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Italian for Kids tutors, lessons & classes

Ciao! The greeting Italian families actually use with kids, all day long.

Personally vetted Italian tutors for kids. Warm, patient, age-appropriate lessons for ages 5-14, calibrated to your child's level, interests, and pace, whether they're starting from zero, hearing Italian from nonna, or prepping for a family summer in Puglia.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Italian tutor reading a picture book with a young child during a lesson
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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Italian for Kids tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching Italian to families since 2006. Italian for kids is one of the most relationship-driven specialties on our roster. What makes a kids' tutor work isn't just the Italian, it's the warmth, patience, and ability to make a child look forward to the lesson. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview, screened specifically for working with children. We're a curated boutique, not a marketplace.

Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a free 30-minute trial, including a parent chat up front about your child's level and goals.

Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in Italian for kids. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial, including a quick chat with you, the parent, about your child's level and goals.

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Per i bambini — kids' Italian

5 things that make kids' Italian lessons actually work

Lessons that engage children work on different principles than adult lessons. These are the pieces every great Italian-for-kids tutor leans on. Screenshot to share with your child's other parent.

  1. 01

    Ciao!

    The warm, kid-friendly Italian greeting. Adults open with buongiorno; families open with ciao. Hearing it from a tutor in the first lesson signals to a child that this is going to feel different from school: softer, friendlier, more like a family interaction. The same word covers "hi" and "bye," which kids find delightfully efficient.

    e.g. Ciao Luca! Come stai oggi?

  2. 02

    Il and la

    Italian assigns every noun a gender. Il sole the sun (masculine), la luna the moon (feminine). English-speaking kids find this strange for about two months and then stop noticing. A great tutor color-codes vocabulary (blue cards for il, red for la) so the article and noun fuse in memory and the child uses the right form by association, not by rule.

    e.g. Il cane corre. La macchina è rossa.

  3. 03

    Pimpa, Topolino, e Cocomelon

    Italian kids' media is generations deep. Pimpa, the polka-dotted dog by Altan, and Topolino, the Italian Mickey Mouse weekly comic since 1932, are inherited reading material. Cocomelon, Bluey, and most Disney and Pixar films have full Italian dubs that pitch right for ages 4-10. Substituting the Italian version of content your child already loves is the highest-leverage between-lesson immersion any family can do.

    e.g. Stasera guardiamo Pimpa in italiano.

  4. 04

    La pasta, la pizza, il gelato

    Food vocabulary is the easiest doorway into Italian for kids. La pasta al pomodoro, la pizza margherita, la merenda, la nutella, regional sweets from whichever grandmother. Kids learn dozens of words effortlessly when those words attach to things they actually want to eat. Most kids' Italian lessons spend real time on food because food is where the language stops feeling abstract.

    e.g. Per merenda voglio pane e nutella.

  5. 05

    Gesti italiani

    Italian hand gestures aren't a cliché; they're a real auxiliary grammar that Italian children acquire alongside spoken words. The mano a borsa (pinched fingertips, "what do you want from me?"), the che vuoi shrug, the cheek-screw for buonissimo. Five or six gestures cover most of what a kid would naturally use, and they make the language physical and memorable in ways pure vocabulary practice never matches.

    e.g. Ma che vuoi? (with the classic pinched-fingertips gesture)

About Italian for Kids

Italian your kid actually wants to speak

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Italian for Kids

Age-appropriate curriculum design

Lessons for ages 5-7 are short, song- and play-driven, built around Pimpa, Zecchino d'Oro songs, and movement games. Ages 8-11 incorporate reading and writing through Topolino, Geronimo Stilton, and Italian YouTube. Ages 12-14 move toward fuller conversation, age-appropriate films and series, and light explicit grammar. The tutor builds the curriculum around your child's interests so Italian becomes a doorway, not an assignment.

Heritage learner activation

For Italian-American and Italian-Australian families where a child understands more than they speak (passive bilingualism from a nonna or nonno). Lessons focus on activating production: making Italian the language of response, not just comprehension. Family vocabulary, summer-in-Italy prep, and scaffolded reading and writing for kids who can speak some Italian but have never seen it on a page.

