Italian Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Italy — quiz patente B format (30 T/F, 20 min), autoscuola costs, ZTL zones in Rome, Milan & Florence, speed limits, traffic fines, and the patente a punti points system.
3,039
Road deaths in Italy (2023)
Down 3.8% from 3,159 in 2022 — ISTAT/ACI
~5.1
Deaths per 100,000 population
Higher than Germany (3.3), UK (2.5); lower than USA (12.2)
€800–1,500
Average cost for Patente B licence
Autoscuola fees vary by city — includes government fees, medical, lessons
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Download InfographicKey Findings
30 true/false questions drawn from a pool of ~7,147, completed in 20 minutes. Maximum 3 errors allowed (27/30 correct to pass). Administered at Motorizzazione Civile offices. Covers road signs, right-of-way, traffic rules, insurance, and first aid.
Approximately €800–1,500 total: government fees (bollettini) ~€42, medical certificate €100–150, autoscuola enrollment €200–500, mandatory driving hours (8 from 2026 at €40–60/hr) €320–480, practical test included. Private candidates can reduce costs but must still complete mandatory hours.
3,039 fatalities in 2023 (~5.1 per 100K). Gradual decline from 3,173 in 2019. Leading causes: distraction, speeding, and drunk driving. December 2024 Codice della Strada reform introduced stricter penalties.
0.5 g/L (0.05%) general limit. Absolute zero (0.0 g/L) for new drivers in first 3 years, under-21, and professional drivers. BAC 0.5–0.8 g/L: €532–2,127 fine. BAC 0.8–1.5 g/L is a criminal offence with up to 6 months jail.
Major Codice della Strada reform (Law No. 177): phone use fines tripled to €250–1,000, mandatory helmets and insurance for e-scooters, saliva drug testing, alcolock devices for repeat DUI offenders, new driver power restrictions extended to 3 years.
Italy has a moderate road safety record for Western Europe. Death rate ~5.1/100K vs Germany 3.3, UK 2.5, USA 12.2. Licence cost (€800–1,500) is moderate globally. ZTL zones in ~300 cities are unique to Italy.
Italy Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)
According to ISTAT and ACI, road fatalities dropped 24.5% in 2020 due to COVID-19 but rebounded in subsequent years. The 2023 figure of 3,039 deaths represents a gradual improvement, and the December 2024 Codice della Strada reform aims to accelerate this trend.
2019→2020
-24.5%
2020→2021
+20.0%
2021→2022
+9.9%
2022→2023
-3.8%
2023→2024
-0.3%
Deaths per 100,000 Population
Source: WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, ISTAT. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.
Italian Theory Test Format#
The computerized theory test is administered at Motorizzazione Civile offices across Italy
The Italian driving theory test (esame di teoria) for Patente B consists of 30 true/false (vero/falso) questions drawn from an official ministerial question bank of approximately 7,147 questions across 25 chapters. You have 20 minutes to complete the test. To pass, you must answer at least 27 questions correctly — a maximum of 3 errors is allowed. The test is conducted on a touchscreen computer at your local Motorizzazione Civile office. Topics include road signs, right-of-way rules, speed limits, insurance, vehicle maintenance, environmental protection, and first aid. The test is available in Italian, and foreign residents may request additional time. Since 2026, the minimum mandatory driving hours have increased from 6 to 8.
Questions
30 T/F
True/false from 7,147 pool
Duration
20 Min
~40 sec per question
Pass Mark
27/30
Maximum 3 errors allowed
Test Fee
~€42
Government bollettini fees
What the Theory Test Covers
- Warning, prohibition & mandatory signs (segnaletica)
- Right of way (precedenza) at intersections
- Speed limits by road type
- Stopping, parking & ZTL zone rules
- Road markings and traffic lights
- Vehicle maintenance & technical checks (revisione)
- Tire requirements (winter tires Nov 15–Apr 15)
- Insurance (RC Auto) requirements
- First aid basics (pronto soccorso)
- Environmental driving & emissions
- Motorway (autostrada) rules & toll system
- BAC limits & drug testing rules
- New driver restrictions (neopatentati)
- Tunnel & railway crossing rules
- Patente a punti (points system)
How to Get Your Italian Driving Licence#
From autoscuola to patente — the complete 6-step process
Enrol at an Autoscuola or Apply Privately
Register at a driving school (autoscuola) or apply as a private candidate (privatista) at the Motorizzazione
Autoscuola fees €200–500 for enrollment. Private candidates submit form TT 2112 directly to the Motorizzazione Civile.
