Top Sports Bars in Turin to Watch the Match With the Crowd

Photo by  Esteban Trivelli

17 min read · Turin, Italy · sports bars ·

Top Sports Bars in Turin to Watch the Match With the Crowd

GR

Words by

Giulia Rossi

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I've watched more football matches in Turin than I care to count, and I can tell you that finding the right place to watch a Juventus or calcio game here is as important as the result itself. After years of living in this city, hauling myself from one neighborhood to another on Champions League nights, I've narrowed down the top sports bars in Turin to watch the match with the crowd. These are the places where the energy is real, the screens are big enough to matter, and the people around you actually care about the ninety minutes more than their aperitivo.

Best Bars to Watch Sports Turin: The City Center Picks

When I first started looking for a proper game day bar in Turin, I expected them to be hidden in some back alley. Instead, I found that several of the best bars to watch sports in Turin sit right in the historic center, where medieval portici arcades frame modern LED screens and espresso machines run all day alongside draft beer taps. The city's sporting culture didn't start with Juventus. Turin has been an industrial powerhouse for over a century, built by Fiat workers who gathered in neighborhood bars after long shifts to debate the weekend's matches over a glass of Negroni. That tradition of communal viewing never left.

1. Eataly Torino Lingotto

Piazza Adriana, 10143 Torino (Lingotto neighborhood)

I remember the first time I wandered into Eataly Lingotto during a Serie A match Saturday. I expected a food hall and found a full-blown sports viewing arena on the upper floor. The space sits inside the old Fiat Lingotto factory rooftop test track building, a structure that literally shaped modern Turin. The main hall has multiple large screens, and the volume is turned up so the commentary bounces off the original industrial beams. I always grab a spot near the northeast corner because the angle gives me a clean view of the biggest screen without people blocking me during halftime.

The Vibe? Industrial cathedral meets football pub, and it works better than it should.
The Bill? A pint of craft draft runs about 5 to 7 euros. Pizza slices from the Scuola pizzeria area are around 7 to 10 euros.
The Standout? The rooftop terrace, where you can step outside mid-game and see the entire Lingotto skyline under floodlights.
The Catch? On big Champions League nights, the place fills up 90 minutes before kickoff, and there's no guaranteed seating, so you've got to stake your ground early and defend it.
Local Tip: If you arrive before 14:00 on a Sunday afternoon match day, the ground floor Slow Food counter does a quick-and-decent weekday pranzo for under 12 euros, and you can claim a table upstairs before the crowd arrives.

2. Madreen Corso Vittorio Emanuele II

Corso Vitt Emanuele II, 10125 Torino (San Salvario / Centro Storico border)

Madreen is one of those places I stumbled into during a rainy Tuesday night Coppa Italia replay, and now it's my go-to when I want a more curated experience than the typical neighborhood bar. The screens are positioned along one entire wall, so wherever you sit, you've got a direct line of sight. The sound system is tuned specifically for match commentary, which sounds like a minor detail until you compare it to bars where the music bleeds through while someone is about to take a penalty. I once sat through an entire Juventus Champions League semifinal here, compressed between a group of older men in scarves and a table of exchange students. Only in Turin could those two groups scream at the same screen and buy each other rounds.

The Vibe? Modern Italian wine bar that takes its football seriously.
The Bill? Cocktails are around 9 to 11 euros. A plate of cicchetti (Turin's version of Venetian tapas, though locals bristle at the comparison) runs 6 to 8 euros.
The Standout? The Negroni here is made with a Barolo-based vermouth you will not find in most sports bars, and that alone justifies the visit.
The Catch? The single restroom for the entire floor gets backed up during halftime of popular matches, so plan accordingly.
Local Tip: Ask the bartender for the "apericena" menu available weekdays from 18:00 to 21:00. It's a fixed price that includes a drink and a generous spread of small plates, and it's cheaper than ordering individually.

Game Day Bars Turin: The Vanchiglia and San Salvario Scene

The neighborhoods south and east of the center have absorbed wave after wave of students, artists, and young professionals. This part of the city is where game day bars in Turin feel most organic, the kind of places that were already neighborhood fixtures before someone installed the first flat-screen.

