Personally vetted instructors

Business Italian tutors, lessons & classes

Buongiorno How Italian offices answer the phone before noon.

Personally vetted Business Italian tutors. Lessons calibrated to the way Italian professionals actually negotiate, present, write contracts, run meetings, and conduct business across Milan, Rome, Turin, and the Italian diaspora.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Business Italian tutor and adult student in conversation
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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Business Italian tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching Italian since 2006. Business Italian has always been a real demand here — pre-deal preparation for executives heading to Italian leadership meetings, contract reading for attorneys and finance professionals, presentation prep for designers and architects pitching Italian firms, and long-running monthly maintenance for executives whose Italian counterparts insist on conducting business in Italian. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real backgrounds in Italian business culture and language.

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Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in Business Italian. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

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Gergo aziendale — register & culture

5 ways to sound like you actually do business in Italian

These aren't textbook expressions. They're the everyday words and habits that separate executives who've worked with Italian partners from those who haven't. Screenshot the infographic, then book a tutor to learn the rest.

  1. 01

    Egregio / Gentile

    The standard formal email opening. Egregio Dottor Rossi for men, Gentile Dottoressa Bianchi for women. Using a generic Salve or skipping the salutation altogether in a first-contact business email reads as cold. The Italian email register is more elaborate than English; learn the formal openings first.

    e.g. Egregio Dottor Rossi, La ringrazio per il Suo cortese messaggio.

  2. 02

    Diamoci del tu

    "Let's switch to tu." The explicit invitation to drop the formal Lei form between colleagues. Wait for it to be offered. Switching to tu on your own initiative — even after months of working together — reads as American-presumptuous. When the invitation comes, accept it; not switching back is a small social cue that the relationship has warmed.

    e.g. Senta, possiamo darci del tu? Lavoriamo insieme da troppo tempo.

  3. 03

    Resto a disposizione

    "I remain at your disposal." The standard professional email closing before Cordiali saluti or Distinti saluti. Signals readiness for follow-up without sounding eager. American-style closings ("thanks!", "looking forward") translate badly; Resto a Sua disposizione per qualsiasi chiarimento is the safe, professional default.

    e.g. Resto a Sua disposizione per qualsiasi chiarimento. Cordiali saluti.

  4. 04

    Pranzo di lavoro

    A working lunch — and a real medium for business, not a courtesy. Italian colleagues will use a 90-minute lunch to decide things that would take five meetings elsewhere. Refusing the espresso afterward, rushing, or talking shop the whole time misses the social part. The relationship is part of the deal.

    e.g. Ne parliamo a pranzo, è più semplice.

  5. 05

    Chiusura estiva

    The August shutdown. Italy effectively closes for the second half of August — manufacturing, finance, government offices. American executives scheduling July or August Italian projects routinely lose two to three weeks they didn't plan for. Treat August as off-limits unless you've confirmed otherwise in writing.

    e.g. Riprendiamo a settembre, da noi c'è la chiusura estiva.

About Business Italian

Italian for the boardroom

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Business Italian

Formal register and email Italian

The Lei form, conditional and subjunctive moods, formal email salutations and closings, the professional vocabulary that distinguishes business Italian from conversational Italian. Drills include real Italian business emails — first-contact, follow-up, negotiation, escalation, internal team — read and rewritten until the register sounds native.

Finance, legal, and contract vocabulary

Fatturato, bilancio, utile, perdita, cassa integrazione, partita IVA, codice fiscale, procura, consiglio di amministrazione, amministratore delegato. Industry-specific vocabulary calibrated to your sector — corporate finance, contract law, M&A, marketing, design, manufacturing — with real Italian source documents.

Meeting dynamics and presentation prep

How Italian business meetings actually run: extended opening pleasantries, hierarchical decision-making, side conversations, the espresso ritual. Presentation Italian — slide language, transition phrases, handling Q&A, fielding interruptions in Italian. Role-play with a tutor who's run these meetings, not just taught from a textbook.

North-South business culture, certifications, deal Italian

The Milan/Turin vs Rome/southern Italy business divide and what it means for meeting punctuality and decision pace. CILS DUE and CELI certification preparation for HR-required proof of proficiency. Pre-deal Italian for upcoming negotiations — sector vocabulary, counterpart-specific prep, cultural calibration for the team you'll meet.

FAQ

About Business Italian lessons & classes

What's the actual difference between conversational Italian and business Italian?

Register, vocabulary, and cultural codes. Register: business Italian defaults to the formal Lei form, uses conditional and subjunctive moods routinely, and follows elaborate salutation/closing formulas in writing. Vocabulary: business Italian carries specialized terms (fatturato, bilancio, cassa integrazione, partita IVA, consiglio di amministrazione) that don't appear in tourist or conversational lessons. Cultural codes: hierarchy, meeting dynamics, the role of business lunches, the August shutdown. Conversational Italian gets you through a vacation; business Italian gets you through a deal.

I already speak conversational Italian. How quickly can I cover business Italian?

If you're solid at B1+ conversational level, expect 8-12 weeks of focused weekly lessons (60-90 min each) to feel competent reading Italian business correspondence and presenting in front of an Italian team. Faster if your goal is narrower (e.g., just contract reading) or if you have an upcoming negotiation that focuses lesson energy. Plateau-level conversational Italian speakers often gain the most from this — the language is already in place; what's missing is register, vocabulary, and cultural calibration.

Do you teach Italian certifications like CILS or CELI?

Yes. Several of our tutors prep students for CILS DUE B2/C1 (the certification most companies and Italian universities recognize) and CELI 3/4 (the alternative from the Università per Stranieri di Perugia). HR departments at Italian-headquartered firms in the United States sometimes require these certifications. Sessions cover the four exam modules (listening, reading, writing, speaking) plus the strategy specific to the test. Mock exams included.

Can lessons be calibrated to my specific industry?

Yes, and they should be. Italian business Italian varies meaningfully by sector. Corporate finance Italian draws heavily on Il Sole 24 Ore and English loanwords. Legal Italian is a separate vocabulary world rooted in Roman civil law tradition. Design and fashion Italian (Milan-based) carries its own register and brand-specific terminology. Manufacturing Italian (Turin-based, automotive and industrial) overlaps with engineering vocabulary. Tell your tutor your industry in the first lesson and they'll build the vocabulary curriculum from real-world source documents in your field.

Are tutors based in Italy or in the United States?

Both. Our roster includes native Italian teachers based in Milan, Rome, Florence, and Turin who teach via video, plus longtime Italian-American bilinguals based in the US who can teach in person in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, or wherever you are. Time-zone-wise, Italy-based tutors typically have morning/early-afternoon availability that maps well to Italian late afternoon/evening — i.e., the same hours Italian counterparts are typically reachable. US-based tutors offer flexibility for end-of-business-day US lessons.

Do you offer group classes for whole teams or just individual lessons?

Individual lessons are the default and most effective for business Italian — the curriculum gets calibrated to your specific role, industry, and goals. We can arrange small-group corporate sessions for teams (typically 3-6 people, weekly cadence, on-site or video) where the company is sending multiple employees to work with Italian partners. Contact us directly for corporate group quotes. For typical individual professional development, one-on-one with weekly cadence is the right structure.

What's the trial like?

30 minutes, free, with the tutor you select. You bring your actual goal — "I have a negotiation in Milan in eight weeks," "I'm reading contracts in Italian and want to feel less lost," "I want to switch to Italian when my Milan-based colleague calls." The tutor will assess your current level, map a curriculum, and you decide whether to continue. Most students continue with the tutor they trialed; if not, swap is easy and we'll match you to a better fit.

Ready for Business Italian lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.