Americans, Canadians, Australians, and Brits do NOT need a visa for Italy โ but there are rules that catch people off guard. Your passport must be valid 3 months BEYOND your departure date. The 90/180-day Schengen rule means you can't stay more than 90 days in ANY 180-day period across ALL Schengen countries combined (Italy, France, Spain, Germany, etc. share ONE clock). And ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is coming โ a โฌ7 pre-travel authorization required for visa-exempt travelers.
Americans/Canadians/Australians/Brits/Japanese: No visa for stays up to 90 days. Just a valid passport. ETIAS (coming 2026-2027): โฌ7 online application, valid 3 years, required before boarding. Apply on etias.ec.europa.eu (not third-party sites that charge โฌ50+). Passport rules: Must be valid at least 3 months past your planned DEPARTURE from Schengen. Must have been issued within the last 10 years. US passports issued to adults last 10 years โ if yours was issued 9+ years ago, check the expiry.
You get 90 days in ANY 180-day rolling period across ALL 26 Schengen countries. If you spent 60 days in France last month, you only have 30 days left for Italy. The clock doesn't reset when you move between countries. Overstaying: fines, deportation risk, future Schengen visa denial. Long stays (study, work, remote work): You need an Italian visa โ apply at the Italian consulate in your home country BEFORE arrival. Digital nomad visa: Italy launched one in 2024 โ requires proof of income (โฌ28K+/year), health insurance, and remote employment/freelance work.