Italian Transfer Pricing for Foreign Companies 2026: Rules and Compliance
Transfer pricing is consistently the number one audit risk for foreign groups operating in Italy. The Italian Revenue Agency has dedicated audit teams focused exclusively on cross-border intercompany transactions, and penalties for non-compliance can reach up to 10% of any upward adjustment.
If your foreign company has an Italian SRL that buys goods from, sells services to, or shares intangibles with the parent company or any other group entity, Italian tax authorities will expect those transactions to be priced as if they were negotiated between independent parties. Failure to document this properly is not merely an administrative oversight — it is a direct pathway to double taxation, protracted litigation, and reputational exposure.
The Arm's Length Principle in Italian Law
Italian transfer pricing rules rest on the arm's length principle: every transaction between associated enterprises must be priced at conditions that would apply between independent parties under comparable circumstances. This principle is enshrined in Article 110, paragraph 7 of the Testo Unico delle Imposte sui Redditi (TUIR), Italy's consolidated income tax code, which states that income from transactions between associated enterprises must reflect normal market conditions. Any deviation may give rise to adjustments by the tax authorities.
Italy does not apply these rules in isolation. As a member of the OECD Inclusive Framework, the country has progressively aligned its domestic framework with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines, most recently the 2022 edition, which remains the reference text in 2026. The Italian Revenue Agency's own guidelines, published in Circular No. 95/E of 2009 and supplemented by subsequent practice, closely follow the OECD methodology. In practical terms, Italian auditors rely on comparable company analyses, benchmarking studies, and functional analyses conducted in accordance with internationally recognised standards.
For foreign companies, this alignment is reassuring. A robust transfer pricing policy that satisfies OECD standards will generally be defensible in Italy as well, provided you adapt it to local requirements and document it in Italian.
Expert Insight — Giovanni Emmi, Dottore Commercialista
"The most common mistake I see from foreign groups entering Italy is treating transfer pricing documentation as a year-end compliance exercise. In reality, the pricing policy should be designed before the Italian entity begins transacting with group members. Retroactive adjustments are always more costly and more difficult to defend."
Transfer Pricing Methods
Italian tax law recognises the same five transfer pricing methods endorsed by the OECD. Which method you choose depends on the nature of the transaction, the availability of reliable comparable data, and the relative contribution of each party to the value chain. The Comparable Uncontrolled Price (CUP) method is considered the most reliable where direct comparables exist, while the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM) is by far the most widely applied in Italian practice because finding comparable company data is relatively straightforward.
| Method | Typical Application | Key Strength | Main Limitation |
|---|
| CUP | Raw materials, commodities, routine loans | Direct comparison to third-party prices | Identical comparables rarely exist |
| Resale Price | Distribution of finished goods | Simple where the reseller adds limited value | Difficult to separate marketing functions |
| Cost Plus | Contract manufacturing, shared services | Transparent, easy to apply to cost-based entities | Requires clear identification of allowable costs |
| TNMM | Most common; suitable for distributors, manufacturers, service providers | Broad databases of comparable companies available | Does not identify precise arm's length price |
| Profit Split | Highly integrated operations, unique intangibles | Accounts for synergies between parties | Complex; requires detailed financial data from all parties |
In day-to-day practice, the TNMM dominates Italian compliance. Advisers typically use commercial databases such as RoyaltyStat, TP Catalyst, or Amadeus to identify comparable Italian or European companies and establish an arm's length range. Your Italian entity's operating margin is then measured against this range. A result within the range is generally accepted; a result outside it may prompt your adviser to recommend a prospective adjustment or, where possible, a retrospective true-up.
Documentation Requirements
Italian transfer pricing documentation follows the three-tiered structure recommended by the OECD: Master File, Local File, and Country-by-Country Report (CbCR). Each tier serves a distinct purpose and applies to different categories of taxpayers.
The Master File provides a high-level overview of the multinational group's business structure, operations, intangibles, financing, and intercompany pricing policies. You must prepare one if the group's consolidated revenue exceeded EUR 750 million in the preceding fiscal year. In most cases, group headquarters prepares the Master File and makes it available to the Italian Revenue Agency upon request.
