What is a Commercialista?
A commercialista is a licensed Italian professional who handles accounting, tax compliance, and financial advisory work. Think of them as the Italian equivalent of a CPA combined with a tax attorney — they can both prepare your tax return and represent you before the tax authorities if something goes wrong.
The title is protected by law. Anyone calling themselves a commercialista must hold a degree in economics or law, pass a state qualifying exam, complete an 18-month supervised internship, and register with the Ordine dei Dottori Commercialisti — the professional body that licenses and regulates the profession.
What a Commercialista Does
The scope of services is broad:
- Tax return preparation — Modello 730, Modello Redditi PF, corporate returns
- Tax planning — structuring income to minimize liability legally
- VAT and bookkeeping — managing a Partita IVA, quarterly VAT filings, ledgers
- Representation — appearing before the Agenzia delle Entrate on your behalf during audits or disputes
- Business setup — incorporating companies, drafting articles of association
- Estate and succession planning — inheritance, gifts, real estate transactions
When You Need One
For simple employment income and a primary residence in Italy, a CAF can handle your filing adequately. But you should go to a commercialista if you have:
- Foreign income or assets (employment abroad, overseas bank accounts, foreign property)
- Self-employment income via Partita IVA
- Rental income from multiple properties
- Complex family situations (trusts, inheritances, business ownership)
- An ongoing dispute or audit with the tax authorities
- Questions about special regimes like the Impatriati or high-net-worth flat tax
Non-residents with Italian property or Italian-source income almost always benefit from a commercialista's guidance — the Quadro RW foreign asset reporting requirements alone carry serious penalties if done incorrectly.
What It Costs
Fees vary widely based on complexity and location. Rough benchmarks:
- Basic personal return (single income source, no foreign assets): €200–500
- Self-employed with Partita IVA (quarterly filings + annual return): €800–2,000/year
- Complex international situations (foreign assets, Quadro RW, special regimes): €1,500–4,000+
- Corporate work or litigation: billed by the hour or project, often €5,000+
Milan and Rome command higher rates than smaller cities or the south.
Commercialista vs. CAF
A CAF is cheaper and fine for standard employee filings, but it operates on a volume model — they won't spend much time on your specific situation. A commercialista is your advisor: they know your file, answer your questions, and take responsibility for the advice they give. For anything involving cross-border income, assets held abroad, or business activity, the commercialista is the right choice.