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Banking· 7 min read

Opening a personal bank account in Italy as a new resident in 2026

Italian banks are not hostile. They are slow, paper-driven, and need the documentation in a specific order. Here's the order that gets the account open in week two, not week ten.

Italian banking is more rule-bound than vendor-driven. Once you fit the rule set, an account opens cleanly. Cases that drag for two or three months usually started with the wrong document or the wrong branch, not with a hostile bank.

This is the sequence we use when we're coordinating a personal banking open for a new resident in 2026.

Step 1: Codice Fiscale first

Nothing happens without the codice fiscale (Italian tax code). For residents-in-progress, this is obtained through the Agenzia delle Entrate or, in some cases, through a consulate before arrival. It is the universal handle for any administrative interaction.

Step 2: Permesso di soggiorno or its receipt

For non-EU movers, the permesso di soggiorno (residency permit) - or, in the interim, the receipt confirming the application is filed - is what most banks expect to see for a resident account. Some banks accept the receipt; others insist on the issued permesso. The difference can be six weeks.

For EU citizens, the relevant proof is the registration certificate from the anagrafe (local registry).

Step 3: Proof of residence (residenza)

The anagrafe registration as a resident at a specific Italian address is the second universal handle. Banks ask for the certificato di residenza or its equivalent.

Step 4: Choose the right kind of bank

There are three rough categories for the new resident:

  • The major Italian retail banks (Intesa Sanpaolo, UniCredit, BPER, etc.) - full service, broad branch network, slower onboarding.
  • Online-first Italian banks - faster digital onboarding, but coverage varies for specific resident scenarios.
  • European neobanks / PSD2 operators active in Italy - functional for day-to-day but not always full substitutes for a domestic account when dealing with Italian administrative payments.

The right answer depends on whether the case needs full Italian mortgage / SDD / domestic-payment plumbing, or only basic transactional service.

Step 5: Source-of-funds documentation

Larger initial transfers - especially across borders - need a clean source-of-funds narrative. Salary statements, sale of an asset, exit proceeds, gift documentation, inheritance. Italian AML processes are stricter than they were a few years ago and will not assume good faith on a six-figure inbound transfer.

Step 6: SDD, IBAN propagation, and the small-but-blocking details

Once the account is open, the operational steps are:

  • Set up the SDD (Italian direct debit) for utilities and rent
  • Update the codice fiscale-linked IBAN with the Agenzia delle Entrate for refunds
  • Inform employer / clients of the new Italian IBAN if salary or invoicing will be redirected

What we tell movers to avoid

  • Walking into a random branch in week one. Pick the bank by service profile first.
  • Bringing only the codice fiscale and expecting the account to open. Banks need the proof-of-residence too.
  • Transferring large funds before the account is fully operational - the bank will hold them under AML review until questions are answered.
  • Assuming a neobank covers every domestic Italian payment scenario. For some cases it does; for others it doesn't.

Italian banking is workable. It rewards order, not speed.

Bordercase notes are informational and do not constitute legal, tax, or fiduciary advice.