The Italy Decreto Flussi 2026 opens 164,850 work permit slots for non-EU citizens in 2026, the first year of a three-year plan that adds up to nearly 500,000 work permits across 2026–2028. For Africans — especially Nigerians, Senegalese, Ivorians and Tunisians — the headline is the 25,000 annual quota reserved specifically for workers from African countries with migration cooperation agreements.
What changed in the Italy Decreto Flussi for 2026?
The new decree authorises 164,850 work permits in 2026, 165,850 in 2027 and 166,850 in 2028, totaling 497,550 across three years. Non-seasonal employed work is set at 76,200 per year; self-employment stays at 650 per year; seasonal work is 88,000 in 2026 and rising. There are 25,000 places per year reserved for workers from African nations and other countries with migration cooperation agreements with Italy, plus an additional 18,000 in 2026, 26,000 in 2027 and 34,000 in 2028 for countries that sign new agreements during the period. Click-day deadlines have been moved earlier: 12 January for agricultural seasonal jobs, 9 February for tourism, 16 February for permanent hires and 18 February for domestic and care roles.
Who is affected?
African workers in agriculture, tourism, construction, manufacturing and domestic care — especially family care workers, since 13,600 dedicated places are set aside for them in 2026. Countries already benefiting from priority quotas include Côte d’Ivoire, Niger, Algeria, Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia.
Key requirements and the click-day rule
The process is employer-driven. An Italian employer must apply for a nulla osta al lavoro (work authorisation) on the Ministry of the Interior’s online portal during the click-day window for the relevant category. Once issued, the worker applies for a national entry visa at the Italian consulate, then enters Italy and converts the visa into a residence permit (permesso di soggiorno) within eight days of arrival. Click-day slots are filled on a first-come, first-served basis — submissions filed even seconds after the queue saturates are rejected.
Why it matters for Nigerians and Africans
The 25,000 reserved quota for African and cooperating-country workers is the most significant pro-Africa allocation Italy has ever published. For Nigerian agricultural workers, Senegalese caregivers and Ivorian construction workers, the click-day calendar is your real chance — not a tourist visa or a Mediterranean crossing. The earlier 2026 click-day dates also mean African applicants must have employer paperwork ready by January, not February. Start identifying Italian employers now.
Key Takeaways
- Italy Decreto Flussi 2026 authorises 164,850 work permits, part of a 497,550 three-year plan.
- 25,000 places per year reserved for workers from African and cooperating countries.
- 13,600 dedicated places for family care workers in 2026.
- Click-day calendar: 12 Jan agriculture, 9 Feb tourism, 16 Feb permanent, 18 Feb domestic.
- The process is employer-driven — you need an Italian employer to file your nulla osta.
Get Your Decreto Flussi Click-Day Filing Right
The 2026 click-days are unforgiving — one missing document and your slot is gone. Travel Expore helps Nigerian, Senegalese and Ivorian applicants prepare an Italian employer’s nulla osta package, secure correct quotas and time submissions to the click-day calendar. Book a consult at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.
Share This Story
- Italy Just Reserved 25,000 Annual Work Permits for African Countries — Here’s the List
- Italy Decreto Flussi 2026: 164,850 Slots and the Click-Day Calendar Africans Need
- The Italian Visa Quota African Domestic Workers Should Be Targeting in February 2026

