Italy's insurance market is worth €151.6 billion. Navigating it as a foreign resident — without expert comparison — means paying too much, covering too little, or missing policies the law requires you to have. This guide changes that.
Some policies are compulsory by Italian law. Missing them isn't just expensive — it can result in fines, seized vehicles, or a rejected residence permit application.
Select a type to see what it covers, what to look for, and which providers lead the Italian market for that category.
Italy's public SSN system is excellent but enrollment takes time — and non-EU residents often face a gap. Private health insurance covers you during this period and gives access to shorter waiting times, English-speaking doctors, and specialist care.
Italy's €151.6B insurance market is dominated by major groups. Here's what each is known for and where they lead.
Italy's largest insurer and one of the world's top 10 insurance groups. Market leader across health, life, travel, and home.
The Italian arm of the world's largest insurer. Particularly strong for expat health plans, business insurance, and travel.
Italy's third-largest group, particularly dominant in motor insurance. UnipolSai is its multi-line arm. Known for competitive pricing.
Fourth-largest player with 10.8% market share. In 2025, AXA acquired a 51% stake in Prima, significantly strengthening its car insurance position.
A major commercial insurer with strength in business risk and travel (via its 2024 acquisition of AIG Travel Guard / Cover-More).
Italy's leading digital motor insurer with ~10% car insurance market share. App-based and popular with expat drivers.
The right premium is just the start. These are the checks that separate a policy that works from one that fails when you need it most.
Every legitimate insurer in Italy must be registered with IVASS. Check ivass.it before purchasing any policy. Unregistered products have no legal protection.
The franchigia is your deductible per claim. The scoperto is a percentage co-payment. Both reduce your payout. A cheaper policy often has a much higher deductible.
An Italian-only claims process can be a significant barrier. Before buying, ask how claims are submitted and in which languages. Opt for providers with English-language support.
Health and life policies commonly exclude pre-existing conditions. Always disclose fully — undisclosed conditions can void your policy entirely at the point of claim.
Premium variation for identical coverage can exceed 40% between providers. Never accept the first quote, especially from bank-tied insurers — they are almost always more expensive.
Most Italian policies auto-renew unless cancelled in writing within a specific window — often 30–90 days before expiry. Missing this locks you in for another year.
For life and income protection policies, confirm that beneficiaries in your home country can receive payouts without legal obstacles. Some policies restrict payments to Italian residents.
Monthly payments often carry a 5–15% surcharge over the annual equivalent. Paying annually is almost always cheaper — ask for both options when comparing.
These are the errors that leave people unprotected, overcharged, or legally exposed. Knowing them before you sign is the most important step.
IVASS is Italy's official insurance regulator. Every legitimate insurer operating in Italy must be registered in the IVASS register. Verify any company, check for complaints, and report unlicensed operators at ivass.it. Always confirm the provider is registered before signing.
Client Portal members get access to expert insurance comparison across all major Italian providers — in their language, with a qualified advisor explaining the differences, exclusions, and real cost before they sign anything.