In the past two decades, the central portion of Campi Flegrei caldera has experienced ground uplift of up to 15 mm/month, and a consequent increase in the rate, magnitudes and extent of seismicity, especially in the past two years. We use a new method for multi-scale precise earthquake location to relocate the 2014-2023 seismicity and map in detail currently activated fault zones. We relate the geometry, extent, and depth of these zones with available structural reconstructions of the caldera. The current seismicity is mainly driven by the time-varying, ground-uplift induced stress concentration on pre-existing, weaker fault zones, not only related to the inner caldera, dome resurgence but also to ancient volcano-tectonic collapses and magma emplacement processes. The extent of imaged fault segments suggests they can accommodate ruptures up to magnitude 5.0, significantly increasing estimates of seismic hazard in the area.