Italy Student Visa 2026: How to Study in Italy as a Non-EU Citizen — Universities, Language Schools, and the Permit Process

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Italy's student visa (Visto per Studio) is one of the most straightforward Italian long-stay visa categories for non-EU citizens — the eligibility is tied to a specific educational enrollment rather than to income thresholds or employment circumstances, and the documentation is more predictable than the elective residence or digital nomad visa categories. The specific Italian student visa landscape in 2026: the enormous attraction of Italian universities for international students (especially for architecture, fashion, food science, and classical music programs), the growing market for Italian language schools that offer the specific context of immersion language learning, and the increasing number of American and British students using the Italian student visa for semester or full-year programs at Italian universities.

Italian Student Visa: Requirements and Types

University Enrollment Visa

For non-EU students enrolling in a degree program at an Italian university (degree-granting programs include bachelor, master, and doctoral courses at public and private Italian universities). Required documents: enrollment confirmation letter from the Italian university (Letter of Acceptance with enrollment number); proof of financial means (approximately €5,899.82/year for living expenses — the Italian minimum for student visa purposes, recalculated annually); proof of accommodation in Italy; comprehensive health insurance; valid passport. The Italian Pre-Enrollment system (Universitaly): non-EU students must register at universitaly.it and submit the pre-enrollment application by the annual deadline (typically January-March for September enrollment). Processing at Italian consulates: 8-12 weeks; apply well before the enrollment semester.

Language School Visa

For non-EU students enrolled in a language school program of more than 90 days (programs under 90 days fall within the Schengen visa waiver for eligible nationalities and do not require a student visa). Required documents: enrollment confirmation from an Italian language school recognized by the MIUR (Ministry of Education, Universities and Research) or accredited by the Regione; proof of financial means (same threshold as university visa); accommodation documentation; health insurance. The language school visa category is used by approximately 15,000 non-EU students per year in Italy, with schools in Rome, Florence, Siena, and Bologna receiving the majority.

Post-Arrival: Permesso di Soggiorno per Motivi di Studio

Within 8 days of arriving in Italy with a student visa: apply for the Permesso di Soggiorno per Motivi di Studio (Study Residence Permit) at the Questura or through the Post Office Kit system. Required at the Questura: the student visa, passport, enrollment confirmation, accommodation proof, and a completed permit application form. The permit is issued for the duration of the course (maximum 1 year, renewable). Students on the Permesso per Studio are permitted to work part-time (maximum 1,040 hours per year for degree students, maximum 25 hours per week) in Italy.

Q&A: Italy Student Visa

Can I work while studying in Italy on a student visa?

Yes — up to 20 hours per week (or 1,040 hours annually for university students) under the Italian student visa conditions. The Permesso di Soggiorno per Studio explicitly permits part-time work; no additional work permit is required. The specific limitation: the work must be within the Italian labor market on an Italian contract (not remote work for foreign employers, which requires a different permit category). Italian university towns have specific student employment markets (university cafeterias, language tutoring, international event support) that offer English-speaking student employment within the permitted hours.

Which Italian universities are most popular with international students?

The Politecnico di Milano (architecture and engineering — consistently ranked among the top 10 architecture schools in the world), the Università di Bologna (the oldest university in the world, founded 1088, with strong programs in law, medicine, and humanities), the Sapienza Università di Roma (the largest university in Italy by enrollment), the Università di Firenze (art history and restoration), and the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (the most selective Italian university by admission, focused on humanities and mathematics at the highest academic level). For fashion and design specifically: Polimoda in Florence, the Istituto Europeo di Design (IED) with campuses in Rome, Milan, and Turin, and Domus Academy in Milan.

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