The Local File is the core compliance document for the Italian entity. It must contain a detailed description of the entity's business, organisational structure, and intercompany transactions, supported by a functional analysis and a benchmarking study demonstrating arm's length pricing. You are required to prepare a Local File when the Italian entity carries out intercompany transactions exceeding a threshold of EUR 5.7 million per category (goods, services, financing, or intangibles) in the relevant tax period. The 2023 Stability Law raised this threshold, and it applies retroactively for fiscal years beginning after 31 December 2022.
The Country-by-Country Report applies only to the ultimate parent entity of groups with consolidated revenue exceeding EUR 750 million. If the parent is resident outside Italy and no agreement exists for information exchange, your Italian constituent entity may be required to file the CbCR in Italy as a surrogate entity.
Penalties for inadequate documentation are significant. When the Italian Revenue Agency makes an upward adjustment to taxable income and you cannot produce contemporaneous documentation, the surcharge ranges from 2% to 10% of the adjustment amount, depending on whether the documentation is entirely absent or merely incomplete. These penalties sit on top of any tax and interest owed on the adjustment itself. For more detail on how these adjustments interact with Italy's corporate tax framework, you may wish to review Italian corporate tax rules for foreign companies.
Expert Insight — Giovanni Emmi, Dottore Commercialista
"Many foreign groups assume that a group-level benchmarking study prepared for another European jurisdiction will suffice in Italy. It often will not. Italian auditors expect to see Italian or at least European comparables, and the functional analysis must reflect the specific role of the Italian entity, not a generic template."
Advance Pricing Agreements
Beyond documentation, there is a way to secure certainty upfront. An Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) is a binding agreement between the taxpayer and the Italian Revenue Agency that locks in the transfer pricing methodology for specific intercompany transactions before disputes arise. APAs eliminate the risk of double taxation for the covered transactions and significantly reduce audit exposure. They are particularly valuable for large groups with complex supply chains or significant intangible transfers involving the Italian entity.
Italy offers unilateral, bilateral, and multilateral APAs. A unilateral APA involves only the Italian Revenue Agency and provides certainty on the Italian side. A bilateral or multilateral APA brings in one or more foreign tax administrations through the mutual agreement procedure under an applicable tax treaty, and eliminates the risk of double taxation entirely. The Transfer Pricing Unit within the Revenue Agency manages the APA process, which typically takes between 18 and 36 months, depending on complexity. Filing fees are set at EUR 50,000 for unilateral agreements and EUR 75,000 for bilateral or multilateral ones, with a reduced fee of EUR 30,000 for small taxpayers meeting certain criteria.
YBI Consiglia
If your Italian SRL has intercompany transactions above EUR 5.7 million per category, budget roughly EUR 15,000 to EUR 30,000 per year for a compliant Local File with benchmarking. Investing in documentation before the tax year closes is consistently less expensive than defending an audit adjustment after the fact.
Frequently Asked Questions
When do Italian transfer pricing rules apply to my foreign company?
They apply the moment your foreign company and its Italian entity transact with each other in a way that is influenced by their relationship. That covers selling or purchasing goods, providing management or technical services, licensing trademarks or patents, and intercompany financing. The trigger is a controlling or significant ownership link — typically defined as direct or indirect ownership of more than 25% of voting rights or capital. Even a newly formed Italian SRL with minimal activity can fall within scope if it invoices group members for services rendered.
What are the penalties for non-compliance with Italian transfer pricing rules?
If the Revenue Agency adjusts your taxable income upward and you have no documentation to support your pricing, expect a surcharge of up to 10% on that adjustment. Where some documentation exists but is incomplete, auditors generally apply a reduced rate between 2% and 5%. On top of the surcharge, you owe the tax itself plus late payment interest — in 2026, the legal rate sits at approximately 2.5% per annum. In the most serious cases involving fraud or wilful evasion, criminal penalties may also come into play.
Does a small Italian SRL need transfer pricing documentation?
Not always, but be careful. If your SRL's intercompany transactions stay below EUR 5.7 million per category in the relevant tax year, the statutory Local File requirement does not apply. The arm's length principle still applies regardless of size, though, and the Revenue Agency can challenge your pricing during any audit. In our experience, small SRLs performing routine distribution or contract manufacturing for their parent are frequently audited precisely because their margins look unusually low. Even without a formal obligation, preparing at least a simplified functional analysis and a basic benchmarking study is a wise precaution. For foreign groups looking to optimise their Italian tax position more broadly, exploring available tax incentives can complement a sound transfer pricing strategy.