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🇲🇦 Chefchaouen, Morocco |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Chefchaouen

The blue city is real — every wall, every step, every doorway. The Instagram photos are actually undersaturated.

I want Chefchaouen

Why Chefchaouen needs a local guide

Chefchaouen sits in the Rif mountains and the entire medina is painted in shades of blue. It is tiny — maybe 45,000 people — and the tourism economy runs on that one fact. But beyond the blue walls there is serious hiking in the Rif, cannabis country politics, and a Spanish colonial past that most visitors miss entirely.

Chefchaouen has become one of the most photographed towns in Africa, and nearly every visitor arrives with the same shot in mind — blue walls, blue steps, blue doorways. The town gets around 200,000 tourists a year, which is a lot for a place with 45,000 residents. Most come on day trips from Fes or Tangier, snap their photos in the Plaza Uta el-Hammam, and leave by late afternoon. To become a tour guide in Chefchaouen means offering what the camera cannot. The blue paint tradition has a specific history tied to Jewish refugees in the 1930s, and most visitors have no idea. The Rif mountains start right behind the medina, and Talassemtane National Park has trails that rival anything in the Atlas. Become a tour guide in Chefchaouen and you work a split market — half your clients want a medina walk with context, and the other half want to hike Jebel El Kelaa or the Spanish Mosque trail at sunrise. The town is small enough that every riad owner knows every guide. To become a tour guide in Chefchaouen, your reputation is your entire business.

Food & drink
Goat cheese from the Rif, fried trout from the mountain streams, and the best kif-free brownies at the cafes on the plaza.
Neighborhoods
The medina and Plaza Uta el-Hammam for the blue core, Ras El Maa waterfall at the edge of town, and the Spanish Mosque trail for the hilltop view.
Who we need
A Rif local who can do the medina walk but also take hikers into Talassemtane National Park or up Jebel El Kelaa. Chaouen needs guides who go beyond the blue.
The blue paint tradition probably started with Jewish refugees in the 1930s — blue represented the sky and the divine. Today the city council pays to maintain it.

Become a guide in Chefchaouen

+2 000€ /month avg. 1 guide per city 0h minimum

Apply with your profile and local knowledge of Chefchaouen. We pick one person per city. If selected, you get the app, the tools and the audience. You handle the recommendations.

I want Chefchaouen
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Chefchaouen

How do I become a tour guide in Chefchaouen?
National licence. Chefchaouen is small enough that most guide work comes through riad owners and Fes-based agencies who send day-trip clients. Getting listed with agencies in Fes and Tangier is how you get steady bookings. On LYA, show both your medina knowledge and your mountain credentials — the best Chaouen guides can do a morning medina walk and an afternoon hike to Ras El Maa or the Spanish Mosque in a single day package. Photos of you on the Talassemtane trails will get you booked by the hiking crowd that other medina-only guides miss.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Chefchaouen?
Day-trippers from Fes or Tangier are the main market. Half-day medina tours run 300-500 MAD. Hiking guides for Talassemtane can charge 600-1000 MAD for a full day. Spring and fall are the best seasons. The dual medina-plus-hiking offering is the real earner — a full-day combo package (morning medina, afternoon Jebel El Kelaa) can command 800-1200 MAD per group. During peak months (April-May, September-October), a well-connected guide can run tours five to six days a week between riad referrals and agency sends from Fes.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Chefchaouen?
Arabic and French. Spanish is a bonus given the colonial history. Mountain hiking certification helps if you want to do the trekking side. Know the blue paint story — every single tourist will ask. Beyond that, you need to explain the Rif's cannabis cultivation history without awkwardness, understand the Spanish colonial period's architectural traces in the medina, and be able to identify the wildflowers and bird species on the Talassemtane trails if you want to serve the nature-tourism segment. In a town this small, one bad review at the wrong riad can cost you a season of referrals.
Is Chefchaouen still available?
Yes. Chefchaouen is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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