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Best Hotels in Turin for Every Budget — 49 Real Picks From £46 (2026)

8 July 202624 min readBy JetMeAway Scout
Best Hotels in Turin for Every Budget — 49 Real Picks From £46 (2026)

Turin is the great value secret of Italy's big cities — and our top-rated pick for 2026 is the Principi di Piemonte, a 1930s grand hotel a block from Piazza San Carlo. But the real reason to book Turin now is at the other end of the price list, where clean, central, well-reviewed hotel rooms start at just £46 a night. This guide covers all 49 hotels we verified as real, distinct and currently bookable — 2 grand five-stars, 10 four-star favourites, and 37 budget rooms — each linking straight to its live price. Turin gives you baroque arcades, the world's second-greatest Egyptian Museum, chocolate and aperitivo, and an Alpine skyline, for roughly two-thirds of what Milan or Rome charge.

Jump to your budget: Best-rated stays · Four-star favourites · Cheap hotels under £70 · FAQs

Scout's 3 best-value picks right now: 🛏 B&B HOTEL Torino Orbassano — from ~£46, a modern budget room with easy parking and tram access. 🏛 Hotel Italia — from ~£53, a central 3-star with 4,800+ reviews, walkable to the Egyptian Museum. ☕ Best Western Hotel Piemontese — from ~£64, a comfortable base a two-minute walk behind Porta Nuova station. From-prices are live midweek rates pulled while writing — tap any hotel for today's price on your dates.

Turin (Torino) sits in the northwest of Italy, capital of the Piedmont region, laid out on an elegant baroque grid by the House of Savoy — Italy's first royal capital. The defining sights all sit within the walkable centre: the Museo Egizio (the most important Egyptian collection outside Cairo), the Mole Antonelliana with its glass-lift viewing platform and National Cinema Museum, the Royal Palace and Piazza Castello, Piazza San Carlo's twin churches, and around 18 km of covered porticoes you can shop and stroll under in any weather. Beyond the centre lie the Langhe wine hills (Barolo and Barbaresco) and, on the horizon, the snow-capped western Alps — Turin hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics and the ski resorts are barely an hour away. Compare live Turin hotel prices or search UK flights to Turin (TRN) — Ryanair, easyJet and BA fly direct in about two hours.

At a glance — Turin's best-rated stays, before the full reviews:

HotelAreaBest ForStandout Feature
Principi di PiemonteCentral, near Piazza San CarloGrand five-star luxury1930s landmark, Preferred Hotels member
Grand Hotel SiteaCity centreClassic grand-hotel serviceAcclaimed Carignano restaurant
Turin Palace HotelFacing Porta NuovaTrain arrivals, near-luxuryHistoric hotel opposite the station
NH Collection Piazza CarlinaPiazza CarlinaDesign-led four-starRestored 18th-century palazzo
Starhotels MajesticPorta NuovaBest-reviewed four-star6,900+ reviews, station-side location

The Scout's Take: Where to Base Yourself in Turin

Turin is compact and flat, so the choice is less about which sight you're near and more about atmosphere and price. The historic centre — the rectangle from Porta Nuova up Via Roma to Piazza Castello — is where you want to be for a first visit: the Egyptian Museum, the Royal Palace, the grand cafés and the best of the arcades are all a walk away, and the elegant four- and five-stars cluster here.

San Salvario, the lively district just east of Porta Nuova, is Turin's aperitivo and nightlife heart — a good-value base full of budget hotels and buzzing bars, a short walk from the station and the Valentino park. Vanchiglia and the Quadrilatero Romano are the arty, foodie quarters, quieter but full of character. Further out — Lingotto (the old Fiat factory, now a mall, cinema and concert venue) and Mirafiori — is where the cheapest rooms and easiest parking are, a tram ride from the centre.

For a first Turin trip, stay central and walk everywhere. On a tight budget or with a hire car, San Salvario and the outer districts are where £46–65 a night is still real.

The Best-Rated Stays in Turin

Turin keeps only two true five-star grand hotels, so we've grouped the city's finest addresses together here: the two five-stars first, then the ten four-star favourites that deliver near-luxury comfort in prime locations for less. From-prices are live midweek rates pulled while writing — tap any hotel for your dates.

Turin's Two Grand Five-Stars

Principi di Piemonte — Turin, Italy

1. Principi di Piemonte | UNA Esperienze — Turin · 5★ · 3,354 reviews · from ~£144/night. Turin's most storied grand hotel — a 1930s landmark a block from Piazza San Carlo, now part of the UNA Esperienze / Preferred Hotels collection. Marble, dark wood and a rooftop restaurant with Alpine views, plus a spa and pool that few central Italian hotels can match. The definitive Turin luxury address, and still priced below a comparable Milan or Rome five-star.

