Turin Quick Guide 2026: Everything First-Time Visitors Need to Know

5 minute read — no fluff, just the essentials for your first trip to Turin


This Turin travel guide gives first-time visitors everything they need for 2026 — what to book in advance, where to stay, free things to do, how to get around, safety tips and how to save money in one of Italy’s most underrated cities.


Before You Leave Home — Book These First

Turin sells out fast. The Egyptian Museum is the worst — queues hit 90 minutes without a ticket. Book ahead.

Egyptian Museum — Book 48–72 hours ahead for guaranteed 9am entry — queues exceed 90 minutes by late morning during April–October. → Lock in your spot

Royal Palace (Palazzo Reale) — Savoy dynasty opulence, gilt ballrooms, throne room. Book ahead in high season. → Check availability and skip the queue

National Museum of Cinema — Inside the iconic Mole Antonelliana. One of the best museums in Italy. Skip-the-line recommended. → See times and book in 2 minutes

Free Walking Tour — Best way to get oriented on arrival. Book your spot in advance. → Book before it fills up

💡 → See everything worth booking in Turin — code SASHAA5 for 5% off


When to Book

How far aheadWhat to book
2+ weeksEgyptian Museum (especially April–October)
1 weekRoyal Palace, Cinema Museum
A few daysWalking tours, day trips
On the dayFree attractions, aperitivo, markets

⚠️ Important for 2026 — Turin+Piedmont Card

The 3-day Torino+Piemonte Card (29€) covers all major museum admissions and unlimited public transport — it pays for itself by Day 2. If you’re staying 2–3 days and planning to visit multiple museums, buy this on arrival. It’s one of the best value city cards in Italy.


Getting There & Around

Airport → City Centre: GTT bus from Turin Airport to Porta Nuova station: ~6,50€, 40–50 min. Taxi: 30–40€. Always use Bolt app instead of street taxis.

Inside the city: A one-day public transport ticket costs 4€ — valid on all trams and buses. The Turin+Piedmont Card includes unlimited public transport if you buy it.

Turin is very walkable — the historic centre has around 18km of covered arcades (portici), so you can explore even in bad weather.

⚠️ Always validate your ticket every time you board. Inspectors are frequent and fines are not small.


Where to Stay in Turin

Stay in or near the historic centre. Always.

Best neighbourhoods for first-time visitors:

  • Centro Storico / Piazza Castello — central, walkable to everything
  • Quadrilatero Romano — most characterful neighbourhood, great food and bars
  • Near Porta Nuova station — convenient for transport, good range of hotels

💡 → Find the best spot to stay — see price and location at the same time

Budget:

  • Hostel dorm: 20–35€/night
  • Budget hotel: 60–90€/night
  • Mid-range hotel: 90–150€/night

Free Things to Do in Turin

Turin’s historic centre is full of historic buildings dating back to the 15th century, many of which are free to enter.

  • Piazza Castello — free, the heart of Turin with the Royal Palace exterior and Palazzo Madama
  • Piazza San Carlo — free, one of the most beautiful Baroque squares in Italy
  • Turin Cathedral (Duomo) — free entry, the only Renaissance church remaining in the city — houses the famous Shroud of Turin
  • Parco del Valentino — free, beautiful park along the Po river with a medieval village replica inside
  • 18km of covered arcades (Portici) — free, walk the elegant porticoed streets rain or shine
  • Porta Palazzo Market — free, Europe’s largest open-air market
  • Royal Gardens exterior — free to walk through
  • Mole Antonelliana exterior — free, Turin’s iconic landmark — best viewed from Piazza Vittorio
  • Free Walking Tour — free (tip-based), best introduction to the city

Free museum days:

  • First Sunday of every month: state museums are free for everyone
  • Egyptian Museum is free on your birthday (bring ID) and free for all women on International Women’s Day (8 March)
  • EU citizens under 26: free at many state museums — bring your ID

My Turin Google Map — Always Up to Date

I’ve created a custom Google Map with every location mentioned in this guide — museums, viewpoints, restaurants, free attractions, markets and hidden gems. I update it regularly so you always have the most current recommendations.

📍 → Open, save and download offline before you fly

Save it to your Google Maps before your trip and download the area offline — you won’t need data to navigate and everything is one tap away.


Quick Budget (3 Days in Turin)

Budget travellerMid-range
Accommodation (3 nights)60–105€180–300
Food (€20–35/day)60–105€105–150
Transport10–15€15–20€
Activities30–50€60–100€
TOTAL~160–275~360–570

How to save money in Turin:

  • Buy the Turin+Piedmont Card if visiting 3+ museums — pays for itself quickly
  • Take advantage of aperitivo (5–8pm) — many bars offer a complimentary food buffet with a drink (10–15€) which can serve as a light dinner
  • First Sunday of the month — all state museums free
  • Walk everywhere — the centre is compact and flat
  • Use Revolut card — best exchange rates, no ATM fees

Money Tips for Turin

  • Use Revolut or a travel card — best exchange rates and no fees
  • Turin accepts cards almost everywhere — no need for lots of cash
  • If you need cash, use ATMs inside banks — avoid standalone street ATMs
  • Always check menu prices before sitting down in tourist areas
  • Never use street currency exchange booths — terrible rates

Best Time to Visit Turin

🥇 April–June — Perfect weather, outdoor markets in full swing, less crowded than Rome or Florence. Best time for first-time visitors.