Obtain Medical Certificate
Get a medical fitness certificate from an ASL doctor or authorized physician
Medical certificate: €100–150. Required for all applicants. Valid for 3 months from issue.
Submit Application & Pay Fees
Submit form TT 2112 with documents and pay government fees (bollettini)
Fees: €26.40 (bollettino postale) + €16 (marca da bollo) = ~€42.40. Need: ID, codice fiscale, photos, medical cert.
Pass the Theory Test
Take and pass the computerized true/false exam at the Motorizzazione
30 T/F questions, 20 min, max 3 errors. Study from official ministerial question bank (~7,147 questions).
Complete Driving Practice
Practice driving with a foglio rosa (learner's permit) valid for 12 months
Minimum 6 hours mandatory (8 from 2026): pre-2026 breakdown was 2 night, 2 secondary extraurban, 2 motorway. From 2026: 2h basics/ADAS, 3h city driving, 2h highway, 1h night.
Pass the Practical Test
Pass the driving test with a Motorizzazione examiner
~45 minutes in real traffic. Tested on: vehicle checks, maneuvers, traffic navigation. No extra fee beyond initial bollettini.
Italian Driving Licence Fees#
Total cost typically €800–€1,500 via autoscuola — private candidates pay ~€400–600
Costs vary significantly by city. Milan, Rome, and Florence tend to be more expensive. Private candidates (privatisti) who arrange their own vehicle can reduce costs, though mandatory driving hours (8 from 2026 at €40–60/hr) must still be completed at an autoscuola. Government fees are fixed nationwide.
Licence Categories & Minimum Age
AM — Mopeds, small scooters (≤50cc, ≤45 km/h)
14
years
A1 — Light motorcycles (≤125cc, ≤11 kW)
16
years
A2 — Medium motorcycles (≤35 kW)
18
years
B — Cars up to 3,500 kg
Most common licence category
18
years
A — Unrestricted motorcycles
20 with 2 years A2 experience, or 24 direct
24
years
C — Trucks over 3,500 kg
Professional qualification required
21
years
D — Buses (8+ passengers)
Professional qualification required
24
years
Licence Validity Periods
Standard renewal period
Medical exam required
Medical exam required
Medical board examination
Neopatentati (New Driver Restrictions)
- First 3 years: max speed 100 km/h on motorways, 90 km/h on main roads
- Vehicle power limit: max 75 kW/ton, max 105 kW (141 HP) for 3 years
- Absolute 0.0 g/L BAC limit during first 3 years
- Penalty points are doubled for violations in first 3 years
- Violation of power limit: €165–660 fine + up to 8-month driving ban
Patente a Punti (Points System)
- All drivers start with 20 points
- Points deducted per violation (1–10 points depending on severity)
- Zero points = driving ban (6 months to 2 years)
- 2 years without violations = points fully restored to 20
- Bonus: +2 points every 2 years of clean driving (max 30)
- Approved courses can restore up to 6 points
Italy has four tiers of speed limits based on road classification. Urban areas (centri abitati) are limited to 50 km/h. Secondary extra-urban roads (strade extraurbane secondarie) allow 90 km/h. Main divided highways (strade extraurbane principali) allow 110 km/h, reduced to 90 km/h in rain. Motorways (autostrade) allow 130 km/h, reduced to 110 km/h in rain and 100 km/h for new drivers in their first 3 years. In fog with visibility under 100 metres, the maximum speed is 50 km/h on any road. Italy uses both fixed speed cameras and the Tutor average-speed camera system on motorways.