Grand Hotel Sitea — Turin, Italy

2. Grand Hotel Sitea — Turin · 5★ · 1,964 reviews · from ~£94/night. A classic city-centre grand hotel steps from Piazza San Carlo and the Egyptian Museum, family-run since 1925, home to the acclaimed Carignano restaurant. Traditional, warm and impeccably located — and at a from-price under £100 it is arguably the best-value five-star in any major Italian city. For travellers who want old-world service without the Milan price tag.

The Four-Star Heart of Turin

Turin's four-star tier is deep and central — grand café-city comfort a short walk from the sights, mostly in the £54–134 band.

Starhotels Majestic — Turin, Italy

3. Starhotels Majestic — Turin · 4★ · 6,943 reviews · from ~£69/night. The best-reviewed four-star in the city, directly facing Porta Nuova station — ideal if you're arriving by train or connecting on to Milan, the Alps or the Langhe. Polished rooms, a good restaurant and a location that puts Via Roma's arcades at your door. The reliable all-rounder of Turin's mid-tier.

Hotel Diplomatic — Turin, Italy

4. Hotel Diplomatic — Turin · 4★ · 6,831 reviews · from ~£80/night. A comfortable, business-friendly four-star on Via Cernaia near Porta Susa, with a small pool and gym — a rarity at this price in central Turin. Spacious rooms and a walkable location toward the Quadrilatero and the centre make it a dependable, good-value pick.

NH Torino Lingotto Congress — Turin, Italy

5. NH Torino Lingotto Congress — Turin · 4★ · 6,271 reviews · from ~£91/night. Next to the Lingotto complex — the former Fiat factory turned mall, cinema, concert hall and Pinacoteca Agnelli art gallery, with its famous rooftop test track. Modern rooms, easy parking and a metro stop to the centre in minutes. Good for families, concerts and trade fairs at the Oval.

NH Torino Centro — Turin, Italy

6. NH Torino Centro — Turin · 4★ · 5,159 reviews · from ~£78/night. A well-run four-star on Corso Vittorio Emanuele, walking distance from Porta Nuova and the centre, with reliable NH comfort and a smart lounge-bar. A safe, central mid-range base at a fair price.

NH Collection Torino Piazza Carlina — Turin, Italy

7. NH Collection Torino Piazza Carlina — Turin · 4★ · 4,951 reviews · from ~£131/night. The design flagship of the group — an elegantly restored 18th-century palazzo on Piazza Carlina (where Cavour once lived), with a striking glass-roofed courtyard and a rooftop terrace. The most stylish four-star in the city and a near-luxury stay just below the five-stars.

Hotel Concord — Turin, Italy

8. Hotel Concord — Turin · 4★ · 4,688 reviews · from ~£92/night. A large, traditional four-star on Via Lagrange in the pedestrian shopping heart of the centre — you step out among the arcades and boutiques. Classic comfortable rooms and one of the most central addresses on this list.

NH Collection Torino Santo Stefano — Turin, Italy

9. NH Collection Torino Santo Stefano — Turin · 4★ · 4,269 reviews · from ~£96/night. In the atmospheric Quadrilatero Romano, Turin's oldest quarter, with a rooftop terrace overlooking the historic rooftops. Contemporary design in a medieval-grid setting, surrounded by the city's best aperitivo bars and trattorie. For travellers who want character with their comfort.

Turin Palace Hotel — Turin, Italy

10. Turin Palace Hotel — Turin · 4★ · 4,084 reviews · from ~£134/night. A historic hotel (opened 1872) directly opposite Porta Nuova, refurbished to near-five-star standard, with the rooftop Les Petites Madeleines restaurant. The most refined station-side stay in Turin — near-luxury for train arrivals who don't want to drag a case across town.

Art Hotel Boston — Turin, Italy

11. Art Hotel Boston — Turin · 4★ · 3,756 reviews · from ~£54/night. A quirky, art-filled four-star near Piazza Solferino, its corridors and rooms hung with modern and pop art (Warhol prints, contemporary Italian works). Genuine character at a price that undercuts every other four-star here — the best-value design stay in the city.

Art Hotel Olympic — Turin, Italy

12. Art Hotel Olympic — Turin · 4★ · 3,617 reviews · from ~£81/night. The sister Art Hotel, a modern four-star near Porta Susa and the Politecnico, popular with business travellers for its bright rooms and easy transport links. Contemporary, comfortable and well-placed for the metro and the high-speed station.

Best-rated tier summary: top luxury — Principi di Piemonte, 5★, ~£144; best-value five-star — Grand Hotel Sitea, 5★, ~£94; best-reviewed four-star — Starhotels Majestic, 6,900+ reviews, ~£69; best-value four-star — Art Hotel Boston, ~£54. Compare all Turin hotels with live prices → or search flights to TRN.