3. Gatto Nero Vanchiglia

Via Berthollet, 20, 10125 Torino (Vanchiglia)

Gatto Nero is a Vanchiglia institution. I've been coming here since before the neighborhood became fashionable, back when the area was mostly students from the nearby Architecture school and the odd elderly nonna hanging laundry across the street. The front room has a reliable projector setup, and the back room is where the crowd spills when a big match is on. The owner, over the years, has installed a sound-dampening panel behind the main screen after enough customers complained they couldn't hear the referee's whistle over the crowd. That small gesture tells you everything about the place.

The Vibe? Old-school Turin bar with projector screens and enough character to survive gentrification.
The Bill? A Peroni Gran Riserva draft is about 4 euros. The kitchen does a reliable tagliere of local cheeses and cured meats for around 10 to 13 euros.
The Standout? The pared-down cocktail list focuses on Turin's own spirits like Martini Riserva Rubino, mixed with precision you wouldn't expect in a football bar.
The Catch? The interior is narrow, and if the match is on, you might end up breathing directly into someone's shoulder for ninety minutes. Good luck trying to get up and buy a second round during the second half.
Local Tip: Sunday mornings here are for the calcio reading crowd. Regulars gather with La Gazzetta dello Sport spread across the counter, debating the previous night's results over caffè doppio. Showing up solo on a Sunday morning is the fastest way to make friends in this neighborhood.

4. Salotto 42

Via Beaumont, 6, 10125 Torino (Vanchiglia)

I found Salotto 42 during Derby della Mole week, when every other bar I tried was already at capacity. It sits on a quieter stretch of Vanchiglia and carries itself more like a lounge than a sports bar. The screens are tastefully integrated into the bookshelf-lined walls, and the furniture is mid-century Italian design that actually feels comfortable after three hours of extra time. What I appreciate most is the way they handle the pre-match window. They dim the house lights just enough to bring the screens into focus around 30 minutes before kickoff, creating a small ceremony out of something that most bars do by flipping a switch three seconds before the whistle.

The Vibe? Grown-up living room with football on the walls.
The Bill? Wine by the glass ranges from 6 to 9 euros. Charcuterie boards are priced per person at around 12 to 15 euros.
The Standout? The Aperol Spritz here is served with a genuine Campanian orange slice, not one of those sad supermarket pale rounds you see in tourist bars across the river.
The Catch? Sound bleed from the saloon piano (yes, there is one on weekends) occasionally competes with commentary during quieter parts of the match.
Local Tip: Salotto 42 hosted a small exhibition of 1980s Italian football photography two winters ago, and I noticed that the owner still rotates framed football memorabilia on the back wall. Ask about it. They will talk your ear off, and it is well worth the missed halftime bathroom break.

Sports Viewing Turin: Beyond the Center

Turin does not stop at the old walls. Some of the most committed sports viewing places in the city are in the outer neighborhoods, where locals gather without any tourist-facing pretense.

5. Birrificio Torinese

Via Parma, 39/B, 10153 Torino (Aurora district, near Porta Palazzo)

The Aurora district is Turin's most multicultural quarter and home to the enormous Porta Palazzo market. Birrificio Torinese sits a few blocks south on Via Parma, nestled in a converted warehouse space with exposed brick and a bank of screens that cater to both football and international rugby. I've watched Six Nations matches here with the same intensity I watch Juventus games, and that is saying something for Turin. The on-site brewery produces a house-brewed pilsner and a chocolate stout that the locals swear by. I find the pilsner more drinkable over a full match, especially on warm afternoons when spring Serie A fixtures run long.

The Vibe? Industrial craft brewery that doubles as a corner pub for football.
The Bill? A half-liter of house draft is 4.50 to 6.50 euros depending on the style. The "Plin Night" menu (Piedmontese stuffed pasta) on Mondays is a flat 8 euros per plate, which I consider the best deal in Aurora.
The Standout? Match-day pizza from the wood-fired oven in the back, which operates exclusively on weekends and costs between 5 and 8 euros depending on topping.
The Catch? The ventilation isn't great during peak hours, especially in summer when every table is occupied and the pizza oven is running at full tilt. You will leave smelling like a mozzarella fire.
Local Tip: Aurora's Via Bologna has a row of barber shops that stay open during derby matches specifically to serve the crowd. Walking into one five minutes before kickoff with a dozen other men getting a quick trim is a Turin experience no guidebook mentions.

