Italy’s Elective Residence Visa
Italy’s Elective Residence Visa (often called the Elective Residence Permit
route, “ERV”) is a long-stay residence pathway for non-EU/EEA/Swiss
nationals who want to live in Italy without working. It is designed for financially independent applicants who can prove stable, substantial
income from non-employment sources and who intend to establish a
genuine long-term residence in Italy.
Who it’s for?
This programme is usually a good fit for:
Retirees with reliable pension income
Financially independent individuals with recurring investment income (dividends/interest)
Applicants with stable rental income
Families who can demonstrate strong, consistent household income from outside Italy
It is generally not suitable for:
Applicants who need to work/rely on salary to support their stay in Italy
Applicants whose income looks like active employment income (especially if it appears they plan to keep “working” while in Italy)
Key benefits
Legal long-stay residence in Italy for financially independent applicants
Suitable for long-term relocation
Cansupport long-term residence (subject to meeting the rules and maintaining genuine residence)
Core eligibility requirements (what applicants must prove)
Nationality & admissibility
Stable passive / non-employment income (core)
You must prove stable, recurring, and sufficient income from
non-employment sources, such as:
Pension/annuity income
Dividends/interest/investment income
Rental income
Other long-term, legally sourced recurring income streams
non-employment sources, such as:
Typical processing time (planning ranges)
- ERV timing varies by consulate appointment availability, document
readiness, and post-arrival Questura backlogs.
Practical planning ranges: - Document preparation: ~2–6+ weeks
- Consular processing after submission: up to ~90 days (about 3
months) is commonly stated - Post-arrival residence permit workflow: often weeks to a few
months depending on local Questura timing.
Overall “start to finish” planning range:
- Roughly 4–9 months to have the residence permit card issued
(highly variable)
Common refusal / delay risks (quality control)
- Insufficient income for household size or weak “buffer” savings
- Inconsistent financial evidence (income claimed doesn’t match
statements/tax records) - Accommodation proof not compliant
- Missing/expired police certificates or incorrect
translations/legalisations - Weak narrative of “intention to reside”
Professional disclaimer
This page is general information, not legal advice. ERV requirements and income expectations vary by consulate and may change. Always confirm
the current checklist and financial benchmark used by the Italian consulate.