Cheap Hotels in Turin Under £70 — 37 Real, Bookable Options

This is the tier that makes Turin one of the best-value city breaks in Italy. Every property below is a real, currently operating hotel we verified as distinct, with live rates on its JetMeAway page. Midweek from-prices were pulled on live searches while writing — the cheapest open at £46 and the whole tier tops out around £69, so a clean, well-reviewed room in or beside the centre genuinely stays under £70. Weekends, the May Book Fair and Juventus match nights push these higher, so midweek is where the £46 rooms live. Budget rule in Turin: stay central or on the metro — the £10–15 you might save on a room out of town, you'll spend on taxis and time.

Best Value Near the Centre (from £46)

B&B HOTEL Torino Orbassano — Turin, Italy

13. B&B HOTEL Torino Orbassano — Turin · 3★ · 1,709 reviews · from ~£46/night. The joint-cheapest room in this guide — a bright, modern B&B Hotels property toward Orbassano with easy parking and tram access to the centre. Simple, spotless and reliable; the pick for drivers and anyone who values a low price over a central postcode.

Hotel Sharing — Turin, Italy

14. Hotel Sharing — Turin · 3★ · 611 reviews · from ~£46/night. A smart, contemporary hotel-and-residence with a social, hostel-meets-hotel design near the Barriera di Milano district — private rooms at the price of a dorm elsewhere. Communal kitchen and lounge spaces make it good for longer or solo stays.

Idea Hotel Torino Mirafiori — Turin, Italy

15. Idea Hotel Torino Mirafiori — Turin · 3★ · 6,074 reviews · from ~£48/night. A large, well-reviewed 3-star toward Mirafiori in the south, near the Fiat heartland — free parking, a restaurant and quick tram links in. One of the best-reviewed budget hotels in the city for the money.

Hotel Miramonti — Turin, Italy

16. Hotel Miramonti — Turin · 3★ · 6,522 reviews · from ~£50/night. A dependable central 3-star with thousands of positive reviews, walkable to Porta Susa and the Quadrilatero. Comfortable, well-run and a fine-value base for sightseeing on foot.

Holiday Inn Turin Corso Francia by IHG — Turin, Italy

17. Holiday Inn Turin Corso Francia by IHG — Turin · 4★ · 3,258 reviews · from ~£52/night. A four-star at a budget-tier price on Corso Francia, the long avenue running west from the centre — parking, a restaurant and a tram straight into town. Predictable IHG comfort and a rare four-star under £55.

Hotel Italia — Turin, Italy

18. Hotel Italia — Turin · 3★ · 4,801 reviews · from ~£53/night. A well-placed, well-reviewed central 3-star within walking distance of the Egyptian Museum and Piazza San Carlo. Straightforward, friendly and one of the strongest central-budget buys in the city.

Novotel Torino Corso Giulio Cesare — Turin, Italy

19. Novotel Torino Corso Giulio Cesare — Turin · 4★ · 2,965 reviews · from ~£54/night. A reliable Novotel between the centre and the airport road, with a pool, parking and family rooms — another four-star that slips into the budget band. Good for families and drivers who want facilities without the central price.

CX Turin Vanchiglia — Turin, Italy

20. CX Turin Vanchiglia — Turin · 3★ · 2,433 reviews · from ~£54/night. A stylish, design-led budget hotel in the arty Vanchiglia quarter, walkable to the river, the Mole and the university. Contemporary rooms and a young, creative neighbourhood full of bars and cafés.

Hotel Cascina Fossata & Residence — Turin, Italy

21. Hotel Cascina Fossata & Residence — Turin · 3★ · 5,917 reviews · from ~£55/night. A restored farmhouse-style hotel with residence apartments (kitchenettes) in the north of the city — great for families and longer stays, with free parking and green space. Thousands of positive reviews for the space and value.

Albergo Guido Reni — Turin, Italy

22. Albergo Guido Reni — Turin · 3★ · 3,204 reviews · from ~£55/night. A friendly, well-kept 3-star toward the southwest of the city with free parking and a garden — a quiet, good-value base for drivers, with tram links to the centre.

Central 3-Stars & San Salvario (from £56)

Taverna Dantesca — Turin, Italy

23. Taverna Dantesca — Turin · 3★ · 2,290 reviews · from ~£56/night. A characterful small hotel near Porta Nuova and San Salvario, with its own traditional restaurant downstairs. Central, sociable and handy for the aperitivo bars on your doorstep.

CX Turin Marconi — Turin, Italy

24. CX Turin Marconi — Turin · 3★ · 4,759 reviews · from ~£56/night. The sister CX property in the Marconi/San Salvario area just south of Porta Nuova — the same clean, design-forward budget formula in Turin's nightlife quarter. Walkable to the station and the Valentino park.

Astor Hotel — Turin, Italy

25. Astor Hotel — Turin · 3★ · 2,836 reviews · from ~£58/night. A comfortable central 3-star near Porta Nuova, well reviewed for clean rooms and a good breakfast. A no-drama, well-located budget base for a weekend of sightseeing.