Relocation and Italian-school readiness

For families moving to Italy: targeted curriculum for the months leading up. School vocabulary (la merenda, la maestra, l'intervallo), social register for the child's peer group, cultural orientation to Italian classroom culture, and conversational fluency calibrated to a September entry date. Tutors with experience in scuola primaria bring the classroom layer alongside the language.

Enrichment, PLIDA Junior prep, conversational maintenance

General Italian enrichment for parent-driven "we want our kid to have Italian" intros. PLIDA Junior exam prep for ages 9-13, the Società Dante Alighieri's certification track for younger learners. Conversational maintenance for kids between Italian-immersion programs or after a summer in Italy, so the gains don't dissolve over the school year.

FAQ

About Italian for Kids lessons & classes

How young is too young for Italian lessons?

Age 4-5 is the youngest we'd recommend formal lessons, and even then sessions need to be short (15-25 minutes), play-heavy, and built around an immediate caregiver presence. Younger than 4 is better served by Italian-language playgroups, family exposure, or screen time alongside a parent. From age 5 onward, lessons work well. Most of our Italian-for-Kids lessons are for ages 6-14.

We're an Italian-heritage family. Our kid understands nonna but answers in English. Can lessons fix that?

Yes, and this is one of the most common profiles we see. The pattern is called passive bilingualism: strong listening comprehension, weak production. A good heritage-focused tutor activates the latent Italian by making it the language of response, not just understanding. They start with vocabulary the child already uses in family contexts (food, holidays, family in-jokes) and build production from there. Many families specifically want the child speaking with cousins in Italy during a summer visit, and lessons calibrate toward that concrete goal.

We're moving to Italy in eight months. Can a tutor get our kid ready?

For most ages, yes, if you start now and stay consistent. A child entering Italian school needs school-context vocabulary (la merenda, la maestra, l'intervallo), conversational fluency calibrated to peer-group register, and cultural orientation to Italian classroom culture. Our tutors with backgrounds teaching in Italian scuola primaria bring the school layer alongside the language. Two lessons a week is the typical cadence for relocation prep, scaling up in the final month before the move.

Does video work for kids, or do they need in-person?

Video works well from about age 6 onward, especially after the first session or two where the child and tutor establish rapport. Younger kids (5-6) benefit from a parent's presence in the room for the first few sessions to bridge attention. The advantage of video for kids is the same as for adults: best-fit tutor regardless of location, and consistency week to week. In-person is also available when the tutor and family are geographically aligned.

Will my child get confused growing up with two languages?

No. Decades of research, including Ellen Bialystok's well-known work at York University on bilingual children, shows that bilingual kids develop typically on every measure that matters and often display advantages in executive function and metalinguistic awareness. Mixing words from two languages within a single sentence (code-switching) is normal, healthy, and not a sign of confusion; bilingual adults do it too. Our blog post on how the brain benefits from being bilingual covers the research.

How do you match the right tutor to my child?

We talk to you first about your child's age, current level, family situation (heritage, relocation, fresh-start enrichment), interests, personality, and what's worked and not worked with prior teachers if any. Then we propose one or two tutors who fit. The personality match matters as much as the credentials: some kids click with a more structured teacher, others with a goofier or more maternal one, and a heritage child often pairs best with a tutor whose own family story mirrors theirs. We've been matching since 2006 and the fit usually lands on the first try.

What's the right lesson cadence?

Weekly is the sweet spot for most goals. Twice a week works for kids prepping for a move, an exam, or a specific summer trip. Less than weekly doesn't build momentum in kids; if that's all the budget allows, daily Italian media exposure (Pimpa, Italian Cocomelon, Italian Disney) bridges the gap. Consistency beats intensity: 30 minutes weekly for a year produces dramatically more Italian than four hours sporadically. Holiday and summer schedules can flex around your family's calendar.

What does the trial include?

30 minutes, free, with the tutor you select. The first 5-10 minutes are typically a conversation with you, the parent, about your child's level, family situation, goals, and any specific concerns. The remaining 20 minutes the tutor spends one-on-one with your child to assess their level and find rapport. After the trial you decide whether to continue, and the tutor will share their read on your child's level and a proposed curriculum direction. Most families continue with the trial tutor; if not, swapping is easy.

Ready for Italian for Kids lessons or classes?

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