Showing posts with label social security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social security. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Info on Relocation and Moving to Italy

(LAST EDITED/UPDATED: 7 June 2010)

Here are the links for Relocation and Moving to Italy:


RELOCATION
MOVING
CHECKLISTS
COMMENTS/OBSERVATIONS

ELECTRONICS

ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND REFERENCES
PERSONAL SAFETY
PETS
SOCIAL SECURITY AND TAXES (USA ONLY)
VISAS AND PERMITS
WEATHER
  • Italy – Select from list of cities/towns in Italy – "Weatherbase is your one authoritative source for finding monthly weather records and averages for more than 16,439 cities worldwide." – Source: Weatherbase
  • italy-weather-and-maps.com – home to maps of Italy, current Italian weather conditions, and six day weather forecasts for every Italian region and province.
MISCELLANEOUS
* = Blog entry has been updated.

For your specific interest, please search the web for further information using Google .

The above links as of this date are/were current. If anyone has any suggestions for any other additional web sites and/or links for reference, please feel free to post your comment and I'll update this blog entry.

Please note: If you want me to reply to your comment or request any further information by email, please include your email address in a separate comment. I will NOT publish any comments with an email address in it.

NOTE: If you want to leave a comment, please leave it in ENGLISH.

Broken links: Since November, 2005, I have written over 300+ blog entries with 1,000's of corresponding links/URLs for Moving2Italy2, covering a varied and wide range of topics. In the event if you come across a broken link or a non-functioning link/URL, please post a comment and report the non-functional link. I wish to thank you in advance for assisting me in the ongoing maintenance and the updating of this successful and informative blog.

Please note: I do NOT represent or endorse any of these links nor do I receive payment for listing them in my blog.

These initial blog entries are a foundation for what is to follow as the time gets closer to when my wife and I move to Italy. NOTE: UPDATE – In September. 2007. my wife (dual citizen), our dog, Siena Lucca and I moved to Monte San Savino (AR), Italy.

Right now, the time frame is 3 - 4 years out. If we hit the lottery, it's a lot sooner. However, in the meantime, we are taking language lesson, learning as much about Italy as we can before the move and making annual trips to Italy to find out where we may live. Right now, there is no favorite location. Over the past 12+ trips to Italy either together or separately, we have spent most of our time in Tuscany and Umbria. In the last 3 - 4 years, we have leased a car from Renault Eurodrive and driven in into Italy from Nice, France and back. Renting a house again in either Tuscany or Umbria and making other trips to my wife's ancestral beginnings in Meta and Sorrento. We have travel north to south and east to west in Italy. Besides driving in from France, we have trained in from either Switzerland or Germany and I have driven in from Germany. We have done the Planes, Trains and Automobiles routine plus the ferry from Corsica.

In the above blog entry, I have distinguished between relocation and moving. While one can argue that they are one and the same, there are differences. For this blog entry, I am associating RELOCATION with a private/public corporation or company or organization sponsored move (read relocation) to Italy. For MOVING, I am associating an individual's move to Italy without any company or organization's financial assistance or aid. It may appear to be splitting hairs. It is a fine line and a grey area but one that exists because no matter what, one is moving from one country to another. For the purposes of this blog entry most of the references and links, in this case, are from the USA to Italy.

Note: I have other blog entries
that may be of interest to some individuals:

Plan on stopping back because this blog entry will be updated on a regular basis.

That's it for Monday, 30 January 2006: lunedì, 30 gennaio 2006.

Ciao, Ben

Today’s quote is an Italian proverb, author unknown.

"Doppo 'e quarant' anne nun s'addimanda chiu "Cumme staje?", ma "Cumme te sienti?"
"After age 40, don't ask "How are you?", but rather "How do you feel?"

Please read my wife's blog about our life in Italy with photographs:

Friends and Family in Italy


Going to Spain, read my new blog:

Info About, For or On Spain – a source of links About, For or On Spain for those individuals traveling or already living in Spain.

(LAST EDITED/UPDATED: 7 June 2010)

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Info about Social Security and Taxes for Americans Living in Italy

(LAST EDITED/UPDATED: 10 June 2007)

Here are the links about Social Security and Taxes for Americans Living and Residing in Italy
:

SOCIAL SECURITY

TAXES
BLOG
  • U.S.(American) Income Tax for Expatriates, Permanent Residents and Nonresidents – "U.S. Income Tax Information, rules, regulations and laws, for US Citizens, Americans, green card holders, and nonresidents living abroad or moving to the US or out of the US.... including comments, suggestions and practical advice. Valuable information on IRS rules concerning U.S. expatriates and their tax returns, and planning." – Don D. Nelson – Location: Dana Point, California, United States
RESOURCES
MISCELLANEOUS
* = Blog entry has been updated.

The above links are current. If anyone has any suggestions for other sites, please feel free to post your comment and I'll update this blog entry. For your specific interest, please search the web for further information using Google .


Even if you are an American living overseas and in this case, Italy, you still have to pay taxes! Depending on your specific financial situation, you will pay federal income tax to either the US or Italian government. Depending on your former state of residence in theUS, you may have to pay State or Commonwealth (Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Virginia) taxes. However, there are local Italian taxes to be paid if you are residing in Italy.

It is suggested to hire an accountant/financial planner and/or someone who is very familiar with preparing tax forms for Italy and the US. Ignorance of the law is no excuse.

That's it for Wednesday, 28 December 2005: mercoledì, 28 Dicembre 2005

Felice Nuovo Anno!

Ciao, Ben

Today’s quote is an Italian proverb, author unknown.

"Che sarà, sarà."
"What will be, will be."

(LAST EDITED/UPDATED: 10 June 2007)