Hotel Castello — Turin, Italy

26. Hotel Castello — Turin · 3★ · 1,344 reviews · from ~£59/night. A tidy, central 3-star handy for Piazza Castello and the Royal Palace, with simple modern rooms. Good for a short stay focused on the historic core.

Hotel Astoria — Turin, Italy

27. Hotel Astoria — Turin · 3★ · 5,462 reviews · from ~£59/night. A long-standing, well-reviewed 3-star near Porta Nuova with thousands of happy guests — reliable, central and friendly. One of the safe bets of the central budget tier.

Hotel Gran Torino — Turin, Italy

28. Hotel Gran Torino — Turin · 3★ · 2,469 reviews · from ~£60/night. A neat, modern 3-star convenient for the station and centre, with helpful staff and good-value rooms. A straightforward choice for a couple or a solo traveller.

Hotel Campus Sanpaolo — Turin, Italy

29. Hotel Campus Sanpaolo — Turin · 3★ · 2,546 reviews · from ~£62/night. A contemporary 3-star toward the southwest near the San Paolo district, with parking and easy tram access. Bright rooms and a quiet residential setting at a fair price.

Hotel Tourist — Turin, Italy

30. Hotel Tourist — Turin · 3★ · 2,716 reviews · from ~£62/night. A well-run 3-star with parking, a reliable pick for drivers who still want good tram links into the centre. Comfortable rooms and consistent reviews.

Hotel Original — Turin, Italy

31. Hotel Original — Turin · 3★ · 167 reviews · from ~£63/night. A small, freshly styled 3-star with individually designed rooms — newer and less reviewed than its neighbours, but a characterful, good-value central sleep. Worth a look if you like a boutique feel on a budget.

Hotel Ferrucci — Turin, Italy

32. Hotel Ferrucci — Turin · 3★ · 1,216 reviews · from ~£63/night. A quiet, family-run 3-star in a residential pocket west of the centre, with parking and a garden. Calm and personable, with trams into town — good for a relaxed base.

Best Quality Hotel Dock Milano — Turin, Italy

33. Best Quality Hotel Dock Milano — Turin · 3★ · 5,805 reviews · from ~£64/night. A large, popular 3-star north of the centre near Porta Palazzo and the vast open-air market, with thousands of reviews and easy links in. Great value and a foodie neighbourhood on the doorstep.

B&B Hotel Torino President — Turin, Italy

34. B&B Hotel Torino President — Turin · 3★ · 2,669 reviews · from ~£64/night. A modern, keenly priced B&B Hotels property near the centre — the dependable budget-chain formula of clean rooms and a good breakfast, close to the sights. Reliable value for a city break.

Hotel Montevecchio — Turin, Italy

35. Hotel Montevecchio — Turin · 3★ · 3,686 reviews · from ~£64/night. A welcoming, well-reviewed 3-star in the San Secondo area near Porta Nuova, on a quiet street minutes from the station. A friendly, central budget favourite.

Best Quality Hotel Politecnico — Turin, Italy

36. Best Quality Hotel Politecnico — Turin · 4★ · 118 reviews · from ~£64/night. A newer four-star near the Politecnico university and Porta Susa — bright, modern rooms at a budget price, well placed for the high-speed station. Fewer reviews so far, but strong value for a four-star.

Hotel Bologna — Turin, Italy

37. Hotel Bologna — Turin · 2★ · 5,209 reviews · from ~£64/night. A simple 2-star directly opposite Porta Nuova with an astonishing number of positive reviews — spotless, friendly and about as central as a budget hotel gets. The classic backpacker-and-couple bargain of Turin.

Best Western Hotel Piemontese — Turin, Italy

38. Best Western Hotel Piemontese — Turin · 3★ · 1,796 reviews · from ~£64/night. A charming Liberty-style 3-star a two-minute walk behind Porta Nuova in the San Salvario district, with a pretty breakfast garden. Central, characterful and well-priced — a Scout favourite for a first Turin stay.

More Central & Suburban Value (from £65)

Hotel Romano — Turin, Italy

39. Hotel Romano — Turin · 3★ · 2,504 reviews · from ~£65/night. A comfortable, central 3-star well reviewed for its location and helpful staff, walkable to the main sights. A solid, unfussy base in the budget band.

Eco Art Hotel Statuto — Turin, Italy

40. Eco Art Hotel Statuto — Turin · 2★ · 2,356 reviews · from ~£65/night. An eco-conscious, art-themed small hotel near Piazza Statuto and Porta Susa, with a green ethos and creative décor. Central, characterful and easy on the conscience as well as the wallet.

Adalesia Hotel & Coffee — Turin, Italy

41. Adalesia Hotel & Coffee — Turin · 3★ · 5,168 reviews · from ~£65/night. A bright, modern 3-star with its own coffee bar, thousands of strong reviews and a location handy for the centre. Fresh, friendly and well above its price point.

