Why Paris needs a local guide
The gap between tourist Paris and real Paris is wider than anywhere in Europe. Someone who knows where to eat in the 11th, which natural wine bars actually matter in Belleville, or why Canal Saint-Martin beats the Marais on a Tuesday night — that person has something worth sharing.
If you want to become a tour guide in Paris, understand that thirty million visitors a year still leave without seeing rue Oberkampf on a Friday night or the covered passages near Grands Boulevards. The city does not lack tourists — it lacks people who can pull them away from the Eiffel Tower queue and into a backstreet wine bar in the 10th arrondissement. To become a tour guide in Paris is to fill a gap that gets wider every year: the distance between the Instagram version and the version where you know which boulangerie on rue des Martyrs actually matters. Most visitors eat a twelve-euro croque-monsieur near Saint-Michel and think they have experienced French food. They have not. The Marché d'Aligre on Sunday morning, the Ethiopian restaurants along rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis, the Japanese canteens near Opéra — someone needs to connect those dots. Right now, the demand for English-speaking guides who actually live in Paris and know the difference between the 5th and the 15th outstrips supply by a wide margin. Becoming a tour guide in Paris means turning your daily commute into someone else's best day in Europe.