Italian in Turin — elegant, independent, underrated
Turin is the most underrated Italian city for language students. It has the architecture of Vienna, the food of Piedmont, two strong universities, and almost none of the tourist-driven distortion of Florence or Rome. Our Turin campus is a modern, spacious three-storey building on Via Saluzzo, a few steps from the beautiful Parco del Valentino. The location works for students who want a refined, lived-in Italian city — one where Italian is spoken at full speed, where the cafés have been there for a hundred and fifty years, and where a daily routine doesn't feel performative.
Turin is the right choice for students who want substance over scenery, and for U.S. faculty-led groups looking for a Northern Italian city that isn't Milan.
The Turin campus
Within Turin's dynamic, multicultural setting, the campus is housed in a modern building just a few steps from the beautiful Parco del Valentino. A spacious three-storey site, designed to accommodate study, work, and relaxation areas — technological innovation and comfort throughout. The educational facilities include 10 teaching classrooms, a computer lab with 18 workstations, a language lab with two two-person booths for simultaneous interpreting practice, a study room, a library, an auditorium (Aula Magna), and indoor relaxation areas.

Modern three-storey campus
A purpose-built modern building, three floors, designed for full-time student use. Bright, quiet, comfortable — the opposite of a converted apartment on a noisy street.

10 classrooms, language lab, library
10 teaching classrooms, a computer lab with 18 workstations, a language lab with two two-person interpreting booths, a study room, and a library. An Aula Magna for events and lectures.

Indoor relaxation areas
A ground-floor relaxation/break area for students between classes, plus additional indoor spaces designed for informal conversation practice and group work.

Study spaces for full-time learners
Multiple study areas across the building, designed for students who actually work between classes — the kind of space most Italian language schools don't have.
Who Turin is right for

Mature students and professionals
Turin attracts a slightly older student profile than Florence — graduate students, professionals on sabbatical, people relocating with family. The city's rhythm suits this profile perfectly.

Long-term students who want a real city
3 to 12 months in a working Italian city of nearly a million people, with universities, museums, a serious classical music scene, and rail connections to Milan (1h) and Paris (5h).

U.S. faculty-led groups (alternative to Florence)
Some U.S. faculty members specifically want a Northern Italian, non-tourist city for their students. Turin offers that, with the operational depth and faculty-led documentation U.S. institutions expect.

Italian + design / architecture / food
Turin is the home of Italian design education, of Slow Food, and of Piedmont gastronomy. Combined Italian-and-discipline programs make particular sense here.
Address & contact
Via Saluzzo, 60 – 10125 Torino
Tel: +39 011 0880078
A few steps from Parco del Valentino, in the heart of the San Salvario district.
If you came for a week,
you came to the wrong school.
Most language schools chase short-stay tourists. We do not.
We are built for the 4-week student, the 6-month visa student, the U.S. faculty-led cohort, the professional relocating for work. People who came to actually study.
See long-term programsFour cities,
one academic operation.
Same teaching framework, same student services, four very different cities. Built for adults who want measurable progress.
You study inside a real Italian university.
Florence, Mantua and Turin campuses are shared with Unicollege SSML — an Italian Higher Institute recognized by the Ministry of Education. Same building, same library, same faculty space.
You are not in a "language school floor" tucked above a souvenir shop. You are inside the academic life of an Italian university.
You lead the academics.
We handle everything else.
Approval-ready documentation for your study-abroad office. Dedicated cohort classrooms in Florence and Milan. On-campus housing in Florence. Single point of contact from pre-departure to post-program reporting.
The paperwork part.
Done properly, every week.
Consulate-grade documentation issued in the format your specific consulate expects. Residence permit support on the ground in Italy. Attendance reporting for renewals. We do this every week, not as an exception.
The international hub
City-centre Academy a short walk from the Duomo. Built for professionals, long-term visa students, and U.S. faculty-led cohorts. The fastest city to start using Italian.
CAMPUS MILANO