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🇫🇷 Marseille, France |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Marseille

Marseille doesn't try to charm you. It either gets under your skin or it doesn't.

Get started — Marseille

Why Marseille needs a local guide

France's oldest city has a chip on its shoulder and a port that smells like salt and diesel. The Panier is graffiti-covered and beautiful. La Corniche gives you coastline without the Riviera price tag. Marseille is not polished and that's the point.

Marseille receives close to five million visitors annually and roughly 1.8 million cruise passengers dock at the Joliette terminal between March and November. Most of them walk the Vieux-Port, take a selfie at Notre-Dame de la Garde, and leave without ever setting foot in Le Panier's back alleys or finding the Vallon des Auffes. To become a tour guide in Marseille is to work in a city that resists easy packaging — and that is exactly the opportunity. Visitors who reach Cours Julien want someone who knows which street-art murals were painted last month. Families stepping off a cruise ship need someone who can get them to a real bouillabaisse at Chez Fonfon before the return-to-ship deadline. Becoming a tour guide in Marseille means dealing with a city that changes mood block by block, from the gentrified Joliette quarter to the raw energy of Noailles market. The calanques alone — limestone cliffs dropping into turquoise water — are a full-day product that most visitors cannot access without local knowledge. If you become a tour guide in Marseille, personality matters more than polish, and that is a rare advantage.

Food & drink
Bouillabaisse. The real thing, not the tourist version. Chez Fonfon in Vallon des Auffes is where Marseillais actually go. Budget 60 EUR and don't ask for ketchup.
Neighborhoods
Le Panier, Cours Julien, Endoume
Who we need
Someone with thick skin and a sense of humor. Marseille rewards personality over polish.
Order a pastis at the Bar de la Marine on the Vieux-Port. It's the bar from Marcel Pagnol's novels. The regulars will talk to you whether you want them to or not.

Become a guide in Marseille

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

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

Get started — Marseille
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Marseille

How do I become a tour guide in Marseille?
The cruise ship terminal at Joliette brings thousands weekly from March to November — that is your launch pad. Many guides start with shore excursions, build reviews, and then pivot to private clientele who want Le Panier street art, Noailles market spice runs, or calanques hiking. Apply for the guide position with a Marseille experience that goes beyond the Vieux-Port and you will stand out immediately.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Marseille?
Cruise tourism is massive — ships dock 3-4 times a week in peak season, and half-day shore excursions bill at 200-350 EUR for small groups. Private walking tours through Cours Julien and Le Panier run 120-180 EUR. Off-season is quieter but never dead thanks to business travel and the growing interest in urban street-art circuits and calanques day hikes.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Marseille?
You need to know this city's edges — tourists can walk the Vieux-Port alone. They need you for Le Panier's back streets, the calanques access points at Sormiou and Morgiou, and the stories that connect Greek Massalia to modern Marseille. Arabic or Italian language skills open the North African and cruise markets that most guides ignore entirely.
Is Marseille still available?
Yes. Marseille is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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