"I had no idea whether getting a mortgage as an American was even possible"
Caleb had been offered a position in Milan. The relocation package was solid, the role was a clear step up — but the property question was unresolved. He'd done enough research to know that the Impatriati regime would give him a significant tax advantage if he established fiscal residency in Italy quickly. What he hadn't figured out was whether a mortgage was even realistic.
He came to the first call with a specific fear: that Italian banks simply wouldn't accept US income documentation, and that he'd end up paying cash and missing a better financial structure in the process. "I assumed cash was the only option," he said. "I just didn't know where to start."
From that call, it became clear that Caleb was actually a strong profile — stable employed income, arriving as a resident under the Impatriati regime, buying a primary home in Milan. The challenge was the timing: he needed to establish fiscal residency before the end of the Italian tax year, and the mortgage had to close fast enough to give him an address to register.
We identified the right bank for his profile, prepared the file with his US income documentation translated and formatted correctly, and submitted in the same week. Pre-approval came back clean. Caleb signed at the notaio eleven weeks after our first call.