Sure Hotel by Best Western Turin City Centre — Turin, Italy

42. Sure Hotel by Best Western Turin City Centre — Turin · Best Western budget brand · 53 reviews · from ~£64/night. A recently added Sure Hotel (Best Western's value brand) in a central location — simple, dependable rooms under the reassurance of a known chain. Newer to the listings, so reviews are still building.

Hotel Plaza — Turin, Italy

43. Hotel Plaza — Turin · 3★ · 2,196 reviews · from ~£66/night. A traditional central 3-star handy for Porta Nuova and the shopping streets, with comfortable rooms and a decent breakfast. A steady, well-located choice.

Hotel Universo — Turin, Italy

44. Hotel Universo — Turin · 3★ · 3,859 reviews · from ~£66/night. A well-reviewed 3-star near Porta Nuova, popular for its location and value — clean, central and reliable. Another safe bet in the station-side budget cluster.

Best Western Plus Executive Hotel and Suites — Turin, Italy

45. Best Western Plus Executive Hotel and Suites — Turin · 4★ · 2,545 reviews · from ~£67/night. A four-star offering suites at a budget-tier price near the centre — extra space and Best Western Plus comfort for families or longer stays. Strong value for the star rating.

Liberty Hotel — Turin, Italy

46. Liberty Hotel — Turin · 3★ · 2,145 reviews · from ~£68/night. A characterful Liberty-era (Art Nouveau) townhouse hotel with period charm and individually styled rooms, near the centre. For travellers who want a bit of Turin's belle-époque elegance on a budget.

Hotel Master — Turin, Italy

47. Hotel Master — Turin · 3★ · 2,261 reviews · from ~£68/night. A comfortable, well-run 3-star with parking near the centre, reliable for a straightforward city stay. Good links in and consistent reviews.

Best Western Plus Hotel Le Rondini — Turin, Italy

48. Best Western Plus Hotel Le Rondini — Turin · 3★ · 194 reviews · from ~£68/night. A Best Western Plus set in greenery near the airport at San Francesco al Campo — a smart choice for early flights or drivers, with parking, a pool and a restaurant. A restful, out-of-town base with airport convenience.

Best Western Crystal Palace Hotel — Turin, Italy

49. Best Western Crystal Palace Hotel — Turin · 4★ · 1,952 reviews · from ~£69/night. Rounding out the tier, a central four-star on Via Nizza near Porta Nuova — modern rooms and Best Western reliability at the top of the budget band, still under £70. The most polished room you'll find at this price in Turin.

Budget tier summary: cheapest rooms — B&B HOTEL Orbassano and Hotel Sharing from ~£46; best-reviewed central budget — Hotel Bologna, 2★, 5,200+ reviews, ~£64; best central-value 3-star — Hotel Italia, ~£53; best four-star under £70 — Best Western Crystal Palace, ~£69. The pricier budget rooms run to about £69, so this whole tier genuinely stays under £70 on midweek dates. Compare all Turin hotels with live prices →

Best Turin Hotels for Specific Trips

Turin sorts neatly by what you've come for. Here's how the 49 hotels above break down by traveller.

Best Turin Hotels for Value

The budget tier exists for this question — but the standouts are Hotel Bologna (2★, 5,200+ reviews, opposite the station, £64), Hotel Italia (£53, central and walkable), and the joint-cheapest B&B HOTEL Orbassano and Hotel Sharing at £46. For a four-star at a budget price, Holiday Inn Corso Francia (£52) and Best Western Crystal Palace (~£69) both punch above their rate.

Best Turin Hotels for Families

Hotel Cascina Fossata & Residence has apartment units with kitchenettes; NH Torino Lingotto sits by the Lingotto mall and cinema; Novotel Torino has a pool and family rooms; and Best Western Plus Executive Hotel and Suites offers suites at budget-tier prices. All give families space without a luxury bill.

Best Turin Hotels for Couples

The romantic picks are the two grand five-stars — Principi di Piemonte and Grand Hotel Sitea — plus the design-led NH Collection Piazza Carlina and the Liberty-era charm of Liberty Hotel and Best Western Piemontese's garden on a budget.

Best Turin Hotels for Train Arrivals

Staying by Porta Nuova saves you the transfer hassle: Starhotels Majestic and Turin Palace Hotel face the station, and budget picks Hotel Bologna, Hotel Astoria and Hotel Universo are a two-minute walk behind it.

Best Turin Hotels for Design and Character

NH Collection Piazza Carlina (restored palazzo) and NH Collection Santo Stefano (Quadrilatero rooftop) lead the four-stars; Art Hotel Boston is packed with pop art at a budget price; and CX Turin Vanchiglia, Liberty Hotel and Eco Art Hotel Statuto bring character on the cheap.

