Roma, Italy
Roma, Italy
Guide Price
$484,920
€449,000 EUR
PROPERTY TYPE
Condo
BEDROOMS
2
BATHROOMS
1
Description
Trilocale con cantina in Via Nocera Umbra, 178 Via Nocera Umbra, 178 - A soli 10 minuti a piedi dalla fermata della metropolitana, linea A "Furio Camillo", proponiamo in vendita un trilocale di circa 115 mq posto al primo piano con ascensore di una palazzina in cortina di piani sette e servizio di portineria per l'intera giornata. L'immobile è così composto: Ingresso con armadio a muro che dà direttamente nel soggiorno con accesso ad un primo ampio balcone vivibile, camera da letto matrimoniale con accesso al medesimo balcone, disimpegno che collega a tutti gli altri ambienti, quali la cucina abitabile con accesso ad un secondo balconcino, seconda camera da letto, un bagno finestrato ed un comodo ripostiglio. L'appartamento si presenta molto luminoso e silenzioso affacciando all'interno del curato cortile condominiale, con marmi originali nella zona giorno e parquet nella zona notte, condizionatori nel soggiorno e nella camera da letto principale, tenda da sole sul balcone in cucina e porta blindata. Completa la proprietà una cantina al piano S1 di circa 10 mq.
Location
Open in Google MapsLiving in Roma
Espresso at the bar every morning, pasta made the way your grandmother wished she could, and a culture that treats every meal, every sunset, and every conversation as something worth lingering over.
Visa
Digital Nomad Visa — requires remote work for foreign clients/employers, min €28,000/yr net income, and 6 months work experience. Valid 1 year, renewable. Elective Residence Visa — for retirees and those with passive income (€31,000/yr minimum, no work allowed). Both offer a path to long-term residency.
Learn more: The Complete Guide to Moving to Italy→Key Fact
Italy launched its digital nomad visa in 2024, making it much easier for remote workers than the old elective residence route. Italian bureaucracy is notoriously slow (3-6 months processing), so patience and a good immigration lawyer are essential.
Learn more: Can Americans Buy Property Abroad? Rules by Country→Italy at a glance
How Italy scores for American expats
Cost of buying in Italy
Estimated fees and ongoing costs for this property
Closing Costs
7-12% of purchase price
- ·Registration tax: 2% (primary) or 9% (second home)
- ·Notary: €2,000-5,000
- ·Cadastral tax: €50
- ·Agent: 3-4% + VAT
Annual Costs
Property Tax
0.4-0.76% of cadastral value (IMU — not on primary residence)
Insurance
€200-500/yr
HOA / Condo Fees
€50-200/mo for apartments (spese condominiali)
Good to Know
Agent Fees
Buyer pays own agent (3-4% + 22% VAT)
Foreign Buyer Note
Reciprocity requirement — Americans can buy freely (US-Italy treaty). Codice fiscale (tax ID) required. 9% registration tax on second homes is significant.
Legal help in Italy
Hire your own attorney — not the seller's. We'll match you with a vetted local lawyer.
Need a local attorney in Italy?
We'll connect you with an independent, English-speaking real estate attorney experienced with foreign buyers. Not the seller's lawyer — yours.
Contact Agent
Grimaldi Roma Conca d'Oro
Next steps for moving to Italy
Interested in this property? Here's how to move forward.
Understand the buying rules
Foreign ownership laws vary wildly by country. Some welcome you, others restrict or ban foreign buyers entirely.
Sort out your visa
Owning property doesn't give you the right to live there. Research residency options before you buy.
Plan your finances
Understand currency risk, international wire transfers, and whether you can get a local mortgage.
Know your tax obligations
US citizens are taxed on worldwide income. You'll need to file US taxes from abroad and may owe local taxes too.
Set up healthcare
Medicare doesn't cover you overseas. You'll need international health insurance or a local plan.
Run the full checklist
Banking, mail forwarding, power of attorney, pet import rules — the complete pre-move checklist.
Subito.it
EUR