REVIEW · TURIN
Turin: Turin & Piedmont 3-Day City Card
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Turismo Torino e Provincia · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Turin sightseeing can be a lot of fun and a lot of spendy. This 3-day Torino+Piemonte Card makes it cheaper by rolling a bunch of major sights into one pass. I like the free entrance to big-name museums and royal residences, and I also like the built-in discounts on transport and sightseeing add-ons. The one drawback to keep in mind is that you’ll get the best results by booking timed entry where required, and planning your days so you can actually use the value.
If you’re visiting Turin more than one day, or you want to go beyond just one or two museums, this card is the kind of setup that helps you move with confidence. You’re not locked into a tour route. You’re choosing your own mix across Turin and the wider Piedmont area, then showing your voucher at the entrance after you secure your slot.
In This Review
- Key Points Worth Noticing
- How the Torino+Piemonte Card Works in Real Life
- The Big Value: Free Entry Across Turin and Piedmont
- Your Museum Map: What You Can Visit for Free
- Royal and landmark sites
- Museums with distinct themes
- Art and design connections
- Medieval and fortified atmosphere
- One important exception: Juventus Museum
- Discounts Beyond Museums (Tours, Opera, and City Sightseeing)
- Scenic Targets: Mole Antonelliana, Rack Sassi, and Superga
- Art Events in November: A Bonus If You Time It Right
- Make Transport Discounts Count (and Avoid the Common Trap)
- Picking a 3-Day Game Plan Without Feeling Rushed
- Day 1: Anchor yourself with the big Turin icons
- Day 2: Royal residences or museums with a strong identity
- Day 3: Contain the travel, then add a scenic payoff
- Price and Logistics: When $52.27 Actually Feels Like a Win
- Who Should Buy the Torino+Piemonte Card
- Should You Book This Torino+Piemonte 3-Day City Card?
- FAQ
- How long is the Torino+Piemonte Card valid?
- What does the card include for attractions?
- Is public transportation included?
- Do I get skip-the-line access?
- Do I need to book anything in advance?
- Which major attractions are covered, and is the Juventus Museum included?
Key Points Worth Noticing

- 3 days from first activation, so pick a clean start date and then work forward
- Free admission to a long list of museums, monuments, castles, fortresses, and royal residences in Turin and Piedmont
- Discounts that go beyond museums, including sightseeing services and adult tickets for City Sightseeing Torino
- Public transport savings for a 3-day pass, which matters if you’re hopping between neighborhoods and nearby towns
- Contemporary art bonus in November, with reduced tickets for events like Artissima and Paratissima
How the Torino+Piemonte Card Works in Real Life

This is a city-card style pass, not a guided tour. You buy the 3-day Torino+Piemonte Card, then activate it and use it across a wide list of sites in Turin and Piedmont. The big promise is simple: you pay once, then you get free entry to many major attractions while also picking up reductions on other paid activities.
Where it gets practical is at the door. After booking your spot on the listed museum websites, you go straight to the entrance and show your voucher to the museum staff. That means your planning is front-loaded, but your day-of experience stays smooth. No hunting for last-minute tickets, no guessing whether you’re about to miss out on a timed slot.
Also note the limits so you don’t get surprised. Public transport in Turin is not included in the card itself. You may get reductions for 3-day public transport tickets, but you still handle transit like a normal visitor. And skip-the-line tickets aren’t included, so you’ll still want to arrive with the right expectations for timing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Turin.
The Big Value: Free Entry Across Turin and Piedmont

The strongest feature here is the free admission list. Instead of paying separate ticket prices for each museum or royal site, you can stack visits across multiple days. That’s exactly where cards like this win: when your itinerary has more than a couple paid entries.
The other value lever is range. This card isn’t only Turin proper. It covers attractions across Piedmont, so you can build a day that’s partly urban and partly out in the region. That flexibility is useful because Turin can be very walkable in central areas, but you’ll still want a way to justify longer trips without constantly re-buying tickets.
And the types of stops included are broad. You’re looking at museums, monuments, castles, fortresses, royal residences, and more. If you’re the kind of traveler who likes variety—art one day, history another, something a bit different on day three—this card matches that style.
Your Museum Map: What You Can Visit for Free

