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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Canada VS COUNTRY B Italy

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for Canada and Italy in 2026.

OVERVIEW
Canada (Ontario) is cheaper than Italy at every income level, with a growing advantage as income rises. Italy's IRPEF income tax reaches 43% above €50,000, compounded by regional and municipal surtaxes (~1.5–3.5%) and employee INPS social security contributions of approximately 9.49%. At €90,000, Canada saves €6,500/year versus Italy. Italy's Forfettario flat tax (€100,000/year flat payment) for qualifying new residents is a major exception — potentially making Italy dramatically cheaper for high-net-worth newcomers.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🇨🇦
COUNTRY A
Canada
TAX RATE
~53.5%
Top Combined Rate
Federal 33% + Ontario 13.16% combined top; plus CPP and EI contributions; Ontario surtax applies at mid-high incomes
🇮🇹
COUNTRY B
Italy
TAX RATE
~56%
Top Combined Rate
IRPEF 43% above €50,000 + regional surtax ~1.5–2.5% + municipal surtax up to 0.9% + employee INPS ~9.49%; effective rates high at mid-range incomes
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from ItalyCanada at €90,000
€6,500
That's €542 back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🇨🇦 CA TAX
🇮🇹 IT TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
€30,000
€7,300
€8,200
€900 cheaper in CA
€9,000
€60,000
€18,900
€22,100
€3,200 cheaper in CA
€32,000
€90,000
€32,500
€39,000
€6,500 cheaper in CA
€65,000
€150,000
€65,600
€71,200
€5,600 cheaper in CA
€56,000
💡

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Canada Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Lower effective burden at all income levels: Canada (Ontario) is cheaper than Italy at €30,000 through €150,000, with the largest advantage at €90,000–€100,000 where Italy's 43% IRPEF bracket + regional/municipal surtaxes + 9.49% INPS create a heavy cumulative burden
  • RRSP and TFSA: Canada's registered retirement savings plan (deductible contributions up to CAD 32,490/year in 2026) and TFSA (CAD 7,000/year tax-free) provide powerful tax-deferred investing vehicles. Italy has limited equivalent tax-sheltered investment products
  • CPP earnings ceiling: Canada's CPP contributions cap at CAD 68,500 (CPP1) — above which pension contributions stop increasing. Italy's INPS (9.49% employee rate) has an upper threshold that phases contribution requirements, but the effective employee burden remains higher at mid-range incomes
  • No equivalent of Italy's surtax complexity: Italy applies IRPEF income tax plus a regional surtax (varying by region, typically 1.5%–2.5%) plus a municipal surtax (up to 0.9%) — three separate levies on income. Canada's provincial income tax is a single provincial rate, simpler to calculate
− CONS
  • Ontario surtax: Ontario applies a secondary surtax of 20% on Ontario income tax above CAD 5,315/year and 36% above CAD 6,802/year — narrowing Canada's advantage at higher incomes. Without the Ontario surtax (e.g. in Alberta at ~48% combined), Canada's advantage over Italy would be substantially larger
  • Canadian Italian diaspora context: Canada has one of the world's largest Italian diaspora communities (~1.5 million Canadians of Italian heritage). Tax is rarely the only factor in Canada-Italy decisions — family ties, lifestyle, and culture weigh heavily
  • No Italian flat tax for new residents: Canada offers no equivalent to Italy's €100,000 lump-sum regime for non-domiciled newcomers — a major gap for high-net-worth individuals considering international relocation
🇮🇹

Italy Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Forfettario flat tax — €100,000/year lump sum for new residents: Italy's impatriates' regime (regime forfettario per neo-residenti) allows individuals who have not been Italian tax residents for at least 9 of the last 10 years to pay a flat €100,000/year in lieu of all Italian income tax on foreign-source income. For a global citizen with €500,000/year in foreign income: Italy becomes dramatically cheaper than Canada. A family member extension costs an additional €25,000/year each
  • Impatriates' regime (regime impatriati): for employees and self-employed individuals who transfer their tax residence to Italy, 50% of employment/self-employment income is exempt from IRPEF (increased to 70% in southern regions) for up to 5 years. For qualifying workers earning €90,000: this can reduce the effective IRPEF rate from ~43% to approximately 21.5%
  • Mediterranean lifestyle, culture, healthcare: Italy's public healthcare system (Servizio Sanitario Nazionale) provides universal free-at-point-of-use care. The lifestyle, cuisine, culture, and climate are non-monetary factors that draw many high-net-worth individuals despite higher standard income tax rates
  • No inheritance tax on most transfers: Italy's succession tax (imposta di successione) is capped at 4%–8% depending on relationship and value, with a very high exemption (€1,000,000 per heir for direct descendants). Canada has no inheritance tax either — both countries are broadly equal on estate planning
− CONS
  • 43% IRPEF above €50,000: Italy's income tax reaches 43% above €50,000 — a relatively low threshold. Combined with regional surtax (~1.5%–2.5%) and municipal surtax (~0.9%), the marginal rate above €50,000 for many Italians is 45%–47%, before INPS
  • Employee INPS ~9.49%: Italy's INPS (Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale) employee contribution is approximately 9.49% of gross salary — on top of income tax. Unlike France where CSG/CRDS partially replace income tax, Italian INPS is purely additional to IRPEF
  • Complex multi-layer system: IRPEF + regional surtax (varies by region: Lombardia 1.62%, Lazio 3.33%, Campania 2.03%) + municipal surtax + INPS create four separate deduction streams. Italy's tax administration (Agenzia delle Entrate) also requires a Modello 730 or Modello Redditi filing for most employed workers with side income
  • Bureaucratic complexity and slow administration: Italy's tax system is complex to navigate, with extended assessment cycles (accertamenti fiscali), frequent amnesties, and a compliance culture that can be challenging for expats unfamiliar with the Italian system
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Canada or Italy cheaper for income taxes?

