Italian Phrase
Grazie per il tuo feedback.
Meaning
A polite way to thank someone for the comments, suggestions, or evaluation they have given you. It conveys appreciation and acknowledges the value of the other person’s input.
When to use
Use this sentence after receiving a review, a comment on a project, a customer’s opinion, or any situation where someone has taken the time to give you constructive input.
✦Grammar Breakdown
Grazieperiltuofeedback.
Grazie
An interjection meaning ‘thank you’; it can stand alone or start a sentence.
per
Preposition used to indicate the cause or reason, equivalent to ‘for’ in English.
il
Definite article (masculine singular) that agrees with the noun that follows.
tuo
Possessive adjective meaning ‘your’; it must agree in gender and number with the noun (masc. sing.).
feedback
A loan‑word from English, treated as a masculine noun in Italian (il feedback).
🗨In Conversation
Ecco il report aggiornato, fammi sapere cosa ne pensi.
Here’s the updated report, let me know what you think.
Grazie per il tuo feedback.
Thank you for your feedback.
✕Common Mistakes
Grazie di il tuo feedback.
‘Grazie di…’ is not idiomatic; the correct preposition after ‘grazie’ is ‘per’.
Grazie per il tuo feedbacko.
‘Feedback’ is a borrowed noun and does not take an Italian ending; keep it as ‘feedback’.
Grazie per il tuo feedback, tu.
When using the noun ‘feedback’, you need the possessive adjective ‘tuo’, not the pronoun ‘tu’.
↔Alternatives
Ti ringrazio per il tuo feedback.
I thank you for your feedback.
Grazie per il tuo commento.
Thanks for your comment.
Grazie per il tuo riscontro.
Thank you for your response.
Cultural Tip
In Italian, ‘grazie’ is perfectly polite in both informal and formal contexts, but if you want to sound a bit more formal or emphatic you can use ‘ti ringrazio’ (informal) or ‘la ringrazio’ (formal). Also, avoid mixing the preposition ‘di’ with ‘grazie’; the correct construction is ‘grazie per…’. The word ‘feedback’ is widely understood in business and tech circles, but in more traditional settings you might prefer ‘commento’ or ‘riscontro’.

