The country’s digital infrastructure framework receives a new and significant injection of liquidity, formalized through the establishment of the National Fund for Connectivity.
The package, which allocates a total of 700 million euros, represents a crucial step in the government’s technology development policies.
This decision marks a strategic reorganization of the resources allocated to the diffusion of the ultra-broadband, with the aim of optimizing investments and accelerating nationwide coverage.
National Connectivity Fund, 700 million to spread Fiber and 5G

The new financial instrument is established under the aegis of the Ministry of Enterprises and Made in Italy (MIMIT) and responds to a logic of operational efficiency. The resources allocated, amounting to seven hundred million euros, derive largely from operating efficiencies and from the reallocation of funds previously allocated under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP).
The creation of a dedicated spending heading enables centralizing and better finalizing investments, ensuring that capital does not remain immobilized but is rapidly transformed into active worksites and connections.
The measure aims to support the realization of fiber optic and 5G networks, essential elements to ensure access to advanced digital services for both public administration and private individuals.
Capillary Coverage and Competitiveness
The rationale behind this intervention is clear: Italy needs to complete its own network architecture to avoid losing ground in international markets.
The National Connectivity Fund will act as a lever to intervene in those areas where market failure has historically slowed the deployment of fiber.
This is about delivering gigabit connectivity not only to large urban centers, but also to inland areas and peripheral industrial districts, often penalized by connection speeds not adequate to current standards.
The availability of these new resources enables operational continuity for plans already launched, such as the plan Italy at 1 Giga, ensuring there are no interruptions due to lack of funds or the rising costs of raw materials that characterized the last two years.
This intervention is thus framed as a measure of industrial policy aimed at supporting the productive fabric: in an economy increasingly data-driven, the speed of information transmission is a production factor as much as energy or logistics.
With the establishment of this fund, the executive lays the foundations to definitively close the era of infrastructural delays, aiming for a fully connected and digitally integrated Italy.



