Why Milan needs a local guide
Milan is a working city that happens to have the Duomo, La Scala, and Leonardo's Last Supper. Fashion Week brings the cameras, but the real Milan is aperitivo at 7 PM in the Navigli canals, Sunday at the San Siro, and the design district during Salone del Mobile when the entire city becomes a showroom.
Milan is Italy's economic engine, and tourism has always been secondary to business here. But the city draws around eight million visitors a year, and the number keeps growing. The Last Supper alone has a waiting list that stretches months — twenty-five people every fifteen minutes, and when your slot ends, you leave. To become a tour guide in Milan means understanding that scarcity. Guides with pre-booked Last Supper access are the only reliable way in for late planners, and that access alone can anchor a practice. The Duomo rooftop, the Brera Pinacoteca, the Navigli canal district at aperitivo hour — Milan rewards the guide who can connect the industrial history to the art, the fashion to the architecture, the risotto alla milanese to the saffron trade that brought it here. Become a tour guide in Milan and you work a city where Salone del Mobile in April and Fashion Weeks in February and September create surge demand that no other Italian city matches. The Fondazione Prada, the Armani Silos, the Mudec — the contemporary layer is as strong as the historical one. To become a tour guide in Milan is to serve a clientele that expects efficiency, style, and substance in equal measure.