FR
🇪🇸 Palma de Mallorca, Spain |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Palma de Mallorca

The Germans bought the beach. The British bought the nightclubs. The old town still belongs to the Mallorcans.

Claim Palma de Mallorca

Why Palma de Mallorca needs a local guide

Palma is a Mediterranean city with a Gothic cathedral that drops straight into the sea. The old town is stone streets and courtyard palaces. The port is superyachts. Twenty minutes outside the city, the Serra de Tramuntana mountains are UNESCO-listed and empty. Most visitors never leave the beach strip.

Mallorca receives over fourteen million tourists a year, making it the most visited island in the Mediterranean. The vast majority head straight to the beach resorts and never set foot in Palma's old town. The Gothic cathedral — La Seu — stands above the harbour, and behind it a medieval quarter of courtyard palaces, stone alleyways, and churches stretches for blocks. To become a tour guide in Palma de Mallorca means intercepting resort tourists and showing them a city they did not know was there. The patio houses of the Casco Antiguo, some in the same families for four hundred years, open their courtyards to anyone who knows to look through the front gate. Santa Catalina's market has been renovated into a food destination, and the Serra de Tramuntana mountains twenty minutes north are UNESCO-listed and nearly empty of tourists. Become a tour guide in Palma and you work a market split between cruise passengers who need a four-hour old-town loop and week-long visitors who want a Tramuntana hiking day or a wine tour in Binissalem. To become a tour guide in Palma de Mallorca is to peel back the beach-holiday layer and reveal a place with eight centuries of Mediterranean history underneath.

Food & drink
Ensaimada pastry for breakfast, pa amb oli (bread rubbed with tomato and olive oil), tumbet (layered vegetable bake), and sobrassada sausage from the inland farms.
Neighborhoods
Casco Antiguo for the cathedral and palace courtyards, Santa Catalina for the market and trendy restaurants, El Terreno for the faded glamour of the 1960s scene.
Who we need
A Mallorcan who can peel people off the beach and show them the Gothic quarter, the Tramuntana trails, or the inland wine country that most tourists never reach.
The patio houses in the old town — Ca'n Oleza, Ca'n Vivot — have courtyards you can peek into from the street. They have been in the same families for 400 years.

Become a guide in Palma de Mallorca

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

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

Claim Palma de Mallorca
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Palma de Mallorca

How do I become a tour guide in Palma de Mallorca?
The Balearic Government issues guide licences. The exam covers Balearic history, ecology (it is a Mediterranean island ecosystem), and architectural heritage. You can take it in Catalan (Mallorqui) or Spanish. On LYA, show your range — the old-town cathedral walk, a Tramuntana hiking route you know by heart, and ideally a wine estate connection in Binissalem. Guides who can serve both the cruise-ship crowd and the long-stay villa renters get booked across both segments, and that consistency is what we look for.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Palma de Mallorca?
Palma is year-round but summer is peak. Cruise ships bring day-trippers constantly. Half-day old-town tours run 120-200 EUR. Tramuntana hiking day trips and wine tours are premium products. A guide doing three cruise-ship days plus two private villa-client bookings per week averages 2,500-4,000 EUR monthly. The Tramuntana hiking day trip at 200-350 EUR is the highest-margin product — minimal overhead, maximum client satisfaction, and it runs reliably from March through November. Wine tours in Binissalem are still under-served, and guides who develop those estate relationships early will own that niche.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Palma de Mallorca?
Spanish and Catalan (Mallorqui). English and German are the two key tourist languages — you can survive on those four. Marine biology basics help for boat tour clients. Know the Tramuntana — it is what makes Mallorca different from any other beach island. You should be able to name the courtyard houses in the Casco Antiguo — Ca'n Oleza, Ca'n Vivot, Ca'n Marqués — and explain their architectural evolution from medieval to Baroque. The cathedral's Gaudi intervention in the early 1900s and Miquel Barcelo's ceramic chapel are details that separate a knowledgeable guide from someone reading a pamphlet. If you can drive the Tramuntana hairpins confidently, you unlock the island's best day-trip product.
Is Palma de Mallorca still available?
Yes. Palma de Mallorca is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
Explore

Other cities looking for a guide

← All positions