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🇬🇧 Bath, United Kingdom |
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Become a tour guide
in Bath

Bath is the only city in England where the architecture is so uniform it looks like someone used copy-paste. That someone was John Wood in 1754.

I want Bath

Why Bath needs a local guide

Bath is built from honey-colored limestone and it knows it. The Royal Crescent, the Circus, Pulteney Bridge — the city is essentially one giant Georgian postcard. But past the tourist zone, Walcot is where the independent shops are, Larkhall has proper local pubs, and Widcombe is the quiet side nobody talks about. The Roman Baths are genuinely impressive. The Thermae Bath Spa on top is where locals actually go.

Bath pulls nearly 6 million visitors a year into a city of just 90,000 people. The ratio is insane. Most of those visitors do the Roman Baths, walk the Royal Crescent, browse the Jane Austen Centre gift shop, and leave by teatime. They never walk up to Walcot for the independent shops and the Saturday flea market that has been running for decades. They never find Larkhall, a neighborhood with proper local pubs where the regulars know each other by name and the beer garden fills up on the first warm evening of spring. To become a tour guide in Bath means showing people the city that continues to exist after the tourists leave at 5pm. The canal walk along the Kennet and Avon to the pub at Bathampton is one of the best walks in Southern England and almost nobody visiting the city does it. To become a tour guide in Bath is to know which Thermae Bath Spa session is the quietest, where to get a Sally Lunn bun without the queue, and why the farmers' market behind the Abbey on a Saturday morning is worth skipping every other plan for. Become a tour guide in Bath and you rescue a beautiful city from being reduced to a day trip.

Food & drink
Sally Lunn's does the oldest bun in Bath — since the 1680s. For something less historic, the farmers' market behind the Abbey on Saturdays is one of the best in England.
Neighborhoods
Walcot, Widcombe, Larkhall
Who we need
Someone who lives in Bath and can show the city past the Jane Austen gift shops. A local who knows the walking trails along the Kennet and Avon Canal.
The Bath Bun is not a Bath Oliver. Mixing them up in a bakery will get you a polite but firm correction.

Become a guide in Bath

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

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

I want Bath
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Bath

How do I become a tour guide in Bath?
Apply for the LYA guide position with a profile that shows you live in Bath, not just visit. Tell us about your pub in Larkhall, the canal walk you do on a weekday afternoon, and the farmers' market stall you go back to every Saturday. We need someone who knows Bath after 5pm when the day-trippers leave and the city becomes itself again.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Bath?
LYA guides average +2,000€/month. Bath has consistent tourism year-round thanks to the Roman Baths, its UNESCO World Heritage status, and the Jane Austen literary connection. Nearly 6 million visitors a year in a city of 90,000 means constant demand — the challenge is standing out, and local knowledge is the way to do it.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Bath?
Live in Bath. Know the city beyond the main tourist circuit — Walcot flea markets, Larkhall pubs, Widcombe's quiet residential side, the canal walks out to Bathampton. Social media presence is helpful, particularly if you already share content about Bath's food, walks, or independent shops.
Is Bath still available?
Yes. Bath is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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