| Road Type | Cars | New Drivers | Rain/Snow | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban (Centri abitati) | 50 | 50 | 50 | 30 km/h zones near schools |
| Secondary (Extraurbane secondarie) | 90 | 90 | 90 | Single carriageway |
| Main (Extraurbane principali) | 110 | 90 | 90 | Dual carriageway / divided highway |
| Motorway (Autostrade) | 130 | 100 | 110 | Toll roads, Tutor speed cameras |
| Fog (visibility <100m) | 50 | 50 | 50 | Applies to all road types |
Urban (Centri abitati)
50
Cars
50
New
50
Rain
30 km/h zones near schools
Secondary (Extraurbane secondarie)
90
Cars
90
New
90
Rain
Single carriageway
Main (Extraurbane principali)
110
Cars
90
New
90
Rain
Dual carriageway / divided highway
Motorway (Autostrade)
130
Cars
100
New
110
Rain
Toll roads, Tutor speed cameras
Fog (visibility <100m)
50
Cars
50
New
50
Rain
Applies to all road types
New drivers (neopatentati, first 3 years) face reduced limits: 100 km/h on motorways, 90 km/h on main roads. Vehicles towing trailers: max 80 km/h on motorways, 70 km/h on main roads. Night fines (22:00–07:00) carry a +33% surcharge.
Traffic Fines & Penalties#
As per Codice della Strada — significantly toughened by the December 2024 reform
Italy's traffic fines were significantly increased by the December 2024 reform (Law No. 177). Mobile phone use while driving now carries fines of €250–1,000 (previously €165), with repeat offenders facing up to €1,400 plus a 3-month driving ban. Speeding fines are tiered: up to 10 km/h over costs €41–169, while 60+ km/h over costs €829–3,316 with licence suspension. Entering a ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato) without a permit costs €83–332 per instance — camera-enforced in ~300 Italian cities. All fines increase by 33% for offences committed between 22:00 and 07:00. A 30% early-payment discount applies if paid within 5 days (except for speeding 40+ km/h over).
| Violation | Fine | Points | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding up to 10 km/h over | €41–169 | — | — |
| Speeding 10–40 km/h over | €168–680 | −3 | — |
| Speeding 40–60 km/h over | €531–2,125 | −6 | Suspension 1–3 mo |
| Speeding 60+ km/h over | €829–3,316 | −10 | Suspension 6–12 mo |
| Running a red light | €154–613 | −6 | — |
| Mobile phone use while driving | €250–1,000 | −5 | Suspension 15 days–2 mo |
| Seatbelt violation | €81–326 | −5 | — |
| Entering ZTL without permit | €83–332 | — | Per instance |
| Drunk driving (BAC 0.5–0.8 g/L) | €532–2,127 | −10 | Suspension 3–6 mo |
| Drunk driving (BAC 0.8–1.5 g/L) | €800–3,200 | −10 | Criminal offence |
| Parking in disabled space | €168–674 | — | — |
| No reflective vest when required | €41–169 | — | — |
Speeding up to 10 km/h over
Speeding 10–40 km/h over
Speeding 40–60 km/h over
Speeding 60+ km/h over
Running a red light
Mobile phone use while driving
Seatbelt violation
Entering ZTL without permit
Drunk driving (BAC 0.5–0.8 g/L)
Drunk driving (BAC 0.8–1.5 g/L)
Parking in disabled space
No reflective vest when required
Fines shown reflect base rates under the Codice della Strada (biennial adjustment suspended through 2026). Night violations (22:00–07:00) carry a +33% surcharge. Criminal offences (BAC ≥0.8 g/L, causing death) are prosecuted under the Codice Penale. A 30% early-payment discount applies within 5 days (7 days for online payments) for most violations.
