Introduces 'Luxury Tax' That Could Spell The End To GA In The
Country
The IAOPA says in its December newsletter that Italy has
introduced a new 'luxury tax' on private aircraft, which will have
a serious impact on the aviation industry and is likely to cost the
country more than it brings in in revenue. The new tax will be
levied on a sliding scale from €1.5 per kilogram (roughly a
dollar a pound) per year for aircraft under 1,000 kgs to €7.55
per kg (about $5 per pound) for aircraft over 10,000 kg, with
helicopters paying double. While the tax will further depress
aircraft ownership in Italy, it could affect every pilot in Europe
because it applies to any private aircraft, of any nationality,
which remains on Italian territory for 48 hours or more. Not only
does that make visiting Italy expensive, but even passing through
the country becomes risky. A weather delay, a mechanical problem,
or industrial action by ATC could land the transiting pilot with a
tax bill running into thousands of euros.

"It looks like they really want to put an end GA in this
country," said Massimo Levy of AOPA Italy. "Can you imagine an
English tourist with a private plane being obliged to pay
€3,500 'luxury tax' at the end of his long weekend in Italy?
Or the American businessman arriving with his Citation remaining
for more than two days? What will happen now to Italian GA? I have
no idea. It looks like we really might have reached the end of the
road."
AOPA Italy has spoken with a number of politicians making it
clear that while aircraft owners should contribute at what is seen
to be a time of national emergency, the levels of tax were so
excessive that they would cripple the industry and therefore
produce less revenue than they would if they were set at more
sensible levels. Political promises of alleviation have come to
nothing.
The new taxes, imposed under a decree named 'Save Italy' which
also raises the pension age by five years, hit almost everything
but are particularly heavy on items such as cars over 250 hp, boats
more than 10 meters (33 feet) long, and all aircraft. While boats
and cars enjoy a discount on the basis of the age – after 20
years a boat pays only 50% of the tax and a car does not pay at all
– aircraft pay the full amount indefinitely.
Airlines, charter and aerial work operators are exempt from the
tax, as are government, police and military aircraft. Others must
pay annually:
- Up to 1,000 kg MTOW €1.50 per kg
- Up to 2,000 kg MTOW €2.50 per kg
- Up to 4,000 kg MTOW €4.25 per kg
- Up to 6,000 kg MTOW €5.75 per kg
- Up to 8,000 kg MTOW €6.65 per kg
- Up to 10,000 kg MTOW €7.10 per kg
- Over 10,000 kg MTOW €7.55 per kg
Helicopters must conform to this weight scale but pay double the
amounts. Gliders, motorgliders, gyroplanes and balloons will pay a
fixed €450 per year.
The application of these tax rates to foreign aircraft will
discourage aerial tourism, but Massimo Levy wonders whether anyone
will really notice. "Italy already extends poor hospitality to
foreign GA airplanes, with all its airspace and airport regulations
and charges," he says, "so possibly no-one will notice that the
trade has all gone, unless something happens like a foreigner
refusing to pay and the authorities impounding an aircraft.
Something like this would make a lot of bad publicity to the
country." He suggests that AOPA members consider writing to the
Italian embassy in their respective countries pointing out that
Italy stands to lose much more than it will gain by imposing the
tax.