Why Rennes needs a local guide
Capital of Brittany but nothing like the coast. Half-timbered houses lean into each other on rue Saint-Georges. The Thabor gardens are impeccable. Saturday morning on the Marché des Lices is one of the best market experiences in the country — and almost no tourists know about it.
Rennes is the capital of Brittany and home to 70,000 students, yet it barely registers on the international tourism map. That gap between what the city offers and what visitors know about it is exactly why you should consider it. The Marche des Lices on Saturday morning is one of the three largest markets in France, and almost no English-speaking guide covers it. To become a tour guide in Rennes is to work a city where half-timbered houses on rue Saint-Georges lean into each other at angles that make you question gravity, where the Thabor gardens feel like they belong in a novel, and where the rue de la Soif packs thirty bars into two hundred meters. Mont Saint-Michel sits one hour away by car, which means becoming a tour guide in Rennes also gives you access to one of the most visited monuments in France as a day-trip add-on. The Breton identity here is real — the flag, the language debate, the galettes-and-cider culture, the complicated relationship with Paris. If you become a tour guide in Rennes, you are working a market with essentially zero established English-language competition and a first-mover advantage that will not last forever.