Know These Rules Before Your Theory Test
Traffic fines, speed limits, ZTL rules, and BAC laws are heavily tested in the Italian quiz patente. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practicing for FreeImportant Driving Rules in Italy
Drive on the Right
Italy drives on the right side. Overtake only on the left. At unmarked intersections, yield to vehicles coming from the right (precedenza a destra).
ZTL Zones (Zona a Traffico Limitato)
~300 Italian cities have restricted traffic zones in historic centres, including Rome (ZTL Tridente, Centro Storico), Milan (Area C, Area B), Florence (ZTL centro), Naples, and Bologna. Camera-enforced. Fines €83–332 per entry. Hotels can often arrange temporary permits.
Mandatory Headlights Outside Towns
Dipped headlights (anabbaglianti) or DRL required at ALL times outside built-up areas, even in daylight. Also mandatory in tunnels and on motorways. Motorcycles must use headlights everywhere.
Reflective Vest Required
Must be worn when exiting your vehicle outside built-up areas, day or night. Must comply with EN471 standard (fluorescent yellow/orange with reflective strips). Fine: €41–169.
RC Auto Insurance
Third-party liability insurance (RC Auto) is mandatory. Minimum coverage: €6.45M bodily injury, €1.3M property per accident. Driving without insurance: €866–3,464 fine + vehicle seizure.
Winter Tires / Snow Chains
Required November 15 – April 15 on designated roads (varies by region). Fines: €41–169 (urban), €85–338 (extraurban/motorway). Check road signs for specific requirements.
0.0 BAC for New Drivers
Absolute zero tolerance for neopatentati (first 3 years), under-21, and professional drivers. General limit is 0.5 g/L. Criminal threshold at 0.8 g/L.
Phone Use Prohibition
Using phones, tablets, or laptops while driving is prohibited. Hands-free devices only. Fine: €250–1,000 (first offence), up to €1,400 + 3-month ban (repeat). December 2024 reform tripled penalties.
Anti-Abandonment Alarm
Since November 2019, all vehicles carrying children under 4 must have an electronic alarm device on the child seat to prevent children being left unattended. Fine: €81–326 + 5 points.
Common Road Hazards in Italy
3,039 road fatalities in 2023 — know these hazards to stay safe on Italian roads
Scooter & Motorcycle Traffic
Italy has one of Europe's highest motorcycle densities. Scooters weave through traffic, especially in cities like Rome, Naples, and Milan.
ZTL Camera Traps
Automatic cameras at ZTL zone boundaries. GPS does not flag them. Multiple entries = multiple fines. Letters arrive months later, especially to tourists.
Tutor Speed Cameras
Average-speed cameras on motorways measure speed over long stretches. Slowing only at camera points does not help — your average speed is calculated.
Narrow Historic Streets
Medieval city centres have extremely narrow roads, sharp turns, and limited signage. Larger vehicles may not fit.
Mountain & Coastal Roads
Winding cliff-side roads (e.g., Amalfi Coast), steep mountain passes with hairpin bends, and limited guardrails in some areas.
Aggressive Driving Culture
Italian drivers can be assertive — tailgating, quick lane changes, and liberal horn use are common, especially in southern cities.
