The Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) is the primary mechanism U.S. citizens in Italy use to avoid paying taxes on the same income twice. Most accountants file the forms mechanically — the real opportunity is in strategic optimization.

What Is the Foreign Tax Credit?

The FTC, codified in IRC §901, permits U.S. taxpayers to reduce their American tax liability by amounts paid in foreign income taxes. Claims are filed using IRS Form 1116 and represent the primary mechanism against double taxation. When a U.S. resident in Italy earns income and pays Italian income taxes (IRPEF) to the Agenzia delle Entrate, they can claim a credit against U.S. taxes dollar-for-dollar — limited to the U.S. tax attributable to that foreign income.

Excess credits may be carried backward one year or forward for ten years, creating significant long-term planning opportunities.

How It Works in Practice

Consider a straightforward example: you earn €50,000 and pay €14,140 in Italian IRPEF. On your U.S. return, that same income generates a U.S. tax liability. The FTC allows you to apply those Italian taxes paid as a credit against what you owe in the U.S. — often eliminating the U.S. liability entirely when Italian rates exceed U.S. rates.

Common Scenarios

FTC vs. Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE)

Foreign Tax Credit

Reduces U.S. tax dollar-for-dollar based on Italian taxes paid. Generally superior in high-tax Italy. Allows carryforward/carryback. Best for high earners in Italy.

FEIE (Form 2555)

Excludes up to ~$126,500 (2024) of foreign earned income from U.S. tax. Cannot be used on the same income as FTC. Often less advantageous in Italy's high-tax environment.

For most U.S. citizens in Italy, the FTC offers superior benefits since Italian tax rates typically exceed U.S. rates. You cannot combine FTC and FEIE on identical income — you must choose.

Filing Requirements

Strategic Opportunities

JSBC emphasizes that most accountants mechanically file the forms without optimization. The real opportunities include:

Important Note INPS social security contributions are not eligible for the Foreign Tax Credit — but they may benefit from the U.S.-Italy Totalization Agreement. Timely filing is essential; retroactive FTC claims have strict deadlines. See also: Can Americans Working in Italy Keep Paying U.S. Social Security?

Additional Reporting for Italian Residents

Beyond the FTC, U.S. citizens in Italy must also file:

The FTC interacts with all of these. Proper coordination is essential to avoid penalties and missed credits.

Maximize Your Foreign Tax Credits

Strategic FTC planning — not just form filing — is where we add value. Our bilingual team handles both U.S. and Italian tax returns for Americans living in Italy.

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