Turin Sandro Pertini Airport (TRN) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Turin’s airport at Caselle, 16 km north of the city with the Alps filling the horizon behind it, has just become markedly easier to use. After years of running to an awkward peripheral terminus, the upgraded Torino–Ceres railway was reconnected to the national network and the airport train now runs through to the central Porta Susa station — a change that finally gives Turin a fast, cheap, central rail link. The airport is a mid-size northern hub: Ryanair bases aircraft here with the largest schedule, Wizz Air and easyJet behind it, and a spread of legacy carriers on top, serving over a hundred destinations. Turin itself is one of Italy’s most underrated cities — the first capital of unified Italy, royal Savoy architecture, the Egyptian Museum, and the birthplace of vermouth and gianduja chocolate. This guide covers the new train, the bus, the border under EES, the lounges, and the layover verdict.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Turin Airport (Aeroporto di Torino-Caselle “Sandro Pertini”)
TRN / LIMF
~16 km north of Turin
Caselle Aeroporto → Torino Porta Susa, ~30 min, ~€3.70, every ~30 min
SADEM/Arriva to Porta Nuova & Porta Susa, ~€7.50 (+€1 on board), ~37 min
~€35–40, ~25–30 min
Euro (€) — Italy is in the eurozone
Yes. EES live; ETIAS pending Q4 2026
Piemonte Lounge (airside) — Priority Pass / Amex; Sala Sagat (landside)
Ryanair (base), Wizz Air, easyJet, ITA Airways, Iberia, KLM, Jet2
One passenger terminal
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Alpine Gateway
- 🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
- 🚆 3. The New Rail Link, the SADEM Bus & Taxis
- 🛋️ 4. The Piemonte Lounge & Sala Sagat
- 🍽️ 5. Piedmontese Food & Drink Before You Fly
- 💡 6. Insider: Turin’s Royal Centre & the Layover Math
- 🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. Single Terminal & the Alpine Gateway
Turin runs a single passenger terminal at Caselle. The layout is straightforward — landside check-in halls (with the Sala Sagat lounge), security, then an airside zone with shops, bars and the airside Piemonte Lounge near gates 6–9. As one of northern Italy’s larger regional airports it carries a broad year-round schedule: Ryanair is the dominant carrier and uses Turin as a base, running around 184 weekly departures across some 38 destinations, with Wizz Air the next largest and easyJet, ITA Airways, Iberia, KLM and Jet2 filling out a network of roughly 25 airlines to over a hundred airports. Winter adds ski traffic — Turin is the gateway to the Piedmontese Alps and the resorts of the Via Lattea and Sestriere, which hosted the 2006 Winter Olympics.
🛂 2. EES Live, ETIAS Pending & the Schengen Reality
Italy is in the Schengen Area and uses the euro, so flights arriving from within Schengen clear with no passport control.
For non-EU arrivals, the Entry/Exit System (EES) became fully operational at the Schengen external border on 10 April 2026, after a phased rollout from October 2025. It replaces the manual passport stamp with a biometric entry/exit record (face and fingerprints) tracking the 90-in-180-day short-stay limit; the first entry of a cycle takes longer while the record is created.
The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) is separate and not yet live, expected in the last quarter of 2026. Once running, visa-exempt non-EU passport holders (US, UK, Canada, Australia and similar) will apply online for a paid authorisation before flying. Until then, a valid passport is all that is needed to land at Turin.
| Passport | Visa for short stay? | EES applies? | ETIAS once live (Q4 2026)? |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA / Swiss | No | No | No |
| UK | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| USA / Canada / Australia / NZ | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| Japan / South Korea / Singapore | No (≤90/180) | Yes | Yes |
| India / China / South Africa | Yes — Schengen visa | Yes (recorded at entry) | N/A while visa required |
🚆 3. The New Rail Link, the SADEM Bus & Taxis
The train is now the best option, and that is recent news. The upgraded Torino–Ceres line was reconnected to the national rail network, and Trenitalia services run from the airport’s Caselle Aeroporto station through to Torino Porta Susa — the central station — in about 30 minutes, with a stop also at Lingotto. Trains run roughly every 30 minutes across the day (about 05:00 to 21:25 on weekdays) and the fare is about €3.70. The old terminus at Torino Dora has been closed in favour of this through-routing, so older guides pointing you to Dora are out of date. From Porta Susa you are central, with the city’s metro and tram network to hand. Validate the ticket before boarding.
The SADEM/Arriva airport bus is the alternative, running direct to both Porta Nuova and Porta Susa stations in about 37 minutes for €7.50 (with €1 added if you buy from the driver). It is useful when the train timetable has a gap, but the train is now cheaper and comparably quick.
Taxis run about €35–40 to the centre, around 25–30 minutes — Caselle is the furthest of these airports from its city, so the taxi is the priciest of the set. Use the official rank.
