
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the polished marble of Turin lie the jagged edges of a city defined by rebellion and divine mystery. Every stone in the Centro district breathes with the echoes of political coups and whispered scandals that history books dared to bury. Embark on this self-guided audio tour to navigate the shadowed corridors where kings plotted and architects defied the heavens. Uncover the secrets hidden behind the ornate facades of the Church of San Lorenzo and the Carignano Palace. Why did a single opera performance at the Teatro Regio trigger a night of unimaginable chaos? What occult sigils are etched into the foundations of these royal squares? Did you know a lost tunnel beneath the city center once held a fugitive for six months? Stroll through time as you dissolve the boundaries between past and present. Walk these streets and claim the city as your own. Start your descent into the dark heart of Turin today.

Under the ancient shadows of Turin's Valentino Castle, secrets linger in quiet arches and sunlit courtyards—stories far stranger than postcards suggest. This self-guided audio tour threads you through San Salvario’s lively streets and down Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, revealing a world just beyond the everyday. Each stop uncovers legends and episodes most travelers never hear. What shocking message echoed through Valentino Castle on the eve of political rebellion? Why did artists once risk everything inside Turin Exhibitions’ glittering halls? And which curious experiment right along Corso Vittorio Emanuele II left historians baffled for decades? Trace hidden alliances, unresolved mysteries, and the pulse of innovation as you move from grand boulevards to secret corners. Each step unlocks a new layer of Turin’s restless spirit and its penchant for reinvention. Begin the journey—dare to walk where secrets have long waited. The next discovery is just ahead.

A single spire slashes the Turin sky, daring the clouds while shadows of masked nobles and secret inventors linger in quiet courtyards. This is not just Italy’s royal heart—it’s a city where every palazzo whispers scandal and rebellion from beneath its elegant facade. Set out on a self-guided audio tour across Centro, discovering stories that locals guard and most visitors overlook. Roam hidden corners at your own pace, hearing truth blur with legend and history pulse beneath your feet. Which famed philosopher nearly toppled the Mole Antonelliana’s summit with praise before disaster struck? Who slipped through the Royal Academy’s arches as foreign armies thundered closer—friend or traitor? Why did aristocrats risk ruin at Palazzo Cacherano di Bricherasio just to launch a curious car company in utter secrecy? Trace winding paths from soaring spires to sumptuous salons. Experience flashes of revolution, artistic fever, haunted ambition, and buried secrets as each step transforms Turin into a living stage of power and passion. Ready to walk the city where daring truly touches the clouds? Start now.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Turin became Italy's first capital in 1861 when the Risorgimento finally unified the peninsula, and held the role for just four years before the new country moved the government south toward Rome. What those years produced was a city with a European ambition that still shows in the Baroque grid of porticoed streets that cover the old centre. Twenty-eight kilometres of covered arcades, the portici, run through Turin's streets, allowing residents to walk from the Piazza Castello to the Piazza Vittorio Veneto in almost any weather without getting wet. The Mole Antonelliana, begun in 1863 as a synagogue and now housing the National Museum of Cinema, stands 167 metres above the rooftops and is visible from the Alps that frame the city to the north and west.
The House of Savoy governed from here for three centuries before Italian unification, and the evidence is everywhere: the Palazzo Madama at the centre of the Piazza Castello, the Palazzo Carignano with its undulating Baroque facade, the Royal Palace, the Venaria Reale outside the city.
The Shroud of Turin, the linen cloth believed by many to be the burial cloth of Christ, is kept in the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist and displayed only rarely, most recently in 2015. Gianduiotto chocolate, made from hazelnuts from the Langhe hills blended with cocoa at a lower than usual proportion because of a Napoleonic trade embargo on cocoa imports, was invented in Turin in the early 19th century and is still made in foil-wrapped nuggets by Caffarel.

Before you walk.
Turin Caselle International Airport is about fifteen kilometres north of the city and served by the Sadem bus to Porta Susa station every thirty minutes. High-speed Frecciarossa trains connect Turin to Milan (about fifty minutes) and to Rome (four hours and fifteen minutes). Turin has two main stations, Porta Nuova and Porta Susa, both in the city centre.
The aperitivo hour in the Quadrilatero Romano neighbourhood and around the Piazza Savoia begins around six in the evening and involves a Negroni or vermouth with free antipasto. Agnolotti dal plin (small handmade pasta with meat filling) is the pasta dish specific to Piedmont. For chocolate, Al Bicerin on Piazza della Consolata has been serving its famous hot chocolate, coffee and cream drink since 1763.
Mostly yes. The portici of central Turin run along continuous flat pavements and are fully accessible for wheelchairs and prams. Individual buildings along the arcaded streets vary in their internal accessibility. The main museum and palace sites offer varying levels of access, so checking specific venue websites before visiting is recommended.
Yes. The Langhe hills and the towns of Barolo, Barbaresco and Alba are about ninety minutes south of Turin by car and are the source of Nebbiolo wines that rank among Italy's finest. Regional trains reach Alba (about one and a half hours with a connection), and multiple wine tour operators in Turin run day trips to the region during harvest season in October.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.