Below are the major included sites you can target. I’m listing them by name because this card is all about matching your interests to the free-entry lineup.
Royal and landmark sites
- Museo Egizio
- Musei Reali di Torino and Museo della Sindone
- La Venaria Reale
- Palazzo Madama
- Palazzina di Caccia di Stupinigi
- Basilica di Superga (listed with Appartamento Reale and Reali Tombe di Casa Savoia)
These are the places that help your trip feel like Turin instead of just a random museum run. When you use the card here, you’re getting credit for major ticket categories—exactly the kind of stops that can add up quickly if you buy everything à la carte.
Museums with distinct themes
- Museo Nazionale del Cinema
- MAUTO – Museo dell’Automobile di Torino
- MAO – Museo d’Arte Orientale
- Museo Nazionale del Risorgimento Italiano
- Museo Nazionale della Montagna
- Museo di Antropologia Criminale Cesare Lombroso
- Museo dell’Arti Decorative Fondazione Accorsi
- Ometto, Museo Diocesano di Torino
This is where you can shape your trip around curiosity. If you’re into film, cars, mountains, or cultural history, the card gives you enough “theme space” to choose stops that feel intentional rather than checkbox-driven.
Art and design connections
- GAM – Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea
- Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea
- Museo Civico d’Arte Antica
- Pinacoteca dell’Accademia Albertina
- Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli
These options also help if you want a modern/temporary mix with classic spaces. Even if you’re not trying to do every museum, you can still build a solid day by picking one or two “anchor” sites plus a bonus stop.
Medieval and fortified atmosphere
- Borgo e Rocca Medievale
If your trip needs some texture—stone, towers, and a different pace—this is the kind of inclusion that can make your itinerary feel more varied.
One important exception: Juventus Museum
The Juventus Museum is listed as discounted, not free. That’s not a deal-breaker. Just plan for it so your spending math doesn’t assume everything in Turin is fully covered.
Discounts Beyond Museums (Tours, Opera, and City Sightseeing)

The card isn’t only about free entry. It also includes reductions on a range of tourist services in Turin. The info points to discounts on sightseeing tours and on ticketed experiences like concerts, theater, and opera.
There’s also a specific, useful one: a reduction on adult tickets at City Sightseeing Torino. That matters because hop-on/hop-off style sightseeing can be a time-saver in a city where you want to move quickly without over-planning routes every day.
This is where I think the card strategy gets smart. Use the card for the expensive admissions. Then use its discounts for the paid “experience” stuff that rounds out the days—so you’re not just collecting stamps in museums.
Scenic Targets: Mole Antonelliana, Rack Sassi, and Superga

Some sights on the card come with practical advantages because they help you see Turin from outside the street grid.
You’ll find reductions tied to:
- Mole Antonelliana (including the panoramic lift)
- Rack Sassi
- Superga
Even if you don’t want to turn every day into a view-chasing mission, these inclusions are good itinerary “glue.” They give you a reason to time your day around a ride or a viewpoint moment, then come back down for museums in the late afternoon.
One planning note: places like these can be easier when you’re not stacking them back-to-back with timed museum entries. Build some breathing room so you’re not sprinting between ticket windows.
Art Events in November: A Bonus If You Time It Right

If your travel window includes November, this card can feel even more valuable because it offers reduced ticket options for contemporary art events. The listed names include:
- Artissima International Fair
- Flashback Habitat
- Paratissima Circus
- The Others Art Fair
This is the sort of bonus that can turn a “standard city visit” into a more event-driven trip. If you care about contemporary art fairs or circus-style art programming, the card can reduce the friction of adding them to your plans.
Make Transport Discounts Count (and Avoid the Common Trap)

The card includes discounts for 3-day public transport tickets, but it doesn’t bundle public transport automatically. That’s a subtle difference, but it changes how you should plan.
Here’s the trap: people assume a city card means you never pay for transit. This one doesn’t. You’ll still need to cover local rides, but the 3-day pass discount can help you keep your transport costs predictable.
So I recommend you do this math early:
- If you’re staying put in central Turin all day, you might not use a transit pass heavily.
- If you’re combining central museums with stops that spread outward, or you’re doing day trips tied to Piedmont attractions, you’ll likely feel the benefit of transit savings more quickly.
And because you’re visiting across 3 days from first activation, transit planning pairs well with your ticket planning. Try not to cram everything into day one. Use day one to hit your most time-sensitive, then let transit help you move efficiently on days two and three.
Picking a 3-Day Game Plan Without Feeling Rushed

