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02nd Nov 2023

Italian region offering people €30k to move there – if they’re the right age

Fiona Frawley

italian region €30k

La dolce vita awaits.

The Italian dream could be yours, but only if you fit the right profile.

One sunny Italian region is giving people the chance of a lifetime by paying them a healthy sum to ditch the grey and the gloom for a sunny adventure in Italy.

While we would all pack our bags in an instant, only a specific few of us will be allowed to go. Sorry everyone!

For those who are under the age of 40, you can take the cash and make the move to Calabria.

Calabria is known as “Italy’s toe” as it sits at the bottom of the pointy end of the boot-shaped peninsula.

Located at the bottom of the country, Calabria has everything the likes of the Amalfi Coast has to offer – just without all of the tourists.

Those of you under 40 and tempted to make the move are being offered €30,000 to move there, but there are a few caveats.

Calabria in Italy (Getty Images)

Calabria offering money for people to move there, with some caveats

Firstly, you would have to be willing to move to Calabria within the 90 days from their successful application and secondly, you must be willing to breathe life into the local economy by starting up a new business that will benefit residents or taking up one of the jobs that need filling.

Fear not though, there’s plenty of roles likely to be going at restaurants, cafes and bars.

If you take up the lucrative offer you have the choice of receiving the money in monthly €1,000 instalments over the course of the next three years or taking all of the cash upfront.

All successful applicants are likely to live in villages with populations of less than 2,000. Towns in the are included in the programme include the likes of Samo, Precacore, Civita, Aieta, Bova, Caccuri and Santa Severina.

Councillor Gianluca Gallo, the brains behind the idea, explained: “We want to make demand for jobs meet supply, that’s why we’ve asked villages to tell us what type of professionals they’re missing to attract specific workers.

“We’ve had a huge interest from villages and hopefully, if this first scheme works, more are likely to follow in coming years.”

Header image via Getty 

This article originally appeared on joe.co.uk

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