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Insight · Transfer Pricing

Transfer Pricing Basics for Italian Groups with a U.S. Subsidiary

Every transaction between your Italian parent company and your U.S. subsidiary is under IRS scrutiny — here is what you need to know to get it right.

Key takeaway: Transfer pricing is the single area where Italian-owned U.S. subsidiaries face the most IRS scrutiny. Every intercompany transaction — goods, services, IP licensing, loans — must be priced as if the parties were unrelated. Proper documentation is not just a best practice; it provides penalty protection in the event of an IRS adjustment. Italian groups should establish a transfer pricing policy before operations begin, not retroactively.

Transfer pricing is one of those topics that Italian companies often associate with large multinationals and Big Four consulting engagements. In reality, the IRS applies the same arm's length standard to every foreign-owned U.S. company — regardless of size. An Italian group with a $2 million U.S. subsidiary faces the same rules as one with a $200 million subsidiary.

In our work with Italian-owned businesses, transfer pricing is the area where we most frequently see a gap between what the IRS expects and what the company has actually documented. This article provides a practical overview of what Italian groups need to know.

1. The Arm's Length Standard

The fundamental rule is simple: transactions between related entities must be priced as if the parties were unrelated — the arm's length standard. This applies to all intercompany transactions, including:

  • the price at which the Italian parent sells goods to the U.S. subsidiary
  • management fees or shared service charges
  • royalties for intellectual property, trademarks, or technology
  • the interest rate on intercompany loans
  • commissions for sales representation or distribution services
  • cost reimbursements and allocations

The IRS can — and does — adjust the U.S. subsidiary's taxable income if it determines that intercompany prices do not reflect arm's length terms. An upward adjustment to the subsidiary's income means additional tax, interest, and potentially penalties.

2. Common Intercompany Transactions for Italian Groups

The most typical arrangements we see between Italian parent companies and their U.S. subsidiaries include:

Purchase of Goods for Resale

The Italian parent manufactures goods and sells them to the U.S. subsidiary, which resells them to U.S. customers. The transfer price — the price the parent charges the subsidiary — determines how much profit is recognized in each country. If the transfer price is too high, the U.S. subsidiary's margins are compressed and the IRS may argue that profit has been artificially shifted to Italy.

Management Fees and Shared Services

Italian parent companies often provide management oversight, accounting support, HR services, or IT infrastructure to their U.S. subsidiaries. These services should be documented in a formal intercompany agreement, and the subsidiary should pay a fee that reflects the value of the services received. The IRS is particularly skeptical of management fees that appear to be a mechanism for extracting profits rather than a reflection of genuine services.

Intellectual Property and Trademark Licensing

If the U.S. subsidiary uses the Italian parent's brand, trademarks, patents, or proprietary technology, a licensing agreement with an arm's length royalty rate should be in place. Even if no formal agreement exists, the IRS may impute a royalty — meaning it could adjust the subsidiary's income to reflect what it would have paid an unrelated party for the same rights.

Intercompany Loans

When the Italian parent lends money to the U.S. subsidiary, the loan must have terms consistent with what an unrelated lender would offer — including interest rate, repayment schedule, and documentation. The IRS may recharacterize an undocumented or below-market loan as a capital contribution, which changes the tax treatment of the payments.

3. Documentation Requirements

The IRS does not require a transfer pricing study to be completed before filing a tax return. However, the penalty regime creates a strong incentive to have contemporaneous documentation in place:

  • Without documentation: If the IRS makes a transfer pricing adjustment, a 40% penalty on the underpayment may apply (the "transactional penalty")
  • With documentation: The penalty is reduced to 20%, and in many cases can be avoided entirely if the taxpayer demonstrates reasonable cause and good faith

In practice, "documentation" means having a written transfer pricing policy that explains the methodology used to price each category of intercompany transaction, supported by benchmarking data (comparable transactions between unrelated parties). This does not need to be a 200-page Big Four report — for a smaller Italian-owned subsidiary, a focused policy document of 15–30 pages with appropriate benchmarking analysis is typically sufficient.

4. The Connection to Form 5472

Form 5472, which we cover in a separate article, requires annual disclosure of all intercompany transaction amounts. The IRS uses this data as a screening tool: companies with large intercompany flows, thin margins, or year-over-year fluctuations in transfer prices are more likely to be selected for examination.

Consistency between Form 5472 data, the company's financial statements, and the transfer pricing documentation is essential. Discrepancies — even accidental ones — can trigger IRS questions.

5. The Italian Side

Transfer pricing is not just a U.S. issue. The Italian tax authorities (Agenzia delle Entrate) also enforce arm's length pricing, and Italy has its own documentation requirements. The risk of double taxation is real: if the IRS increases the U.S. subsidiary's income through a transfer pricing adjustment, the Italian parent's income is not automatically reduced. Obtaining relief requires invoking the Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) under the U.S.–Italy tax treaty — a process that can take years.

For Italian groups, this means the transfer pricing policy should be designed to satisfy both the IRS and the Agenzia delle Entrate simultaneously. The U.S. and Italian documentation standards are broadly consistent (both follow OECD guidelines), but the analysis needs to be coordinated.

6. Common Mistakes We See

In our work with Italian-owned U.S. businesses, the most frequent transfer pricing issues include:

  • No intercompany agreement in place — transactions occur informally, with pricing set by the Italian parent without documentation
  • Management fees with no clear connection to services actually provided — the IRS views these as disguised profit extraction
  • Using the Italian parent's trademark without a licensing agreement — the IRS may impute a royalty
  • Intercompany loans with no formal terms — or with interest rates that do not reflect arm's length terms
  • Pricing set once and never revisited — as the business grows and market conditions change, transfer prices should be reviewed periodically
  • Inconsistency between the U.S. and Italian transfer pricing positions — creating exposure to adjustments in both countries

Closing Observations

Transfer pricing is not an optional compliance exercise — it is a core part of operating a cross-border business. For Italian groups, the combination of IRS enforcement, Form 5472 disclosure, and Italian tax authority oversight means that intercompany transactions are visible to both countries' tax administrations.

The good news is that for most Italian-owned U.S. subsidiaries, getting transfer pricing right is not prohibitively complex or expensive. It requires a clear policy, proper agreements, and basic benchmarking — all established before or at the start of operations. The cost of doing this proactively is a fraction of the cost of an IRS adjustment and the subsequent double taxation dispute with Italy.

About our approach

We help Italian-owned U.S. subsidiaries establish transfer pricing policies, draft intercompany agreements, and maintain the documentation needed to support their positions with both the IRS and the Italian tax authorities. For companies that need formal benchmarking studies, we coordinate with specialized transfer pricing economists.

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This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Specific situations should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.