Italy's 20 Regions
Driving licence administration is handled by the local Motorizzazione Civile offices in each region
| Region | Capital | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Lombardia | Milano | 10.0M |
| Lazio | Roma | 5.7M |
| Campania | Napoli | 5.6M |
| Sicilia | Palermo | 4.8M |
| Veneto | Venezia | 4.8M |
| Emilia-Romagna | Bologna | 4.5M |
| Piemonte | Torino | 4.3M |
| Puglia | Bari | 3.9M |
| Toscana | Firenze | 3.7M |
| Calabria | Catanzaro | 1.9M |
| Sardegna | Cagliari | 1.6M |
| Liguria | Genova | 1.5M |
| Marche | Ancona | 1.5M |
| Abruzzo | L'Aquila | 1.3M |
| Friuli Venezia Giulia | Trieste | 1.2M |
| Trentino-Alto Adige | Trento | 1.1M |
| Umbria | Perugia | 0.9M |
| Basilicata | Potenza | 0.5M |
| Molise | Campobasso | 0.3M |
| Valle d'Aosta | Aosta | 0.1M |
Lombardia
Milano · 10.0M
Lazio
Roma · 5.7M
Campania
Napoli · 5.6M
Sicilia
Palermo · 4.8M
Veneto
Venezia · 4.8M
Emilia-Romagna
Bologna · 4.5M
Piemonte
Torino · 4.3M
Puglia
Bari · 3.9M
Toscana
Firenze · 3.7M
Calabria
Catanzaro · 1.9M
Sardegna
Cagliari · 1.6M
Liguria
Genova · 1.5M
Marche
Ancona · 1.5M
Abruzzo
L'Aquila · 1.3M
Friuli Venezia Giulia
Trieste · 1.2M
Trentino-Alto Adige
Trento · 1.1M
Umbria
Perugia · 0.9M
Basilicata
Potenza · 0.5M
Molise
Campobasso · 0.3M
Valle d'Aosta
Aosta · 0.1M
While traffic laws are national (Codice della Strada), some regulations vary by region — particularly winter tire requirements, ZTL zone rules, and toll road concessions.
Emergency Numbers
All toll-free, available 24/7. 112 is the EU-wide emergency number.
112
General Emergency (EU-wide) / Carabinieri
113
Polizia di Stato (State Police)
115
Vigili del Fuoco (Fire Brigade)
118
Ambulance / Emergency Medical
803 116
ACI Roadside Assistance
Common Misconceptions About Driving in Italy#
Myth: You only need to carry a reflective vest if you break down at night
Fact: Under Italian law, a reflective vest (giubbotto catarifrangente) must be worn ANY time you exit your vehicle outside built-up areas, day or night. This includes stopping on rural roads, motorway shoulders, or any road outside towns. Fine: €41–169.
Myth: ZTL fines only apply to Italian-registered vehicles
Fact: ZTL cameras photograph ALL licence plates, including foreign and rental vehicles. Rental companies will charge the fine to your credit card plus an admin fee (€30–50). Fines can be enforced across the EU through cross-border agreements.
Myth: The speed limit on Italian motorways is always 130 km/h
Fact: 130 km/h is the default, but new drivers (neopatentati) are limited to 100 km/h for 3 years. In rain, the limit drops to 110 km/h. In fog under 100m visibility, it drops to 50 km/h. Some motorway sections have lower posted limits.
Myth: Headlights are only required at night in Italy
Fact: Dipped headlights (anabbaglianti) are mandatory at ALL times outside built-up areas, even in broad daylight. This also applies on motorways and in tunnels. Motorcycles must use headlights everywhere. This is one of the most commonly violated rules by tourists.
Myth: Italy's theory test has multiple-choice questions like most countries
Fact: Italy's quiz patente uses a unique true/false (vero/falso) format — 30 statements that you mark as true or false. Most other European countries use multiple-choice with 3–4 options. This format requires precise knowledge since there is a 50% guess probability.
Myth: You can use your phone at a red light since the car is stationary
Fact: Using a mobile phone while driving is prohibited at ALL times, including at traffic lights and in slow-moving traffic. The December 2024 reform increased fines to €250–1,000 and added automatic licence suspension (15 days to 2 months). Only fully hands-free devices are permitted.
Speed camera registry & fine adjustments
National registry established for all active speed cameras — only registered devices can issue valid fines. Biennial fine adjustments took effect January 2025. Free Flow electronic tolling expanded on new motorway sections.
Major Codice della Strada reform (Law No. 177)
Effective December 14: phone fines tripled (€250–1,000), mandatory helmets/insurance for e-scooters, saliva-based drug testing, alcolock for repeat DUI, new driver power limits extended to 3 years, e-scooter parking on sidewalks banned.
