Treaty positions, withholding, and structure, coordinated with your Italian commercialista so the two sides line up instead of contradicting each other.
When money, ownership, or people move between Italy and the United States, the two tax systems do not automatically agree. Dividends, royalties, interest, and intercompany charges can be taxed twice, or taxed in the wrong place, when the U.S. and Italian positions are handled in isolation. The U.S. advisor optimizes the U.S. side, the commercialista optimizes the Italian side, and no one owns the seam between them. That seam is where the costly surprises live.
We handle the U.S. side of the cross-border picture and coordinate directly with your commercialista on the Italian side, so the positions are designed to fit together. We work through the relevant treaty provisions, withholding obligations, and structural choices with both jurisdictions in view, and we translate, literally and conceptually, between the two so decisions are made with the full picture rather than half of it.
We handle the U.S. side and coordinate with your commercialista on the Italian side. We do not replace your Italian advisor; we make sure the U.S. and Italian positions are designed to work together rather than against each other.
No. We handle the U.S. side and coordinate with your commercialista on the Italian side. The value is in the two sides being designed together, which is exactly what tends to be missing.
That is one of the most common reasons companies come to me. Treaty provisions and withholding rules exist to address it, but only if the U.S. and Italian positions are coordinated deliberately.
It is most valuable where there is real cross-border complexity, but even a smaller company moving money between the two countries benefits from getting the structure right early.
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