
The Questura di Torino confirmed on December 24 that it has signed a free-use contract with the local Curia to relocate the city’s Immigration Office to the Santo Volto complex in Via Val della Torre 3. The move, formalised on 23 December and now awaiting ministerial approval, will bring together three currently scattered service counters—permit pick-up, asylum-file integration, and postal-application processing—under one roof by mid-2026.
Since the closure of the old one-stop desk in Corso Verona earlier this year, the Questura has run temporary counters in Via Botticelli, Via Fratelli Ruffini and Via Doré. Officials say consolidation will improve workflow efficiency, allow for expanded waiting areas and provide better accessibility for elderly and disabled applicants.
For applicants who prefer professional guidance when dealing with Italian bureaucracy, VisaHQ can streamline the process. The agency’s platform (https://www.visahq.com/italy/) lets users verify visa or residence-permit requirements, generate the correct forms and even arrange courier collection of supporting documents—services that can minimise trips to physical offices like the Questura di Torino while ensuring all paperwork meets current standards.
The new location is designed to accommodate the sharp rise in demand: permit issuances in Turin have increased by more than 20 % in 2025, driven partly by renewals of temporary-protection titles for Ukrainian nationals and the growth of digital bookings via the Prenotafacile portal. The Santo Volto site offers modular space for biometric enrolment booths and staff offices, as well as secure storage for residence-card stock.
For employers and relocation managers, the reorganisation promises shorter appointment lead times and a single physical destination for all immigration formalities in Piedmont’s economic hub. The Questura says satellite counters in Bardonecchia, Ivrea and the soon-to-open Rivoli office will remain operational for remote communities.
Since the closure of the old one-stop desk in Corso Verona earlier this year, the Questura has run temporary counters in Via Botticelli, Via Fratelli Ruffini and Via Doré. Officials say consolidation will improve workflow efficiency, allow for expanded waiting areas and provide better accessibility for elderly and disabled applicants.
For applicants who prefer professional guidance when dealing with Italian bureaucracy, VisaHQ can streamline the process. The agency’s platform (https://www.visahq.com/italy/) lets users verify visa or residence-permit requirements, generate the correct forms and even arrange courier collection of supporting documents—services that can minimise trips to physical offices like the Questura di Torino while ensuring all paperwork meets current standards.
The new location is designed to accommodate the sharp rise in demand: permit issuances in Turin have increased by more than 20 % in 2025, driven partly by renewals of temporary-protection titles for Ukrainian nationals and the growth of digital bookings via the Prenotafacile portal. The Santo Volto site offers modular space for biometric enrolment booths and staff offices, as well as secure storage for residence-card stock.
For employers and relocation managers, the reorganisation promises shorter appointment lead times and a single physical destination for all immigration formalities in Piedmont’s economic hub. The Questura says satellite counters in Bardonecchia, Ivrea and the soon-to-open Rivoli office will remain operational for remote communities.