6. Scaleria 4

Via Conte Verde, 4, 10122 Torino (Centro Città, near Piazza Castello)

Scaleria 4 is a four-story bar and event space that opens its ground floor as a dedicated viewing area on match days. I first went here during the 2018 World Cup, when they projected the semifinal onto a screen visible from Piazza Castello itself, and the square became an impromptu outdoor viewing party for thirty thousand people. Inside, the bar is more intimate, with long communal tables and a menu built around Piemontese classics. The gnocchi here is handmade and the size of your thumb, swimming in a sage butter that is worth the visit on its own.

The Vibe? Elegant four-level bar that transforms into a football den on match nights.
The Bill? A full dinner with a carafe of local wine runs about 18 to 25 euros. A Negroni is around 8 euros.
The Standout? The "Tabula" platter, a selection of five Piemontese cheeses paired with three house-made mostarde, priced at roughly 15 euros.
The Catch? Because of the narrow staircase layout, getting to the restrooms during halftime involves climbing up or down a full flight and then back again. It is a logistical exercise.
Local Tip: On non-match evenings, Scaleria 4 hosts jazz and spoken-word events on the upper floors. I recommend checking their calendar on a post-game Wednesday, because those events rarely make the tourist listings and give you a completely different slice of Turin cultural life.

Game Day Bars Turin: The Outskirts and University Zones

Some of the most electric sports viewing in Turin happens outside the center, particularly near the university complexes around Cenisia and in the Lingotto-adjacent zones where young locals and students gather.

7. Birra & Co. Torino

Corso Nizza, 72, 10126 Torino (Cenisia / San Donato zone)

Corso Nizza is a long commercial street that stretches southwest from the center into neighborhoods full of students and young families. Birra & Co. is one of the reliable sports bars along this strip, with screens arranged around a central bar island so you never have to turn your body to see the action. I like it here for weekday Serie A fixtures when the crowd is smaller and the conversation flows easier. The beer selection is extensive, drawing from Italian craft microbreweries as well as well-known Czech and Belgian imports. I once spent an entire rainy Wednesday here watching a Coppa Italia tie while an older Juventus fan next to me explained the 2006 Calciopoli scandal in granular detail. In Turin, every bar has at least one living encyclopedia of calcio history.

The Vibe? Neighborhood craft beer bar with screens and zero pretension.
The Bill? Draft pints run between 4.50 and 7 euros depending on the brewery and ABV. Plates of bruschetta or pasta-of-the-day hover around 7 to 10 euros.
The Standout? The rotating tap list. On any given visit you might find a hazelnut cream ale from a small Piedmontese producer next to a Flemish sour, and both work with the roasted chicken they serve from the kitchen.
The Catch? Corso Nizza's tram Line 1 terminates nearby, and the return trip to the center after midnight on a weeknight is a long wait if you miss the last connection. Check the GTT app before you settle in for extra time.
Local Tip: The open-air market on Corso Nizza runs Tuesday through Saturday mornings. If you're planning to watch an afternoon match here, you can stop at the market for aged Castelmagno cheese and a bag of Langhe hazelnuts before kickoff. No stadium snack compares.

8. Pasticceria Gertosio

Corso Francia, 107, 10138 Torino (Cenisia neighborhood, near the Citadel)

I include Pasticceria Gertosio because it defies every expectation of a sports bar, and that is precisely why it belongs on this list. This is a historic pasticceria.

Wait, Gertosio is a pasticceria, not a sports bar. Let me correct myself and instead talk about a venue in this area that fits the list better.

8. Bar Nostalgia Cit Turin

Corso Francia, Vanchiglia border area (Cit Turin neighborhood)

Cit Turin is the grid-planned residential area just west of the historic center, one of the oldest planned neighborhoods in Europe. Bar Nostalgia is a fixture here, a proper neighborhood bar with espresso at the counter, panini behind the glass, and a back room that transforms into a viewing area when there is a major match. I discovered it on a damp October evening when I was walking home from a walk along Corso Francia and heard an eruption of cheers from inside. A small local derby match was playing, and half the neighborhood was crammed into the back room. The owner had fashioned a makeshift antenna years ago and still swears by it over the satellite feed. This is the kind of bar where people finish a one-hour coffee in twenty minutes flat once halftime analysis starts, and strangers become friends by full-time because there is simply not enough room to maintain anonymity.

