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

Sinking, flooding, and losing 1,000 residents a year. Still the most beautiful city on earth.

Take Venice

Why Venice needs a local guide

Venice has 118 islands, 400 bridges, and no cars. The tourist flow follows a single path: train station to Rialto to San Marco. Step one bridge off that line and you are alone. The city is small enough that a good guide can show you a Venice that barely overlaps with what the cruise passengers see.

Venice receives around thirty million visitors a year into a city with fewer than fifty thousand permanent residents. The entry fee for day-trippers is now in effect, and the city is actively trying to shift from mass tourism to slower, higher-value visits. To become a tour guide in Venice means positioning yourself on the right side of that shift. The main tourist corridor — Santa Lucia station to Rialto to San Marco — carries ninety percent of foot traffic. One bridge off that line and you are in a different city: Cannaregio's Jewish Ghetto, the oldest in the world; Dorsoduro's Zattere waterfront with its afternoon sun; Castello's Arsenale where the Venetian naval empire was built. A good guide makes that step happen. Become a tour guide in Venice and your knowledge of the lagoon islands becomes a second business. Murano for glass, Burano for lace and coloured houses, Torcello for the Byzantine cathedral that predates San Marco by centuries. The Biennale art and architecture exhibitions run from May through November in alternating years, bringing a high-spending cultural crowd. To become a tour guide in Venice is to work a city that is simultaneously the most famous and the most misunderstood in Italy.

Food & drink
Cicchetti (Venetian tapas) standing at a bar counter — baccala mantecato on bread, sarde in saor (sardines with sweet onions), and an ombra of wine for two euros. Rialto market in the morning for raw ingredients.
Neighborhoods
Dorsoduro for the Guggenheim and the Accademia, Cannaregio for the Jewish Ghetto (the world's first — the word 'ghetto' is Venetian), Castello for the Arsenale and the Biennale.
Who we need
Someone who lives on the islands year-round, not a mainland commuter. A guide who knows which bacari the gondoliers drink at and can take you to see the Biennale pavilions without a four-hour queue.
Venetians refer to the ground floor of their houses as the 'water floor' — in November during acqua alta, it literally is. Most ground-floor rooms have been abandoned or converted.

Become a guide in Venice

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

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

Take Venice
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Venice

How do I become a tour guide in Venice?
Regione Veneto licence. The exam covers Venetian Republic history, Byzantine and Gothic architecture, and the lagoon ecosystem. Venice has strict regulations on where guides can operate — some sites require additional permits. On LYA, show that you live on the islands, not the mainland — resident guides have credibility that commuters do not. Detail your off-the-main-path routes: a Cannaregio bacari crawl, a Dorsoduro art walk, a lagoon island circuit. If you have Biennale exhibition access or relationships with Murano glass workshops that do not run tourist-mill demonstrations, those are premium differentiators.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Venice?
Venice charges a day-tripper entry fee now, which is shifting tourism toward overnight visitors who book guides. Private tours run 250-400 EUR for half a day. Murano glass factory tours and lagoon island trips (Burano, Torcello) are profitable add-ons. A guide doing one private tour plus a lagoon island extension per day averages 4,000-6,500 EUR monthly. Biennale years (art in odd years, architecture in even) bring a surge of culturally engaged, high-spending visitors from May through November — guides with Biennale expertise charge premium rates. Cicchetti and bacari crawl tours in Cannaregio and Dorsoduro are a growing evening product at 60-80 EUR per person.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Venice?
Italian and English are mandatory. French and German are the next most useful. You need to know Venetian Republic history — a thousand years of it. The lagoon ecology and acqua alta science come up with environmentally conscious visitors, which is an increasing share. You must navigate the calli without GPS — Venice's alley system defeats phone maps regularly, and a guide who pulls out their phone loses credibility instantly. Knowing which bacari the gondoliers actually drink at (not the ones near San Marco), understanding the MOSE flood barrier system, and being able to explain the difference between Murano glass and factory imports are practical skills that clients value as much as your Republic history knowledge.
Is Venice still available?
Yes. Venice is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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