The card’s biggest strength is choice. The biggest risk is trying to do everything. You’ll get the best result if you treat your 3 days like a set of themes, then add just one or two “extra” stops per day.
Here’s a practical way to think about it:
Day 1: Anchor yourself with the big Turin icons
Start with one major Turin anchor from the free list. This could be Museo Egizio, Palazzo Madama, Musei Reali di Torino, or Museo Nazionale del Cinema. Then add a nearby second stop from the free lineup if your pacing feels good.
Why this works: once you’ve got your bearings, the rest of the card becomes easier. You’ll also learn which museums are easiest for timed-entry planning.
Day 2: Royal residences or museums with a strong identity
Pick one royal residence-heavy day (like La Venaria Reale or Palazzina di Caccia di Stupinigi), or go for a different identity day (like MAUTO or Museo Nazionale della Montagna). If you want variety, pair a “bigger ticket category” with a more niche-themed museum.
Day 3: Contain the travel, then add a scenic payoff
Choose a day that mixes a scenic-related inclusion (think panoramic lift in Mole Antonelliana or Superga) with another museum you’re genuinely interested in. You’ll feel less stress this way because you’re finishing with something memorable rather than rushing into your last tickets.
Two pacing tips that help with this card:
- Plan your sightseeing carefully to maximize the card. That means no random stops. Commit to a couple of sites per day.
- Book slots where recommended/required so you don’t lose a day to an avoidable timing issue.
Price and Logistics: When $52.27 Actually Feels Like a Win

At $52.27 per person for 3 days, the question isn’t just whether the card is “cheap.” It’s whether it replaces enough paid admissions to beat what you’d spend individually.
The card is usually worth it when:
- You’re visiting more than two or three of the included sites.
- You’re staying at least more than one day.
- You’re using Turin and Piedmont options instead of only central areas.
The info also hints at why people rate it highly: it’s simple once you’ve done the pre-planning. The voucher-and-entrance flow is straightforward, as long as you keep track of which museum needs a booked slot.
A few “don’t mess this up” notes:
- You’ll need passport or ID card.
- Entrance to the Juventus Museum isn’t included, but you do get a discount.
- You’re not getting skip-the-line entry, so still plan for time.
Who Should Buy the Torino+Piemonte Card
This card is a good fit if you like:
- A flexible itinerary with lots of self-directed choices
- Doing multiple museum stops rather than just one
- Mixing major landmarks with more specific theme museums
- A value-first approach that helps you control your daily spending
It may feel less efficient if you:
- Only want one or two paid museums total
- Prefer a slow, wandering trip with fewer ticketed stops
- Don’t want to bother with checking opening times and securing entry slots
One more detail: tickets are available for children, youth, and adults, and the card is valid for 1 adult and 1 child under 12 years old. Booking is required for the child under 12 when accompanying an adult card owner, so it’s worth factoring family logistics into your planning.
Should You Book This Torino+Piemonte 3-Day City Card?
Book it if your Turin days include more than a couple museums and you want to control costs while keeping freedom. With the free-entry lineup across museums and royal residences, plus discounts on things like sightseeing tours and transport passes, it’s built for travelers who plan even lightly and then move smart.
Skip it (or at least reconsider) if you’re aiming for a very short list of attractions, because a card needs usage to pay off. And remember: the card doesn’t replace transit entirely, and it doesn’t provide skip-the-line entry. You’ll still need to show up on time and book slots when required.
If you want a practical way to see a lot of Turin and Piedmont without constant ticket-buying friction, this card is one of the cleanest solutions.
FAQ
How long is the Torino+Piemonte Card valid?
It’s valid for 3 days, starting from your first activation.
What does the card include for attractions?
You get free or reduced entrance to museums, monuments, castles, fortresses, and royal residences in Turin and Piedmont, plus reductions on some tourist services in Turin (like sightseeing tours and entertainment).
Is public transportation included?
No. Public transportation in Turin is not included, though there are discounts for 3-day public transport tickets.
Do I get skip-the-line access?
No. Skip-the-line tickets are not included.
Do I need to book anything in advance?
You should book your spot in museums beforehand to plan your visit and secure entry. Also, booking is required for the child under 12 accompanying an adult card owner.
Which major attractions are covered, and is the Juventus Museum included?
The card includes free entrance to major sites such as Museo Egizio, Musei Reali di Torino / Museo della Sindone, La Venaria Reale, Palazzo Madama, and Museo Nazionale del Cinema. The Juventus Museum is not free, but it is listed as discounted.