Canada (Ontario) is cheaper at every standard income level. At €30,000, the saving is €900/year — modest, as both countries are moderately taxed at low incomes. The gap grows to €3,200 at €60,000 and peaks at €6,500 at €90,000 where Italy's 43% IRPEF bracket + INPS + regional surtax creates a significantly higher burden. At €150,000, Canada is still €5,600 cheaper. The major exception: Italy's Forfettario flat tax (€100,000/year lump sum for qualifying new residents) can make Italy dramatically cheaper than Canada for very high global earners.

What is Italy's Forfettario flat tax regime for new residents?

Italy's regime forfettario per neo-residenti (also called the €100,000 flat tax) allows individuals who have not been Italian tax residents for at least 9 of the last 10 years to pay a flat annual tax of €100,000 in lieu of all Italian income tax on foreign-source income. Italian-source income is taxed normally. There is no asset or wealth reporting requirement for foreign assets. Family members can join for €25,000/year each. Duration: 15 years maximum. This regime was introduced in 2017 to attract globally mobile high-net-worth individuals, and has been widely used by sports professionals, hedge fund managers, and entrepreneurs relocating to Milan, Rome, or the Italian Riviera.

What is Italy's impatriates' regime and who qualifies?

Italy's regime impatriati (impatriates' regime) provides a 50% income exemption on employment and self-employment income for qualifying workers who transfer their tax residence to Italy. The exempt portion rises to 70% for workers who move to southern regions (Abruzzo, Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, Molise, Puglia, Sardinia, Sicily). Conditions: must not have been Italian tax resident in the prior 3 years; must commit to Italian tax residence for at least 2 years; must perform the work activity in Italy. Duration: 5 years, with extension to 8 years for those who purchase an Italian home or have dependent children in Italy. For a €90,000 earner qualifying for this regime: IRPEF applies only on €45,000 — dramatically reducing Italy's tax burden.

How does Italian INPS compare to Canadian CPP?

Italy: employee INPS (Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale) contributions approximately 9.49% of gross salary. This covers old-age pension, disability, and survivors' insurance. Employer INPS: approximately 29.35% — one of Europe's highest employer SS rates. Canada: CPP employee contributions at 5.95% to CAD 68,500 earnings ceiling (CPP1) + CPP2 4% on CAD 68,500–73,200. Maximum annual employee CPP1+CPP2: ~CAD 4,250 (~€2,850). Italian INPS is substantially higher than Canadian CPP as a percentage of income, contributing to Italy's higher effective burden at mid-range incomes.

How do capital gains tax systems compare between Canada and Italy?

Canada: capital gains at 50% inclusion rate (2/3 above CAD 250,000 from June 2024). Effective rate at Ontario top marginal: ~26.8%. Primary residence: fully exempt. Italy: capital gains on listed shares taxed at flat 26% (imposta sostitutiva). This includes dividends from listed companies. Unlisted company shares: taxed at income rates or 26% depending on participation threshold. Primary residence: gains on sale of primary home are exempt if owned and occupied for at least 5 years. Italy's flat 26% rate on listed equity is actually competitive with Canada's effective ~26.8% rate — this is one area where Italy performs similarly to Canada.

What is the regional and municipal surtax in Italy?

Italy's IRPEF is a national income tax, but two additional surtaxes apply: (1) Regional surtax (addizionale regionale): set by each of Italy's 20 regions, typically 1.22%–3.33%. Rome (Lazio) charges 3.33% — one of the highest in Italy. Milan (Lombardia) charges 1.62% — lower. Sardinia charges 1.23%. (2) Municipal surtax (addizionale comunale): set by each municipality, up to a maximum of 0.8%. Combined, these add 1.5%–4.2% to the effective income tax rate for most Italians. For a €90,000 earner in Rome: regional + municipal surtax ≈ €3,000–€3,800/year on top of IRPEF — comparable to Canada's Ontario surtax impact.

Is Milan or Toronto more expensive to live in?

Toronto is generally more expensive than Milan, particularly for housing. Numbeo data shows Toronto's overall cost of living is approximately 10–20% higher than Milan. Rent: central Toronto 1-bed CAD 2,200–3,000 (~€1,510–€2,060); central Milan €1,500–€2,200/month. Groceries: broadly comparable. Restaurants: Milan slightly cheaper. Healthcare: Italy's SSN provides universal free-at-point-of-use care; Canada's provincial health insurance similarly free. The income tax advantage of Canada over Italy at €90,000 (€6,500/year) is partially offset by Italy's lower housing and food costs, particularly outside Milan and Rome.

Does the Canada-Italy tax treaty affect Canadian expats in Italy?

Yes. The Canada-Italy Double Taxation Convention prevents double taxation. Key provisions: employment income is taxed in the country where work is performed. Dividends: Italy withholds 15% on dividends to Canadian residents (reduced under DTA). Pensions: generally taxable only in country of residence; Canadian pensions to Italian residents may be subject to Italian tax credit offset. CRA departure tax: Canadians leaving Canada trigger a deemed disposition on most non-Canadian assets — get valuations before departure. RRSP: Canadian residents with RRSP accounts can continue contributing during a temporary absence, but Italian tax authorities may require foreign account reporting (quadro RW in the Italian tax return) for RRSP balances above certain thresholds.