Turin: Hop-on Hop-off Bus Tour with 24 or 48-Hour Ticket

1.Turin: Hop-on Hop-off Bus Tour with 24 or 48-Hour Ticket
Hop on and off Turin’s top sights with onboard audio, Wi‑Fi, and 24 or 48-hour tickets across Red, Blue, and Green routes.
TURIN
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Turin's top 10 tickets tours. What each one covers, who runs it, and where to start if you're only in town for a couple of days.

Hop on and off Turin’s top sights with onboard audio, Wi‑Fi, and 24 or 48-hour tickets across Red, Blue, and Green routes.

2-hour small-group guided tour of Turin’s Royal Palace: Royal Apartments, Mirror Room, Royal Armory and Royal Library. Entry ticket included.

Turin’s Juventus Museum and Allianz Stadium tour pairs a multimedia Black and White museum with a guided stadium walk for $34 in 2 hours.

Milan coach trip to Serravalle Designer Outlet with a Fashion Pass, optional VIP boarding, and return transport for a full shopping day.
“Rude to black people that have tickets for ride. The ticket takers that stand in front of the bus are the rudest. Was in line and was ignored and just walked off like we were not there. This is just for those that want to go so they won’t be surprised by their behavior. The…”

Skip the line at Turin’s Royal Palace with a guided tour of Savoy apartments, the Holy Shroud Chapel, and palace gardens in 1.5 hours.

Turin’s MAUTO Museum Ticket for one day—car history, tech and culture, plus free audio guide and fast express entry.

Explore Palazzo Madama in Turin: ancient art (70,000+ works), Juvarra’s staircase, a panoramic tower, and a medieval botanical garden.

Skip the stress at Turin’s Museo Egizio with an electronic bracelet and video guide covering 30,000 Egyptian artifacts across four floors.
“I was not impressed with the company who provided us with the entry tickets to the Egyptian Museum (which is really worth a visit).”

Visit Grinzane Cavour Castle in the Langhe with an entrance ticket covering rural-life museum rooms, workshops, and the Cavour Enoteca.
“Empty. Boring. No reason to visit. Take a pic from outside and see the view. Not suitable for disabled.”

Self-guided entry to Turin’s National Museum of Cinema inside Mole Antonelliana, with a multilingual audio guide via QR codes.