🥈 September–October — Mild temperatures, wine harvest season in nearby Piedmont, fewer tourists

🥉 December — Christmas markets, festive atmosphere, less crowded than other Italian cities

Avoid: August — many shops and restaurants close for summer vacation. Also avoid January–February if you don’t like cold.


Is Turin Safe? Safety Tips for Solo Travellers

Turin is generally safe for solo travellers, including solo female travellers. The northern business-city atmosphere means less chaotic nightlife than Rome or Naples.

General safety:

  • Safe to walk in central areas at night
  • Less late-night safety concerns than Rome or Naples
  • Keep valuables secure in crowded areas and on public transport
  • Violent crime is rare

Common scams to avoid in Turin:

  • Pickpockets — most common at Porta Palazzo market, train stations and on crowded trams. Keep your bag in front of you
  • Street taxis — always use Bolt or official taxi ranks. Never get into an unmarked car
  • Currency exchange booths — terrible rates, always use ATM or pay by card
  • Tourist-area restaurants near Piazza Castello — always check menu prices before sitting down

Emergency numbers:

  • General emergency: 112 (English available)
  • Police: 113
  • Ambulance: 118

3 Tips That Will Save Your First Trip to Turin

1. Book the Egyptian Museum in advance. Queues exceed 90 minutes by late morning during peak season — choose the earliest available slot. Don’t arrive without a ticket.

2. Do aperitivo instead of dinner. From 5–8pm, many Turin bars offer a complimentary food buffet with a drink for €10–15 — it’s a local tradition and one of the best value meals in the city.

3. Buy the Turin+Piedmont Card if staying 2+ days. At 29€ it covers all major museums and unlimited transport. It pays for itself quickly.


Day Trips from Turin

Turin makes an excellent base for exploring Piedmont:

  • Langhe wine region — 1h by car or bus. Home of Barolo and Barbaresco wines, truffle hunting, medieval hilltop villages. Best in autumn during harvest
  • Sacra di San Michele — 45 min by train + bus. Dramatic medieval abbey perched on a rocky cliff. Inspired Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose
  • Lake Maggiore — 1.5h by train. Elegant lake with islands, gardens and belle époque hotels
  • Milan — 1h by train, 10–20€ return. Easy day trip — Duomo, Last Supper (book months ahead!), Navigli canals

Travel Insurance — Don’t Skip This

One of the most important things first-time solo travellers forget. I learned the hard way — my appendix burst during a solo trip in Europe. One emergency abroad and you’ll understand why travel insurance is non-negotiable.

Even for a short trip to Turin, get covered before you go.

👉 → The insurance I use — get covered in 5 minutes

EU Citizens: Bring your EHIC card — covers emergency treatment in EU countries for free. But it’s not a replacement for proper travel insurance. It has limited coverage and doesn’t cover repatriation.


Essential Apps for Turin 2026

AppWhat for
GTTTurin public transport — metro, trams and buses
Google MapsDownload offline map before you go
BoltTaxis — cheaper than street taxis
RevolutBest exchange rates, no ATM fees
Google TranslateCamera mode for menus and signs — essential in Italy
GetYourGuideBook activities and skip-the-line tickets
eSIMNo roaming fees — activate before you fly

Useful Italian Phrases

Always try. Italians really appreciate the effort — even a simple grazie goes a long way.

EnglishItalianPronunciation
HelloCiao / BuongiornoCHOW / bwon-JOR-no
Thank youGrazieGRAT-see-eh
PleasePer favorepehr fah-VOH-reh
Excuse meScusiSKOO-zee
The bill pleaseIl conto, per favoreeel KON-toh pehr fah-VOH-reh
Cheers!Salute!sah-LOO-teh
Help!Aiuto!ah-YOO-toh

FAQ — Turin First-Time Visitors

Is Turin safe for solo female travellers? Yes — Turin is one of the safer Italian cities for solo female travellers. The northern business-city atmosphere means less chaotic nightlife than Rome or Naples. Standard precautions apply — watch your belongings in crowded areas.

How many days do you need in Turin? 3 days is ideal for first-time visitors — enough for the main museums, the historic centre, aperitivo culture and a day trip. 2 days is possible if you focus on highlights only.

Is Turin expensive? Turin is more affordable than Rome, Florence or Milan. Budget around 50–80€/day for accommodation, food and transport. Much better value than other major Italian cities.

What is Turin known for? Turin is known for the Egyptian Museum (second most important in the world after Cairo), the Shroud of Turin, the National Museum of Cinema, Baroque architecture, chocolate, the Fiat car brand, and being Italy’s first capital after unification.

Do I need cash in Turin? Not much — Turin accepts cards almost everywhere. It’s useful to have some cash for markets and smaller cafés. Use Revolut for the best rates.

What currency does Turin use? Euro (€) — Italy is in the Eurozone.

Is Turin good for first-time solo travellers? Absolutely. Turin is compact, walkable, affordable and very safe. It’s less overwhelming than Rome or Florence and gives you a more authentic Italian experience with far fewer tourist crowds.

Andreia

Hi, I’m Andreia

I create Sisoulnomad: honest solo-travel guides from Europe and beyond. No fake sponsored content — just what I actually use and recommend. Want a real postcard from wherever I am in the world? Join the club. 📮