Which taxes are calculated using the ‘rendita catastale’?
IMU – (Imposta Municipale Propria) – The tax on second + properties and houses, which are considered luxury properties (Class A/1, A/8, A/9)
Imposta di registro, Ipotecaria e Catastale – the taxes when buying and selling property (not market value!)
Imposta di successione e donazione – the value of property is calculated using the rendita catastale for the purposes of inheritance tax. https://spectrum-ifa.com/how-can-i-save-on-inheritance-tax-in-italy
Why is it important?
The rendita catastale represents the amount of “theoretical rent” that a householder pays to him or herself as a measure of economic consumption. It is an imputed figure — a notional income — that reflects the benefit you receive simply by living in a property you own. In other words, if a householder owns their home outright, with no mortgage or debt, then that person is considered both a consumer and an investor of the invisible rent money they would have received had they been renting out a similar property. This money is assumed to be spent, reinvested, or otherwise circulated back into the economy.
Economists consider this a growing financial benefit that property owners enjoy from not having to pay rent. It is a silent contribution to economic activity, even though no cash actually changes hands. And in a country like Italy, where home ownership is culturally and economically significant, this imputed value plays a surprisingly large role.
During the financial crisis 2008/9, the Italian economy shrank dramatically. GDP fell, unemployment rose, and many sectors contracted sharply. Yet property, proportionately, made up more of the gross domestic product. The weighting of property in Italian GDP increased despite falling house prices and fewer transactions. That gives you an idea of how severe the declines were in other parts of the economy. Even when the market was weak, the imputed value of housing — the rendita catastale — continued to represent a stable and substantial component of national wealth.
This helps explain why successive governments treat property taxation so delicately. When the financial benefit from housing takes up a larger proportion of a property owner’s economic position, it becomes politically sensitive. It is no coincidence that governments have repeatedly adjusted or abolished taxes on the prima casa, recognising that Italian homeowners’ spending habits are more important to the domestic economy than the behaviour of foreign buyers. Italy’s economic engine is fuelled by its own residents, and the majority of them live in homes they own.