IT-Wallet digital driving licence launch
Italy launched digital driving licences via the IO app (IT-Wallet) in October 2024. The first 50,000 citizens gained access, expanding to all Italian citizens by December 2024. Digital licences are valid for roadside checks.
Theory test format change: 40 → 30 questions
From December 2021, the theory test was reduced from 40 questions (40 minutes, max 4 errors) to 30 questions (20 minutes, max 3 errors). The question bank remained at ~7,147 ministerial questions across 25 chapters.
Anti-abandonment alarm mandate
Electronic alarm devices became mandatory on child car seats for children under 4 years old, to prevent children being left unattended in vehicles. Fine: €81–326 plus 5 points for non-compliance.
How Italy Compares Globally#
Italy's driving regulations compared to other major countries — data compiled from official government sources
| Parameter | Italy | Germany | USA | UK | Japan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.05% | 0.05% | 0.08% | 0.08% | 0.03% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 18 | 18 | 16 | 17 | 18 |
| Driving Side | Right | Right | Right | Left | Left |
| Highway Speed | 130 km/h | No limit* | 105–137 | 112 km/h | 100–120 |
| Test Questions | 30 T/F | 30 MCQ | 20–50 | 50 | 50 |
| Licence Cost | €800–1,500 | €2,000–3,500 | $30–90 | £200–1,500 | ¥300K+ |
| Road Deaths/yr | 3,039 | 2,770 | 40,901 | 1,695 | 2,678 |
| Deaths/100K | ~5.1 | ~3.3 | 12.2 | 2.5 | 2.1 |
Same as Germany (0.05%). Stricter than USA/UK (0.08%). Novice/professional drivers: absolute 0.0%.
Same as Germany and Japan. USA allows from 16, UK from 17. No accompanied driving programme.
Standard EU-level. Germany has no general limit. Reduced to 110 km/h in rain, 100 km/h for new drivers.
Moderate globally. Cheaper than Germany (€2,000–3,500) but much more than USA ($30–90) or India (~$10).
~5.1 per 100K — worse than UK (2.5) and Germany (3.3) but much better than USA (12.2).
Road deaths: Italy 3,039 (ISTAT 2023), Germany 2,770 (Destatis 2024), USA 40,901 (NHTSA 2023), UK 1,695 (DfT 2023), Japan 2,678 (NPA 2023). Per-100K rates calculated from national population data. UK BAC is 0.08% for England/Wales; Scotland is 0.05%. Italy highway speed: some 3-lane sections may allow 150 km/h where signposted.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- Codice della Strada (Highway Code) — Italian Government
- Il Portale dell'Automobilista — Ministero delle Infrastrutture e dei Trasporti
- ISTAT — Incidenti stradali (Road accident statistics) — Istituto Nazionale di Statistica
- ACI — Automobile Club d'Italia — Official Italian automobile association
- Gazzetta Ufficiale — Law No. 177/2024 — Official Journal of the Italian Republic
- IVASS — Insurance supervisory authority — Istituto per la Vigilanza sulle Assicurazioni
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official Italian legislation and government portals
- Cross-verified against ISTAT publications, ACI resources, and MIT data
- Regional variations noted where applicable (ZTL rules, winter tire requirements)
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on March 24, 2026
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a driving licence cost in Italy?
What is the Italian theory test format?
What are the speed limits in Italy?
What is the BAC (blood alcohol) limit in Italy?
What are ZTL zones and how do I avoid fines?
What are the neopatentati (new driver) restrictions?
What equipment must I carry in my car in Italy?
How does the patente a punti (points system) work?
What changed with the December 2024 Codice della Strada reform?
Do I need an International Driving Permit (IDP) in Italy?
Are headlights required during the daytime in Italy?
How do Italian motorway tolls work?
What is the minimum age for driving in Italy?
How long is an Italian driving licence valid?
What are the emergency numbers in Italy?
Cite This Page
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Pawan Priyadarshi
Founder & Chief Engineer
Data sourced from Codice della Strada, ISTAT, ACI, Il Portale dell'Automobilista, and official Italian government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy.
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