Best Turin Hotels for the Alps and Skiing

For winter arrivals connecting to Sestriere, Bardonecchia or the Aosta Valley, base near the stations: Art Hotel Olympic and Best Quality Hotel Politecnico by Porta Susa (high-speed and ski trains), or the station-side Starhotels Majestic. Drivers heading for the slopes may prefer the easy-parking Holiday Inn Corso Francia.

Beyond the Arcades — Turin's Essentials

A few things worth planning your stay around:

  • The Egyptian Museum (Museo Egizio) — the most important collection of Egyptian antiquities outside Cairo, in the heart of the centre. Book a timed ticket; give it half a day.
  • The Mole Antonelliana & National Cinema Museum — Turin's spire-topped symbol, with a panoramic glass lift to a viewing platform and a brilliant, immersive cinema museum spiralling up inside.
  • Aperitivo hour in San Salvario or the Quadrilatero — Turin invented it. A €8–12 drink comes with a buffet generous enough to be dinner. The best-value evening out in Italy.
  • Historic cafés — Al Bicerin (for the bicerin, the coffee-chocolate-cream drink), Baratti & Milano, Caffè Torino and Mulassano are living monuments to Turin's chocolate and café culture.
  • Piazza San Carlo & the arcades — the "drawing room of Turin," ringed by porticoes; stroll the 18 km of covered walkways that let you cross the city in any weather.
  • The Royal Palace & Piazza Castello — the Savoy royal complex, including the Royal Armoury and the chapel of the Shroud.
  • A day trip to the Langhe — Barolo and Barbaresco wine country and the truffle town of Alba are an easy train or drive south; autumn is truffle season.
  • The Alps on the horizon — climb the Mole, Monte dei Cappuccini or the Superga hill for the snow-capped skyline; the ski resorts are barely an hour away.

JetMeAway's Scout feature surfaces this kind of neighbourhood intelligence automatically once you book.

UK Practicalities

  • Direct UK flights: Ryanair, easyJet and British Airways fly to Turin (TRN) from London and regional airports in about two hours, with extra frequency in the ski season. Milan Malpensa (MXP) is a 90-minute coach away as a backup. Search flights to TRN.
  • Airport: Turin Caselle (TRN) is 16 km north. Train or airport bus to Porta Nuova/Porta Susa in ~40–45 minutes for a few euros; taxi ~€35–40.
  • Currency: Euro (€). Aperitivo (~€8–12 with buffet) is the value evening meal; museums €10–20; trams a couple of euros.
  • Getting around: The centre is flat and walkable under the arcades; an efficient metro and tram network covers the rest. Central hotels rarely need a taxi.
  • Best months: April–June and September–October for mild days and clear Alpine views; winter for the ski link and Christmas lights; January–March and high summer for the cheapest rooms.
  • Budget: Grand stay — £120–250/night. Budget trip — £46–69/night room, £25–35/day food via aperitivo and bakeries. A three-night midweek city break on the budget tier can land comfortably under £350 per person before flights.

Why Book Turin Through JetMeAway

Every hotel above links to its own live-price page — real wholesale rates, all taxes shown, and a date picker to match your trip. We take an affiliate commission from the hotel, so there are no markups and no booking fees added to your side of the deal, and your data reaches the hotel only when you book, not a marketing database.

Compare live Turin hotel prices · Search UK flights to Turin (TRN)

Explore More of Italy

Planning a wider Italian trip? Pair Turin with our other city guides, each built the same budget-first way:

Turin Hotels FAQs

How much is a cheap hotel in Turin per night? Real bookable budget rooms in Turin start around £46 a night on midweek dates — B&B HOTEL Torino Orbassano and Hotel Sharing both open at ~£46. The bulk of the budget tier sits in the £46–69 band for a clean 3-star, which is why Turin is one of the best-value city breaks in northern Italy. Prices climb on weekends, during the Turin Book Fair (May), the Salone del Gusto and any Juventus home match, so midweek is where the £46 rooms live. Our hotel pages show the all-in total including taxes.

What is the cheapest area to stay in Turin? The cheapest central beds cluster around Porta Nuova station and the San Salvario and Vanchiglia districts just off the centre — Hotel Bologna, Taverna Dantesca, CX Turin Vanchiglia and Hotel Astoria all fall in the £53–64 range and put you a short walk or one tram stop from Piazza San Carlo. Cheaper still are the properties out toward Mirafiori, Lingotto and Orbassano (from ~£46), which trade a central address for a metro or tram ride in. For a first visit, paying £10–15 more to stay inside the old-town grid is usually worth it.

Where should I stay in Turin on a budget? Stay within walking distance of Porta Nuova or on the metro line. Hotel Italia (£53), Astor Hotel (£58), Hotel Astoria (£59) and Best Western Hotel Piemontese (£64) are central, well-reviewed 3-stars in the £53–64 band. If you have a hire car, the Holiday Inn Turin Corso Francia (~£52) and the locals'-priced properties out toward Mirafiori (from ~£46) have free or cheap parking and quick tram access. All keep you under £70 a night for a proper hotel room.

