at some branches)
-
Activate online banking:
- Set up username/password
- Configure two-factor authentication
- Download mobile app
-
Set up initial transfers:
- Transfer funds from US account (use Wise for best rates)
- Set up any automatic payments
-
Request account certificates (if needed for residency, visa, etc.)
Common Rejection Reasons and How to Overcome Them
Rejection Reason #1: "We Don't Accept US Persons"
What It Means: Branch staff may not be trained on FATCA procedures or assume US persons are too complicated.
How to Overcome:
- Ask to speak with branch manager or compliance officer
- Mention that Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit accept US persons (shows it's possible)
- Offer to provide all FATCA documentation upfront
- Try a different branch (major city branches are more experienced)
Script:
"I understand FATCA adds complexity, but I have all required documentation including my SSN and completed FATCA self-certification. I know Intesa Sanpaolo's Milan branch processes US person accounts regularly. Can you check with your regional compliance team about the procedure?"
Rejection Reason #2: "We Need Additional Documentation"
What It Means: Either legitimate compliance request or stalling tactic.
How to Overcome:
- Ask for specific list of required documents in writing
- Provide everything promptly
- Follow up within 3-5 business days
- If requests seem unreasonable, ask to escalate
Red Flag: Repeated requests for additional documents without clear explanation may indicate they're trying to discourage you. Consider switching banks.
Rejection Reason #3: "Your Application Is Under Review" (Indefinitely)
What It Means: Application stuck in compliance queue or they're hoping you'll give up.
How to Overcome:
- Set deadline: "If I don't hear back by [date 2 weeks out], should I assume rejection?"
- Follow up weekly
- Ask for direct contact at compliance department
- Escalate to regional office if branch unresponsive
Rejection Reason #4: "We Don't Offer Business Accounts to US Persons"
What It Means: Some banks accept US persons for personal accounts but not business accounts (higher compliance risk).
How to Overcome:
- Apply for personal account first (easier)
- Once you have personal account relationship, apply for business account
- Consider Wise Business as interim solution
- Try Fineco (more flexible on business accounts)
Special Considerations for Partita IVA and SRL
Partita IVA (Sole Proprietorship)
Additional Requirements:
- Partita IVA certificate
- INPS registration proof
- Description of business activity
- Expected annual revenue
- Client/supplier information (sometimes requested)
Account Type: "Conto Corrente Business" or "Conto Professionisti"
Fees: Typically €15-25/month (higher than personal accounts)
Transaction Limits: May have lower limits initially; request increase after 3-6 months of activity
SRL (Limited Liability Company)
Additional Requirements:
- Visura Camerale (company registration extract)
- Articles of incorporation (Atto Costitutivo + Statuto)
- List of shareholders and beneficial owners
- Corporate resolution authorizing account opening
- Tax ID of company (Partita IVA societaria)
- Personal guarantees from shareholders (sometimes)
Account Type: "Conto Corrente Societario"
Fees: €20-40/month depending on transaction volume
Compliance: Enhanced due diligence—expect more questions about business model, clients, suppliers
Timeline: 3-6 weeks (longer than personal accounts)
Challenge: Some banks that accept US persons for personal accounts reject SRLs with US shareholders. Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit are your best options.
Investment Products: PFIC Warnings for US Persons
CRITICAL: Most Italian investment products are PFICs (Passive Foreign Investment Company) for US tax purposes. PFIC taxation is punitive:
- Gains taxed at highest marginal rate (37%)
- Interest charge on deferred tax
- No step-up in basis at death
- Complex annual reporting (Form 8621)
Products to AVOID as US Person:
- Italian mutual funds (fondi comuni di investimento)
- Most ETFs listed on Italian exchanges
- Insurance products with investment component (polizze vita investimento)
- Gestioni patrimoniali (discretionary portfolio management)
What to Request Instead:
- Direct stock ownership (individual securities)
- US-domiciled ETFs (if bank offers them)
- Government bonds (Italian BTP, German Bunds—generally not PFICs)
- Bank deposits (conti deposito)
Script for Bank Advisor:
"I'm a US person and cannot invest in PFICs due to IRS reporting requirements. I can only invest in individual stocks, government bonds, or US-domiciled ETFs. Can you confirm which products in your platform meet these criteria?"
