FR
🇬🇧 Bristol, United Kingdom |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Bristol

Banksy is from Bristol. So is trip-hop, cider culture, and an unreasonable number of independent bookshops.

Claim Bristol

Why Bristol needs a local guide

Bristol does things differently and gets defensive if you compare it to London. The street art in Stokes Croft is world-class and not curated — it just happens. Clifton is Georgian townhouses and the suspension bridge. Bedminster is where the younger crowd moved when Stokes Croft got too expensive. The cider is flat, dry, and not what Americans think cider is.

Bristol attracts around 3 million visitors a year, and a lot of them come for the street art and leave without scratching the surface. They photograph the Banksy pieces on Park Street and never walk further into Stokes Croft where the murals change every few weeks and nobody asks permission. They stand on the Clifton Suspension Bridge and miss Bedminster entirely, which is where the artists moved when the rents pushed them south. To become a tour guide in Bristol means understanding a city that has always done things its own way. The trip-hop scene came from here — Massive Attack, Portishead, Tricky — and that independent spirit runs through everything from the St Nicholas Market stalls to the cider farms in the Somerset hills just outside the city. To become a tour guide in Bristol is to know which pub in Stokes Croft still pours scrumpy from a barrel, where the best Caribbean food in St Pauls is, and why Bristolians will argue for hours about whether the Harbourside is better now than it was ten years ago. Become a tour guide in Bristol and you represent a city that would rather invent something new than copy what London did last year.

Food & drink
St Nicholas Market has a rotation of street food stalls that changes monthly. The pieminister chain started here and the original shop on Stokes Croft is still the best.
Neighborhoods
Stokes Croft, Clifton, Bedminster
Who we need
Someone embedded in Bristol's creative scene. A guide who knows the street art, the music venues, and the cider farms outside the city.
Bristol has its own dialect. 'Gert lush' means really great. You will hear it at least once per pub visit.

Become a guide in Bristol

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

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

Claim Bristol
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Bristol

How do I become a tour guide in Bristol?
Apply for the LYA guide position with a profile rooted in Bristol's creative scene. Tell us about the mural on Stokes Croft that just went up, the cider farm you drive to on weekends, and the St Nicholas Market stall you keep going back to. We need someone who can say 'gert lush' without it sounding forced and who knows Bristol's neighborhoods as communities, not postcodes.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Bristol?
LYA guides average +2,000€/month. Bristol's tourism is growing fast, especially among younger travelers and the street-art crowd. The city's reputation as an alternative to London draws visitors who want something different, and they tend to spend on experiences — food, music, walking tours — rather than chain shops.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Bristol?
Live in Bristol. Know the city beyond the Harbourside — Stokes Croft street art scene, Bedminster's newer creative spaces, Clifton village shops, St Pauls food. Social media presence is a plus, particularly if you already share Bristol content around art, food, or cider culture.
Is Bristol still available?
Yes. Bristol is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
Explore

Other cities looking for a guide

← All positions