
Revello
Piedmont's hidden gem in Italy's truffle country
Look, everyone's heard of Alba and Barolo. But tucked away in the Cuneo province, Revello sits quietly in the shadow of the Maritime Alps, doing its own thing. This medieval town of 4,000 knows exactly what it is: a place where truffle hunters still walk the oak forests at dawn, where the local osteria serves pasta you'll dream about for months, and where you can wander cobblestone streets without bumping into tour groups every five minutes.
The thing about Revello? It doesn't try to impress you. The 11th-century abbey ruins speak for themselves. The weekly market on Via Roma sells vegetables that taste like they should. And when October rolls around, the air fills with the earthy scent of white truffles being shaved over tajarin at Osteria del Borgo. This is Piedmont without the pretense — just good food, old stones, and people who've been doing things the same way for centuries.
Best Months
APR · MAY · JUN · SEP · OCT
~22°C · moderate crowds
Culture & Context
FRESCOED MEDIEVAL HEARTLAND
Revello sits in the old Marquisate of Saluzzo, a medieval feudal state that punched well above its weight from the 12th to 16th centuries before France and then Savoy absorbed it. That history is not just in the guidebooks here — it's literally painted on the walls. The Marchioness Margherita di Foix had her private chapel decorated with frescoes in 1519, and you can still walk in and stand in front of them today.
The town has strong Occitan roots (it's called "Revel" in Occitan), which puts it in an interesting linguistic and cultural overlap zone between Italian Piedmont and the Franco-Provençal Alpine valleys. Don't expect anyone to greet you in Occitan on the street, but the cultural identity is real — festivals, signage, music, and food all carry traces of it. Revello itself is small (about 4,200 people) and primarily agricultural.
The surrounding plain grows the region's prized sweet asparagus, which shows up on spring menus everywhere. This is not a place that performs for tourists. People here are farming, running small businesses, going to Sunday mass at the Collegiata.
You're a guest in their town, not the main event.
Local Customs
RESPECT SUNDAY MASS HOURS
Sunday morning mass at the Collegiata di Santa Maria Assunta is serious business for locals. Avoid walking through for sightseeing at 10:30am on Sundays or 6pm on Saturdays — those are active mass times and it's genuinely disruptive.. Lunch is the main meal of the day in this part of Piedmont.
Restaurants typically open 12:30–14:30 and then shut firmly until evening. Don't show up at 3pm expecting to eat — you won't.. The aperitivo culture is strong just down the road in Saluzzo.
Locals from Revello will often drive to Saluzzo's piazza for an evening drink rather than staying local. Join them — a glass of Pelaverga (a local native wine) at the bar costs around €3–4 and usually comes with small snacks.. Piedmontese hospitality runs warm but quiet.
Locals won't rush over to greet you, but ask a genuine question and they'll spend twenty minutes explaining the history of the abbey. Patience and basic Italian go a long way — English is very limited in Revello itself.. Bargaining at markets is not a thing.
Fixed prices at market stalls are real prices. Tipping is appreciated but not expected — rounding up the bill is the local norm.
Safety
EXCEPTIONALLY SAFE, WATCH HEAT
Revello is exceptionally safe by any measure. It's a small agricultural town with very low crime. The main practical concerns are pedestrian safety on the narrow SP roads between town and the abbey (no sidewalks on parts of the route, so stay visible if walking), and summer heat in July and August — the Po valley plain traps heat and humidity intensely.
The abbey and valley get very hot midday in peak summer. One reviewer noted no air conditioning at an agriturismo in early July made for a rough night — ask specifically about AC before booking summer stays.
Getting Around
TRAIN-BUS ACCESSIBLE, BIKE FRIENDLY
Getting to Revello without a car requires a train to Saluzzo followed by the Line 104 bus (13 minutes, hourly). The Arenaways train on the Cuneo–Saluzzo–Savigliano line was reactivated in 2025 after 12 years of suspended service, running up to 28 trains a day with coverage from 6am to 9pm — a genuine improvement that makes Revello properly accessible from Turin (about 1h 50min total with the bus connection). The nearest airports are Turin Caselle (TRN, about 70km) and Levaldigi/Cuneo (CUF, about 30km).
Getting around the Revello municipality itself on foot is fine for the historic center and abbey — but the Valle Po farmhouse area and Mombracco trailheads really need a car or bike. Cycling is genuinely popular here along the Po River path. Rental bikes are available in Saluzzo.
For the Staffarda Abbey specifically: it sits in the Staffarda frazione a few kilometers from the town center. Driving takes 5 minutes; cycling is pleasant on flat terrain. The abbey itself is closed Mondays and on January 1st, December 24th, 25th, and 31st.
Useful Phrases
Revello Itineraries
Things to Do in Revello

Abbazia di Staffarda
90 min
Revello Historic Center
60 min
Local Vineyard Visit
90 minMoney-Saving Tips
- 1.Shop at Saturday's farmers market on Piazza Denina for local produce at 30% less than Turin prices
- 2.Book accommodation outside the historic walls on Via Staffarda to save €20-40 per night
- 3.Visit during shoulder seasons (April-May, September-October) for lower hotel rates and restaurant prices
- 4.Buy wine directly from producers in surrounding hills rather than tourist shops in Alba
- 5.Take the train to Turin instead of driving to avoid €15 daily parking fees in the city
- 6.Eat lunch at trattorias rather than dinner - many offer the same dishes for €10-15 less
- 7.Stay at working farms like Cascina San Giuseppe for authentic experience at €60 per night
Travel Tips
- •Learn basic Italian phrases - English isn't widely spoken outside hotels and main restaurants
- •Book restaurants in advance during truffle season (October-November) as tables fill quickly
- •Bring cash - many small businesses don't accept cards, especially at the weekly market
- •Pack layers for shoulder seasons as mountain weather changes quickly throughout the day
- •Rent a car to explore surrounding valleys and truffle hunting areas not accessible by public transport
- •Visit Enoteca San Martino early in your stay to get local wine recommendations from owner Giuseppe
- •Download offline maps as cell service can be spotty in the surrounding Alpine valleys