Is Turin cheaper than Milan or Rome? Noticeably, yes. Turin's budget tier starts around £46 a night for a central 3-star; the equivalent room in Milan or Rome typically runs £80–120. Food, aperitivo and museum entry are cheaper too — a Turin aperitivo (a drink plus a generous buffet) is one of the best-value evening meals in Italy. For UK travellers watching the budget, Turin delivers a grand, elegant Italian city at roughly two-thirds of Milan's room prices, with direct flights from several UK airports.

How much should I budget per day in Turin? On a budget: £46–69 for the hotel room, £25–35 a day for food if you lean on aperitivo (a €8–12 drink comes with a buffet that can double as dinner) and a bakery breakfast, plus £10–20 for museums and trams. That lands a comfortable day around £90–120 all-in for one person, less for two sharing a room. Turin is one of the few grand Italian cities where a real city break still fits inside a modest daily budget.

What are the cheapest months to visit Turin? January to March and the second half of July into August are the cheapest, when business travel dips and rooms fall to their £46 floors. Avoid the Turin International Book Fair (mid-May), the Salone del Gusto/Terra Madre food fair (autumn, odd years) and Juventus home-match weekends, when city-wide rates jump. Midweek is cheaper than weekends year-round. For the best mix of price and weather, late September to October gives you mild days, the Alps clear on the horizon, and low-season rates.

Where is the best area to stay in Turin for the first time? The historic centre around Piazza San Carlo, Via Roma and Piazza Castello — you can walk to the Egyptian Museum, the Royal Palace, the Mole Antonelliana and the porticoed shopping streets without a tram. The Grand Hotel Sitea, Turin Palace Hotel, Principi di Piemonte and NH Collection Piazza Carlina all sit in or beside this grid. It is compact, elegant and safe, and the arcades mean you can cross the city centre in the rain without getting wet.

Is Turin worth visiting? Very much — and it is still overlooked, which is part of the appeal. Turin was Italy's first capital and the seat of the House of Savoy, so it has a royal-city grandeur (palaces, 18 kilometres of porticoed arcades, grand café culture) without Florence or Venice crowds. The Egyptian Museum is the most important outside Cairo, the Mole Antonelliana houses a superb cinema museum, and the whole city sits under an Alpine backdrop. Add chocolate, aperitivo and Piedmont wine and it is one of Italy's best-value long weekends.

How do I get from Turin airport to the city centre? Turin Airport (Caselle, TRN) is about 16 km north of the centre. The regional train and the SADEM/Arriva airport bus both reach Porta Nuova and Porta Susa in around 40–45 minutes for a few euros; a taxi is roughly €35–40 and takes 25–30 minutes. Many central hotels are a short walk from Porta Nuova, so the train or bus drops you close to your bed.

Are there direct flights from the UK to Turin? Yes. Ryanair, easyJet, British Airways and others fly to Turin (TRN) from London and several regional UK airports, especially in the winter ski season when Turin is the gateway to the Milky Way and Aosta Valley resorts. Flight time is roughly two hours. If fares to Turin are high, Milan Malpensa (MXP) is about 90 minutes away by direct coach and often cheaper.

What is Turin famous for? The Shroud of Turin, the Egyptian Museum (second only to Cairo), the Mole Antonelliana and its National Cinema Museum, the House of Savoy palaces, Fiat and Juventus, and a deep chocolate and café tradition — this is the birthplace of gianduja (hazelnut chocolate), bicerin (a coffee-chocolate-cream drink) and Italy's aperitivo hour, plus vermouth. It is also the elegant capital of Piedmont, gateway to Barolo wine country and the Alps.

How many days do you need in Turin? Two to three days covers the essentials — a full day for the Egyptian Museum and the Royal Palace complex, a day for the Mole Antonelliana, the arcades, Piazza San Carlo and an aperitivo crawl, and a third for a wine day trip to the Langhe or a train up into the Alps. A long weekend is the sweet spot, and cheap midweek rooms make a three-night stay easy to justify.

Is Turin a walkable city? Exceptionally. The centre is a flat, grid-planned baroque core, and Turin has around 18 km of covered porticoes — you can walk from Porta Nuova to Piazza Castello, museum to café, entirely under arcades. An efficient tram and metro network covers anything further out, so a central hotel means you rarely need to pay for a taxi.

Which Turin hotels are best for the Egyptian Museum and the old town? The Museo Egizio sits on Via Accademia delle Scienze in the heart of the centre. The Grand Hotel Sitea, Turin Palace Hotel, NH Collection Piazza Carlina and Principi di Piemonte are all a short walk away, and central budget picks like Hotel Italia, Hotel Bologna and Best Western Piemontese put the museum within a 10–15 minute stroll. Stay inside the Porta Nuova–Piazza Castello rectangle and everything is walkable.

