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The Best Historic and Modern Cafes in Turin: A Local's Complete Guide

T

The Voyage Co.

Turin's cafe culture tells the story of how tradition and innovation live side by side in this city. I've spent years seeking out both the historic institutions and the new spaces where coffee lovers gather. Let me walk you through them.

Stefania is a Turin native and explorer of unusual spaces — from hybrid spots like Mirafiori Cafè inside the historic FIAT workshops to family-friendly venues in the Quartiere Juvarriano where books meet the ritual of coffee.

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1. Caffè San Carlo

Piazza San Carlo

This is where Turin's history lives. Opened in 1822, Caffè San Carlo sits on Piazza San Carlo like a guardian of the city's Risorgimento past. The baroque details inside remind you that this is not just a cafe, it's a monument. Order the signature brioche called "La Carla" and an espresso, and sit with the weight of nearly two centuries of Turin around you.

The atmosphere is refined and elegant. You see elderly Torinese reading newspapers, business people in quiet meetings, couples enjoying calm moments. It's the Turin that values tradition and the ritual of taking coffee seriously.

2. Baratti & Milano

Piazza Castello

Another historic institution, Baratti & Milano opened in 1858 in stunning Liberty style. This is where you come for hot chocolate made the traditional way, for their signature gianduiotti and cremini chocolates. The coffee here comes with cream and roasted hazelnuts — a Turin tradition that tastes like the city's industrial past transformed into something beautiful.

The interior is all art deco elegance, and the patisserie cases display chocolates that look like tiny works of art. Italians call it a "granducale" institution, and standing inside you understand why.

3. Caffè al Bicerin

Near Consolata Sanctuary

Dating back to 1763, Al Bicerin is famous as the birthplace of the bicerin drink itself: coffee, chocolate, and milk layered together in a small glass. If you come to Turin and miss this cafe, you've missed understanding something essential about the city. The bicerin is warm, rich, and oddly comforting on cold mornings.

The space is small and intimate, with wooden furnishings that feel authentically 18th-century. Travellers and Torinesi mix here, bound together by the simple ritual of drinking bicerin.

4. Le Altalene Libri e Caffè

Quartiere Juvarriano

This is a hybrid space that represents the new Turin: part cafe, part bookshop, part playroom. It's where families come for morning coffee and quality time, where artists and thinkers gather, where the rhythm feels intentional and warm. The food is thoughtfully prepared, the brunch is excellent, and the space itself encourages you to stay.

What makes it special is that it's beloved by Torinesi precisely because it respects them. Parents can bring children, readers have space to settle in with a book, and the coffee is genuinely good.

5. Sweetlab

Central Turin

For something more modern and playful, Sweetlab offers brunch and pastries that feel contemporary while respecting Turin's culinary traditions. Their red velvet cheesecake is famous, and they serve British afternoon tea with Italian refinement. The atmosphere is stylish and relaxed, popular with younger Torinesi who love good food and good design.

6. Mirafiori Cafè

Historic FIAT Workshops

This is what I love most about Turin: a cafe housed inside the historic FIAT workshops. It's a hybrid space where industrial history becomes a backdrop to coffee, pastries, and conversation. The location itself tells you something about Turin's identity, about how the city transforms old spaces into new gathering places.

Coming here feels like participating in Turin's evolution. You sit in history while sipping espresso with people who work in the neighbourhood, who use this space as part of their daily life.

Turin is a city of layers — Risorgimento elegance, Liberty patisseries, FIAT-era industrial bones — and its cafes carry every one of them. Visit at least three of these in a single trip and you'll already understand more about the city than most travellers ever do.

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