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Italy - Visas and Permits Required – Living La Dolce Vita – Pt 3 ❤️

Italy - Visas and Permits Required – Living La Dolce Vita – Pt 3 ❤️ Italy - Visas and Permits Required – Living La Dolce Vita – Pt.3
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Permits You Need to Stay in Italy

This video is for anyone wanting to make Italy a long-term or permanent home.

It covers the permits and certificates required, with an insight into the basic procedures to go through, before la dolce vita becomes reality, and you can call Italy your home.

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Italy – if you want to be living la dolce vita, you need to know what visas and permits are required – and we continue with the permits and other certificates to apply for.

In part 2 of this 4-part series you were introduced to the various visas required to gain ENTRY INTO ITALY.

Now, you are going to get an insight into what is required if you want to STAY IN ITALY for more than 3 months (90 days).

So, we'll start with....

1. The Permit to Stay (Permesso di Soggiorno):

If your intention from the outset is to live in Italy for longer than three months, you must apply for, and obtain, the Permit to Stay, within your first eight days of being in the country.

Within Italy, there are application packs with the relevant forms which you can get from post offices with a Sportello Amicocounter (the URL link is in the Description box below this video), or from local trade unions and municipalities set up to handle them.

The application pack will require you to:

(1) Buy a special type of stamp, called “marca da bollo” from a tobacconist ("tabaccheria").

(2) Get at least 4 passport-sized photos of yourself.

The forms to complete will be in Italian, so unless you have someone who reads and understands Italian to help you, check out a very helpful video, whose URL link is shown here:

This YouTube video has step-by-step instructions in English.

Do NOT sign and date the application form, as you will require to do this in the presence of a Sportello Amico representative at one of the hundreds of post offices around the country.

The Sportello Amico representative will review your application form and then ask you to sign the....

You’ll then be handed an appointment card showing a date and time on it for you to go to the immigration office at a local Police station (questura).

This is called the questura appointment, and takes place within about two months after you submit your application.

Make sure you also get a post office receipt – this is important.

Then, go to the questura meeting on the relevant date.

Make sure you take the following:

(1) The post office receipt.

(2) The paper or card from the post office confirming your appointment date and time.

(3) Proof of health insurance, including a photocopy.

(4) Proof of why you're in Italy, including photocopies of relevant letters and documents.

(5) All the documents you completed when you applied for your visa at the consulate or embassy in your home country, including a photocopy.

(6) Your visa.

(7) The remaining passport-size photos.

(8) Your passport.

At the Police station, the immigration officer interviewing you will have your application documents; ask you some questions; and then take your fingerprints.

The officer should then advise you when you can return to collect your Stay Permit, and should also give you a code to use to check the progress of the application online.

You may also receive a text notification on your mobile phone, too, as to when to collect the permit.

The Stay Permit should be ready after a couple of months.

2. Certificate of Residence (certificato di residenza):

3. The EC Residence Permit:

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Italy - Visas and Permits Required – Living La Dolce Vita – Pt.3






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