Turin Private Tour
About this activity
Smartphone tickets accepted
- Your booking is confirmed immediately
- This activity is available in your language
- This option includes FREE cancellation—book now, risk-free!
Experience Highlights
A private tour of Turin is particularly suitable for discovering the city following a fully customisable route. An expert guide will accompany you through the centre, telling you the history of monuments such as the Mole Antonelliana, the Palazzo Reale or the Porta Palatina. Tours usually last between 2 and 6 hours.
- Enjoy a private activity
- Customise the itinerary according to your tastes and interests.
- Learn about the history of Turin from an expert guide.
What’s included
- Private and personalised tour
- Expert guide
Select participants and date
Step by Step
Turin is one of Italy's cities of art. A private tour is the perfect way to visit it, as you can decide what to see and choose the total duration. To create the perfect itinerary, just let us know your suggestions at the time of booking. The city has many points of interest, such as:
- Mole Antonelliana: the most emblematic building of the Turin skyline. Its great dome dominates the city centre and offers a splendid view of Turin and the nearby Alps. Today it houses the Cinema Museum.
- Piazza Castello: completely surrounded by arcades, it is the largest square in the city. In the centre stand two emblematic buildings: the medieval castle and the elegant Palazzo Madama.
- Chiesa della Gran Madre di Dio: neoclassical church located in a very picturesque area, on the banks of the river Po and at the foot of a hill. According to legend, the Holy Grail is buried here.
- Duomo di San Giovanni Battista: the first and only example of Renaissance architecture in Turin. The side stairs inside lead to the Chapel of the Holy Shroud.
- Piazza San Carlo: the nerve centre of the city, designed in the 17th century by Carlo di Castellamonte. It is known for its historic cafés, the equestrian statue of Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy and the twin churches of Santa Cristina and San Carlo.
This is just a brief example of the many things worth seeing. Turin also boasts renowned cultural institutions such as the Egyptian Museum (the second most important in the world after Cairo) and the Automobile Museum, which chronicles the evolution of this means of transport.