Now in early access
Doppia Vita guides Americans building a life in Italy through the processes that define it — then watches both countries so you never get blindsided by what changes next.
No spam. No pressure. Just early access when we're ready.
Which form. Which office. What order. What documents. The map doesn't exist in English — and changes without notice.
Registering with AIRE. Opening an Italian account. Enrolling in healthcare. Each one triggers something on the US side that most people discover too late.
Italy updates requirements. The IRS issues new guidance. Deadlines shift. There's no one watching your specific situation when it happens.
A lawyer helps you once. A forum gives you someone else's experience. Neither stays with you for the years this actually takes.
Doppia Vita works in two phases that reinforce each other — navigation when you need to act, awareness so you're never caught off guard.
Mode 01 — Navigate
Tell Doppia Vita what you need to do — permesso di soggiorno, AIRE registration, codice fiscale, healthcare enrollment. Get a precise, current, English-language guide for your specific situation, region, and visa type. Including what it triggers on the US side before you act.
Mode 02 — Aware
Once a process is complete, Doppia Vita watches both countries for changes that affect your specific enacted situation. Not generic news — personal alerts. Italy changed your permesso requirements. The IRS updated guidance on your account type. You'll know before it matters.
US-Italy corridor
Most tools see one country. Doppia Vita is built from the ground up around the intersection — the treaty implications, the reporting requirements, the timing conflicts that only emerge when you're genuinely living across both systems.
Always current
Italian bureaucracy shifts. US reporting requirements evolve. Doppia Vita monitors the sources that matter — Italian ministries, IRS guidance, consulate updates — and surfaces what's relevant to you, not everything that changed.
The problem isn't that the information doesn't exist. It's that it's scattered, often wrong, always in Italian, and never connected to what it means for your American life. — The insight behind Doppia Vita