Camillo Grossi (Grosseto, 30 September 1876 – Turin, 16 June 1941) was an Italian general during the interwar period and World War II.
Born in Tuscany, he entered the Military Academy of Modena in 1894 and began his career in the Alpini Corps.
He participated in the First World War with the rank of major and later colonel (from 1917), serving as Chief of Staff of the Third Army and later as head of the press office at the Supreme Command.
Between 1921 and 1923 he headed the operations office of the General Staff, and was later commander of the 2nd Alpini Regiment.
Army Group East was dissolved on 10 July 1940, one month after Italy's entry into World War II, an on 8 December 1940 Grossi became president of the Italian Armistice Commission with France (replacing General Pietro Pintor, who had been killed in an air crash) until 16 June 1941, when he suddenly died in Turin from a heart attack.