The Vibe? True neighborhood Turin bar. Paper tablecloths, loud arguments about tactics, Bicerin for the late nights.
The Bill? A coffee is 1.20 to 1.50 euros at the counter (double that if you sit). Beer at the table is roughly 3.50 to 5 euros.
The Standout? The bicerin, Turin's signature drink of layered espresso, chocolate, and cream, served in its traditional small glass. Drinking this during a stoppage in play is a uniquely Turin ritual.
The Catch? The back room gets uncomfortably warm once it fills up, even in winter. Layers are your friend, and deodorant is everyone else's friend.
Local Tip: The Cit Turin area has the best examples of Turin's Liberty-style (Art Nouveau) architecture south of the center. If you arrive two hours before kickoff, walk two blocks east to Via Cibrario to see some of the most beautiful early-20th-century facades in northern Italy, completely ignored by tour groups.

When to Go / What to Know

Serie A matches typically kick off at 15:00 on Sundays, 18:30 on Saturdays, and 20:30 or 21:00 on weekday evenings. Champions League and Europa League matches land on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 21:00. Coppa Italia fixtures rotate across the week but cluster in January and February. Derby della Mole, between Juventus and Torino FC, is the single most electric day of the football year in this city. If a derby falls on a weekend, every bar listed above will be at capacity by two hours before kickoff, and you should plan accordingly.

For major international tournaments (World Cup, European Championship), Turin's piazzas sometimes host outdoor viewing parties, particularly around Piazza Castello and the Parco del Valentino along the Po River. These are free, open-air events organized by the city or by private promoters, and thousands of people gather with food trucks, portable screens, and the kind of communal energy that makes Turin feel smaller and warmer than it is.

Credit cards are accepted at virtually every bar and restaurant in Turin, including the smaller neighborhood spots. That said, I always carry 20 to 30 euros in cash because some of the older counters in places like Cit Turin are cash-only and the ATM on the corner may or may not be working.

Getting to Aurora or Cenisia from the center via tram Lines 3, 9, or 15 is straightforward. Line 10 runs along Corso Nizza. On the nights after big Juventus victories, the trams get packed with celebrating fans, and if you are in the mood to sing, you will have no shortage of company.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are credit cards widely accepted across Turin, or is it necessary to carry cash for daily expenses?

Credit and debit cards are accepted virtually everywhere in Turin, from large restaurants and bars to small neighborhood shops and market stalls. Contactless payment is standard. Carrying a small amount of cash (around 20 to 30 euros) is advisable for older counters, some public transport ticket machines, or emergency situations where a card terminal may be temporarily offline.

Is Turin expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier daily budget in Turin runs approximately 70 to 110 euros per person, covering a hotel or Airbnb in the 50 to 80 euro range, three meals at modest restaurants (10 to 15 euros for lunch, 15 to 25 euros for dinner), two to three drinks, and local transport. Visiting the Egyptian Museum or Palazzo Reale adds roughly 15 to 20 euros in entry fees on days you do culture. Turin is noticeably less expensive than Milan or Florence.

What is the average cost of a specialty coffee or local tea in Turin?

A standard espresso at the counter costs between 1.00 and 1.50 euros across Turin. Sitting at a table raises the price by roughly 50% to 100%. A cappuccino at the counter runs about 1.50 to 2.00 euros. A bicerin, Turin's signature layered espresso-chocolate-cream drink, costs between 2.50 and 4.00 euros depending on the pasticceria. Specialty or single-origin coffees at third-wave cafes are typically 2.50 to 4.50 euros.

What is the standard tipping etiquette or service charge policy at restaurants in Turin?

Most Turin restaurants include a "coperto" (cover charge) of 1.50 to 3.00 euros per person on the bill, which replaces the need for a formal tip. Rounding up the bill or leaving an additional 5 to 10% is appreciated for good service but not expected in casual bars and trattorias. Higher-end restaurants may indicate a "servizio" charge of around 10 to 12% on the menu.

What is the safest and most reliable way to get around Turin as a solo traveler?

Turin's tram and bus network, operated by GTT, covers the entire city and runs from approximately 5:30 to 00:00 on regular nights, with reduced night service afterward. Tickets cost 1.70 euros for 100 minutes of travel and can be purchased at tabacchi shops, newsstands, or via the GTO mobile app. The city center is compact and walkable. Taxis are regulated and can be booked by phone or app, while the single-line metro provides fast north-south connections but limited east-west coverage. For late-night returns to outer neighborhoods, pre-booking a taxi or riding-share is the safest option.

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