Which hotels are closest to Porta Nuova station? Porta Nuova is the main hub for airport transfers and high-speed trains to Milan, Rome and Paris. Starhotels Majestic and Turin Palace Hotel face the station directly; Best Western Piemontese, Hotel Bologna and several San Salvario budget hotels are a two-minute walk behind it. It is the most convenient base if you are arriving by train or connecting on to the Langhe or the Alps.

Is Turin safe for tourists? Yes, Turin is a comfortable, low-key city by big-city standards. The historic centre is well-policed and pleasant to walk at night, especially under the arcades and around the aperitivo bars of San Salvario and the Quadrilatero. As anywhere, keep an eye on your bag around Porta Nuova station and on busy trams, but there is no area near the tourist sights a visitor needs to avoid.

When is the best time to visit Turin? Late spring (April–June) and early autumn (September–October) are ideal — mild days, clear Alpine views and the café terraces in full swing. Summer can be warm and a little quiet as locals leave; winter is cold but atmospheric, with the Christmas lights (Luci d'Artista) and the ski resorts an hour away. Autumn also brings the Piedmont wine and truffle season in the nearby Langhe.

What are the best luxury hotels in Turin? Turin's two grand five-stars are the Principi di Piemonte (a 1930s landmark near Piazza San Carlo, part of UNA Esperienze/Preferred Hotels, from ~£144) and the Grand Hotel Sitea (a classic city-centre grand hotel with the acclaimed Carignano restaurant, from ~£94). Just below them, the four-star Turin Palace Hotel and NH Collection Piazza Carlina offer near-luxury comfort in prime locations for less.

Which Turin hotels are good for families? Look at the roomier four-stars and apartment-style stays: Hotel Cascina Fossata & Residence has residence units with kitchenettes, NH Torino Lingotto Congress sits next to the Lingotto complex with its cinema and shopping centre, and Best Western Plus Executive Hotel and Suites offers suites at budget-tier prices. Central 3-stars like Hotel Italia and Best Western Piemontese also have family rooms within walking distance of the sights.

Do Turin hotels have parking? Central Turin is a restricted-traffic zone (ZTL), so most old-town hotels use nearby paid garages (€15–25 a night). If you are driving — for the Alps or the Langhe — the properties toward Corso Francia, Mirafiori and Lingotto (Holiday Inn Corso Francia, NH Lingotto, Hotel Cascina Fossata) have easier and cheaper parking. Check each hotel's page for on-site or garage details before you book.

Can you see the Alps from Turin? On a clear day, yes — the western Alps form a dramatic snow-capped wall on Turin's horizon, best seen from the top of the Mole Antonelliana, from Monte dei Cappuccini, or from the Superga basilica hill. Autumn and winter give the sharpest views. It is one of the few major Italian cities where the mountains are part of the everyday skyline.

How far is Turin from the ski resorts? Close — Turin hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics. The Via Lattea (Milky Way) resorts of Sestriere, Sauze d'Oulx and Bardonecchia are roughly 1–1.5 hours by car or train, and the Aosta Valley resorts are a similar drive north. This makes Turin a rare thing: a grand cultural city you can pair with a ski day, which is why UK winter flights to TRN are frequent.

Is Turin good for a weekend break? It is one of Italy's best short breaks — compact, walkable, elegant and cheap, with direct UK flights of about two hours. Two nights covers the Egyptian Museum, the Mole, the arcades, Piazza San Carlo and a couple of aperitivo evenings, and cheap midweek rooms from £46 keep the whole trip affordable. It feels like a discovery rather than a checklist.

What is aperitivo in Turin and why is it good value? Turin invented the Italian aperitivo hour. From around 6–9pm you buy a drink (often a vermouth-based cocktail — vermouth was born here — or an Aperol spritz) for roughly €8–12, and the bar lays on a buffet of nibbles that in many San Salvario and Quadrilatero bars is generous enough to serve as dinner. It is the single best-value way to eat and drink in the city, which matters if you are keeping to a budget.

Is Turin good for chocolate and food lovers? It is a chocolate capital — the home of gianduja (hazelnut chocolate) and the bicerin, a layered coffee-chocolate-cream drink served in historic cafés like Al Bicerin. Historic caffès (Baratti & Milano, Caffè Torino, Mulassano) are institutions, the covered markets and the huge Porta Palazzo market feed the city, and Turin is the gateway to Piedmont's Barolo, Barbaresco and white-truffle country. Food and chocolate alone justify the trip.

How do I book these exact hotels at the prices shown? Every hotel name in this guide links to that hotel's live page on JetMeAway, with real-time rates, all taxes shown and a date picker to match your trip. The from-prices quoted here were pulled on live midweek searches while writing, so your dates will differ — tap through for today's number. No booking fees either way, and no markups.

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