🛋️ 4. The Piemonte Lounge & Sala Sagat
Turin has two lounges, and the distinction matters. The main one is the Piemonte Lounge, airside after security on the upper floor near gates 6–9, with runway views; it accepts Priority Pass and is on the Amex network. There is also a Sala Sagat, this one landside in the check-in area (zones C/D), useful before security or for a delayed early arrival. For most travellers the airside Piemonte Lounge is the one to aim for — a calm seat, Italian coffee and a light buffet before the gate. Pre-booking is offered for a small fee at peak times.
🍽️ 5. Piedmontese Food & Drink Before You Fly
Piedmont’s table is one of Italy’s richest, and Turin is its capital, so the carry-out options here are unusually good. The chocolate is the obvious one: gianduiotto, the foil-wrapped ingot of chocolate and Piedmont hazelnut, was invented in Turin and is the easiest premium souvenir to fly home. The city is also the birthplace of vermouth — the fortified, botanical wine that Antonio Benedetto Carpano first made here in the 18th century — and a bottle of a good Turin vermouth travels well. To drink on the spot, order a bicerin, the layered espresso, chocolate and cream drink served in the historic cafés. For food, the regional anchors are agnolotti del plin (small pinched pasta parcels), grissini (the thin breadsticks, a Turin invention), bagna càuda (a warm anchovy-and-garlic dip), and the great Nebbiolo reds — Barolo and Barbaresco — from the Langhe hills south of the city. Chocolate, vermouth and wine all clear EU customs without issue.
💡 6. Insider: Turin’s Royal Centre & the Layover Math
Turin is a planned, porticoed, monumental city — the seat of the House of Savoy and the first capital of unified Italy from 1861 to 1865 — and it rewards a visitor more than its industrial reputation lets on. Two anchors stand out. The Museo Egizio (Egyptian Museum) holds one of the most important collections of Egyptian antiquities anywhere, often ranked second only to Cairo’s. The Mole Antonelliana, the spire that is the city’s symbol, houses the National Cinema Museum and a panoramic lift. Beyond those: the Savoy Royal Palace and the residences that form a UNESCO World Heritage group, the grand café culture along the arcaded streets, and Lingotto, the former Fiat factory with the rooftop test track Fellini and others filmed, now a cultural complex with the Pinacoteca Agnelli.
The layover math: the train to Porta Susa is about 30 minutes each way for €3.70, so a layover of four and a half to five hours makes central Turin realistic — the Egyptian Museum or the Mole, a bicerin in a historic café, and back, with at least a 90-minute return-security buffer. A four-hour layover is enough for a walk through the central piazzas and a café but not a museum. Under four hours, stay airside; Caselle is too far out to risk a tight turn.
🧭 7. Practical Notes Before You Go
- Validate your ticket. The airport train and SADEM bus tickets must be stamped before or on boarding; an unvalidated ticket counts as no ticket and draws a fine if checked.
- Cash and the exchange trap. Draw euro from a bank ATM (Bancomat) rather than the airport bureau de change. Cards work almost everywhere, but keep small change for the train ticket machine.
- Reduced-mobility assistance. Free under EU rules but must be booked through your airline at least 48 hours ahead; the meeting point is signed in the terminal.
- The Malpensa alternative. A direct coach links Turin and Milan Malpensa (Arriva/Autostradale, from about €10), useful if your long-haul connection is out of Malpensa rather than Caselle. Caselle itself has on-site short- and long-stay parking if you are driving in.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Feature | Current Data (2026) |
|---|---|
| Official name | Aeroporto di Torino-Caselle “Sandro Pertini” |
| IATA / ICAO | TRN / LIMF |
| Location | ~16 km north of Turin, Piedmont |
| Network | ~25 airlines to 100+ airports; Ryanair ~184 weekly departures |
| Terminals | 1 |
| Train to centre | Caselle Aeroporto → Porta Susa (via Lingotto), ~30 min, ~€3.70, every ~30 min |
| Bus to centre | SADEM/Arriva to Porta Nuova & Porta Susa, ~€7.50 (+€1 on board), ~37 min |
| Taxi to centre | ~€35–40, ~25–30 min |
| Currency | Euro (€) |
| Schengen status | Member; EES live (10 Apr 2026), ETIAS pending Q4 2026 |
| Lounges | Piemonte Lounge (airside, Priority Pass/Amex); Sala Sagat (landside) |
| Dominant carriers | Ryanair (base), Wizz Air, easyJet, ITA Airways, Iberia, KLM, Jet2 |
| Recent change | Torino–Ceres rail reconnected; airport train now runs to Porta Susa |
| Best layover move | Train to Porta Susa + Egyptian Museum / Mole (4.5–5 hr+ layover) |