Warning: Many Italian bank advisors don't understand PFIC rules. They may insist their products are "fine for Americans." Don't trust this—verify with your US tax preparer.
Maintaining Compliance After Account Opening
Annual FATCA Reporting
Your Italian bank will:
- Send you annual FATCA self-certification update request
- Report your account information to Italian tax authority
- Italian tax authority forwards to IRS
Your Responsibility:
- Respond to bank's annual certification requests
- Report account on US tax return (Form 8938 if thresholds exceeded)
- File FBAR if aggregate foreign accounts exceed $10,000
Account Monitoring
Banks monitor for:
- Large or unusual transactions
- Changes in account activity patterns
- Sanctions list updates
Best Practices:
- Notify bank of large incoming transfers in advance
- Keep documentation of source of funds
- Update bank if your circumstances change (address, employment, etc.)
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I use a Belgian or German IBAN (from Wise/Revolut) for Italian residency?
A: Technically yes—EU law requires Italian authorities to accept EU IBANs. In practice, some offices may push back. For residency permits (permesso di soggiorno), Questura generally accepts EU IBANs. For tax payments (F24), you need Italian IBAN.
Q: My Italian bank is charging me extra fees because I'm American. Is this legal?
A: Yes. Banks can charge higher fees for US persons to cover FATCA compliance costs. Typical "FATCA fee" is €50-150 annually. Negotiate or switch banks if excessive.
Q: I already have an Italian bank account from before I became a US citizen (or before FATCA). Will they close my account?
A: Possibly. Banks periodically review accounts and may identify US persons. If discovered, they'll request FATCA documentation. If you don't provide it, they may close the account. Proactively provide documentation to avoid closure.
Q: Can I open an Italian bank account remotely from the US before moving to Italy?
A: Generally no. Italian banks require in-person identification or Italian residency. Fineco allows fully online application but still requires Italian codice fiscale and proof of Italian address. Some banks offer "pre-arrival" services through international desks—contact Intesa Sanpaolo or UniCredit international divisions.
Q: What if I'm denied at all Italian banks? Can I live in Italy without an Italian bank account?
A: Technically yes, but it's very difficult. You can't pay F24 taxes, INPS contributions, or receive Italian salary without Italian IBAN. Some expats use:
- Wise Business (for receiving payments)
- Italian accountant pays taxes on your behalf (advance them funds)
- Landlord accepts international transfers for rent
This is unsustainable long-term. Keep trying different banks or escalate within banks you've applied to.
Q: How long should I keep my US bank account open after moving to Italy?
A: Indefinitely. Maintain US bank account for:
- Emergency access to USD
- US credit card payments
- Maintaining US credit history
- Receiving any US income (rental, investments, etc.)
Use Italian account for Italian/EUR expenses, US account for US/USD expenses.
Summary: Your Action Plan
Before Applying:
â–ˇ Obtain codice fiscale
â–ˇ Gather all required documents (passport, proof of address, SSN)
â–ˇ Prepare clear explanation of your situation and source of funds
â–ˇ Research which banks in your city accept US persons
Application Strategy:
â–ˇ Start with Intesa Sanpaolo (major branch)
â–ˇ If rejected, try UniCredit (major branch)
â–ˇ Apply to Fineco online (for personal account)
â–ˇ Use Wise as backup while waiting
If Rejected:
â–ˇ Ask for specific reason in writing
â–ˇ Request escalation to compliance department
â–ˇ Try different branch (different city if possible)
â–ˇ Consider BNL or other international banks
After Approval:
â–ˇ Set up online banking immediately
â–ˇ Understand FATCA reporting obligations
â–ˇ Avoid PFIC investment products
â–ˇ Maintain US bank account as backup
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute banking or legal advice. Bank policies change frequently. Verify current requirements directly with banks or qualified professionals.
Important Disclaimer on Bank Policies:
Bank acceptance of US persons can change without notice and may vary by branch even within the same bank. A branch that accepted US customers last month may have new compliance restrictions today. Always call the specific branch where you plan to apply and confirm:
- They currently accept US persons for the account type you need
- What specific FATCA documentation they require
- Expected approval timeline
If one branch rejects you, try another branch of the same bank—policies are not always uniformly enforced.
Last Updated: March 2026