A Study of Subjective Well-Being and Life Satisfaction in Italy: how are Children doing at 8 years of Age? L. Migliorini 1 & T. Tassara 1 & N. Rania 1 Accepted: 10 December 2017 # Springer Science+Business Media B.V., part of Springer Nature 2018 Abstract The paper presents a portion of the first findings of the International Survey of Childrens Well-being (ISCWeB) study, which was performed in Italy. The primary purpose of the ISCWeB project was to consider the subjective well- being of children and to achieve a comprehensive understanding of their lives, focusing on their own perceptions and evaluations. This work aimed to learn more about the subjective well-being of 8-year-old Italian children. A total of 1145 children participated in the study and completed the ISCWeB questionnaire. Several psychometric scales were used: the single-item Overall Life Satisfaction (OLS) scale, the five-item StudentsLife Satisfaction Scale (SLSS-5), the Brief Multidi- mensional StudentsLife Satisfaction Scale (BMSLSS), and the Personal Well-being Index - School Children (PWI4). In addition, the satisfaction in different life domains was measured and several group comparisons were performed to analyze gender and contextual differences. Adopting gender comparisons, family and school contexts were explored more in deep through selected items of the ISCWeB questionnaire. It was also considered the role of gender as individual variable capable of influencing the relations between family and school satisfaction and subjective well-being. Overall, a high degree of childrens subjective well-being emerged. No differences were found between males and females on overall subjective well-being, while gender statistically significant differences were found in the life domains of family and school. Moreover, the results revealed the contribute of gender in moderating the relation between school satisfaction and subjective well-being, finding that higher satisfaction with school life leads to higher subjective well-being for males but not for females. Theoretical, practical and policy implications were discussed. Keywords Childrens worlds . Subjective well-being . Life satisfaction . Life domains . Italy Child Ind Res https://doi.org/10.1007/s12187-017-9514-3 * L. Migliorini laura.migliorini@unige.it 1 Department of Education Sciences, University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy