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🇮🇹 Rome, Italy |
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Become a tour guide
in Rome

Two thousand years of history piled on top of each other and a metro system that can't dig a new line without finding a temple.

I want Rome

Why Rome needs a local guide

Rome is not a museum city. It is a living city with ancient ruins used as traffic roundabouts. The Colosseum gets the crowds, but Trastevere is where you eat, Testaccio is where the Romans actually go, and Pigneto is where the nightlife is heading. Every neighbourhood has its own rhythm.

Rome receives over fifteen million international visitors a year, and the Colosseum alone accounts for seven million entries. The pressure on the historic centre is immense — timed tickets, crowd management, and a constant tension between preservation and access. To become a tour guide in Rome means navigating that density while making the ancient world feel personal. The Forum is not a field of broken columns; it is the centre of an empire that lasted five hundred years, and every paving stone has a function a good guide can explain. But Rome is also Trastevere at 9 PM when the trattorias spill onto the cobblestones, Testaccio where the old slaughterhouse market is now the best food hall in the city, and the Appian Way on a Sunday morning when it is closed to cars and open to cyclists. Become a tour guide in Rome and you compete with thousands of other licensed guides — the difference is in specificity. The guide who can stand in front of a Caravaggio at San Luigi dei Francesi and hold a group for twenty minutes without losing them is the one who gets rebooked. To become a tour guide in Rome is to work the most layered city in the western world and make every layer legible.

Food & drink
Cacio e pepe (just pasta, pecorino and black pepper — and it is harder to make than it looks), supplì al telefono (fried rice balls with a mozzarella string), and Roman artichokes two ways: alla giudia (fried) and alla romana (braised).
Neighborhoods
Trastevere for the evening passeggiata and trattorias, Testaccio for the old slaughterhouse market and real Roman cooking, Monti for the vintage shops near the Colosseum.
Who we need
Someone who can make the Forum come alive — not by reciting dates but by explaining what daily Roman life actually looked like. And who knows where to eat after.
There are over 2,500 public drinking fountains in Rome — the nasoni. Locals block the top hole with their thumb to make the water arc up for drinking. Tourists never figure this out.

Become a guide in Rome

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

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

I want Rome
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Rome

How do I become a tour guide in Rome?
Guiding in Italy requires a regional licence — in Rome, it is from the Regione Lazio. The exam covers ancient Roman, medieval, Renaissance and Baroque history plus art history. An arts or tourism degree helps but specific guide training programs exist. On LYA, show depth on at least two distinct products — the ancient Rome circuit (Colosseum, Forum, Palatine) and a neighbourhood experience (Trastevere food walk, Testaccio market tour, or Appian Way bike route). If you hold the separate Vatican guide accreditation, that immediately puts you in the top earning bracket.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Rome?
Rome is year-round. Private Colosseum-Forum-Palatine tours are the staple — 250-400 EUR for a half-day. Vatican tours (requires separate Vatican guide accreditation) are the highest earner. Food tours in Testaccio and Trastevere are a growing market. A licensed guide with Vatican accreditation doing two tours a day in peak season can gross 6,000-9,000 EUR monthly. The Colosseum underground and arena floor access tours command a premium of 50-100 EUR per person above standard tours. Food tours in Testaccio average 60-80 EUR per person for groups of six to eight — three hours of work for 400-600 EUR.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Rome?
Italian fluently. English is the primary tourist language. Spanish, French, and increasingly Chinese are in demand. Art history depth — you need to talk about Bernini and Caravaggio from memory, not notes. You must stand in front of the Pantheon and explain the unreinforced concrete dome in a way that makes an engineer and a teenager both pay attention. Knowing which churches have free Caravaggios (San Luigi dei Francesi, Santa Maria del Popolo) and how to time your visit to avoid the coin-operated lights running out mid-explanation is the kind of practical knowledge that separates a Rome guide from a history lecturer.
Is Rome still available?
Yes. Rome is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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