Turin is one of those cities that quietly breaks expectations. On paper, it looks elegant, reserved, almost aristocratic: wide boulevards, royal squares, Alpine order. In reality, Turin is extremely neighborhood‑dependent. Where you live here will completely define your daily experience. Two streets can mean the difference between calm and chaos, safety and stress, charm and frustration. This is not Milan, where money smooths everything out. It is not Naples, where energy dominates every corner. Turin is subtle, layered, and sometimes unforgiving if you choose the wrong area. Below is an honest, no‑nonsense ranking of Turin’s neighborhoods — from the ones most people should avoid, all the way up to the best places to live. This is written for real life: expats, students, families, and long‑term renters who want facts, not postcards. Tier 1: Areas most people should avoid These neighborhoods are not extreme by global standards, but by Turin’s standards they are the most problematic...