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🇫🇷 Lyon, France |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Lyon

People call it France's food capital. Most visitors never make it past the Presqu'île.

I want Lyon

Why Lyon needs a local guide

Lyon earns its food reputation, but the city has more going on than bouchons. The traboules of Vieux Lyon are Renaissance passageways most French people don't even know exist. Croix-Rousse has a village feel ten minutes from downtown. The confluence district is raw, new, and weird.

Lyon pulls roughly six million visitors a year, and most of them cluster between Bellecour and the Presqu'ile without ever crossing the Saone into the Croix-Rousse slopes where the silk workers lived. To become a tour guide in Lyon means stepping into that gap. The traboules — over 400 Renaissance passageways — are the kind of thing people fly across oceans for, yet half of them stand unmarked behind wooden doors. Food tourism alone could keep you busy: Les Halles Paul Bocuse, the bouchons on rue du Boeuf, the morning market on quai Saint-Antoine. But becoming a tour guide in Lyon also means knowing the city beyond the plate. The Confluence district is a former industrial zone turned architectural experiment. Fourviere hill holds Roman ruins that predate Paris by a century. The Fete des Lumieres every December floods the city with three million extra people in four days. If you want to become a tour guide in Lyon, the timing is right — the city's international profile has grown faster than its guide supply, and demand for English-speaking food walks alone outpaces what is currently available.

Food & drink
A praline tart from Pralus. Cervelle de canut at a proper bouchon. And the indoor market at Les Halles de Paul Bocuse — where chefs actually shop, not just tourists.
Neighborhoods
Vieux Lyon, Croix-Rousse, Confluence
Who we need
A food person, obviously. But also someone who gets that Lyon is a workers' city with silk-weaver history, not a theme park.
Locals still argue about which bouchon does the best quenelle de brochet. The correct answer changes depending on who you ask and what day it is.

Become a guide in Lyon

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

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

I want Lyon
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Lyon

How do I become a tour guide in Lyon?
Lyon's tourism office runs seasonal recruitment, but the independent route is where the real opportunity sits. Apply for the guide position with a food-walk concept through Les Halles Paul Bocuse and the bouchons of rue du Boeuf — culinary travelers are actively searching for exactly this. Having auto-entrepreneur status and a food-hygiene certificate helps if you plan to include tastings in your tours.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Lyon?
Steady flow year-round thanks to business tourism, the Fete des Lumieres in December, and weekend foodies taking the TGV from Paris. Food tours command premium pricing — 80-120 EUR per person for a half-day with tastings at bouchons and market stalls. A well-reviewed guide doing four tours a week in high season can clear 3,000 EUR monthly in Lyon without breaking a sweat.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Lyon?
You need genuine food knowledge — not 'I like eating,' but real knowledge. Know the difference between a quenelle and a pike dumpling made badly. Know why Beaujolais is not just Nouveau. Understand the silk-weaver history of the Croix-Rousse and how to navigate the traboules without getting lost, because your clients will notice if you hesitate at a wrong door.
Is Lyon still available?
Yes. Lyon is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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