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🇨🇭 Geneva, Switzerland |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Geneva

Geneva has 200,000 people, the UN, CERN, and the most overrated fountain in Europe. The city behind the Jet d'Eau is more interesting.

I want Geneva

Why Geneva needs a local guide

Geneva is tiny and international. Half the population is not Swiss. The Pâquis neighborhood near the train station is the grittiest part of town — kebab shops, dive bars, and the best cheap lunch options. Carouge is Geneva's answer to a village — Italian-built, full of artisan shops and Saturday markets. The Old Town is steep, quiet, and has the best view of the lake.

Geneva gets around 3 million visitors a year, and most of them come for the UN, CERN, or a business conference. They see the Jet d'Eau, walk around the lake, maybe visit the Red Cross Museum, and leave having experienced one of the most international cities on earth without ever tasting it. Pâquis, the neighborhood between the train station and the lake, is where Geneva actually lives after hours. Turkish börek for lunch, Ethiopian injera for dinner, a dive bar that has been open since the diplomats started coming in the 1960s. To become a tour guide in Geneva means understanding a city where half the population holds a foreign passport and the other half has been here for generations. Carouge, built by the King of Sardinia in the 18th century, feels like a small Italian town grafted onto the edge of Switzerland. The Saturday market there is where chefs and locals buy the same produce. To become a tour guide in Geneva is to navigate the gap between the CHF 60 lakeside lunch and the CHF 12 kebab plate in Pâquis that is arguably better. Become a tour guide in Geneva and you show visitors the affordable, multilingual, slightly rough-edged city that exists behind the diplomatic facade.

Food & drink
Fondue at Café du Soleil in Petit-Saconnex — a local spot, not a tourist fondue chain. For a fast lunch, a cardamom coffee and a börek from a Turkish place in Pâquis.
Neighborhoods
Pâquis, Carouge, Plainpalais
Who we need
Someone who speaks French and navigates the UN-expat world without being in it. A local who knows the cheap Geneva that exists alongside the expensive one.
The Jet d'Eau was originally a pressure valve for a hydraulic power network. They turned it into a tourist attraction because it looked good. Very Geneva.

Become a guide in Geneva

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

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

I want Geneva
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Geneva

How do I become a tour guide in Geneva?
Apply for the LYA guide position with a profile rooted in Geneva's neighborhoods. Tell us about the Pâquis restaurant where you eat for under CHF 15, the Carouge Saturday market stall you hit every week, and the Old Town shortcut you take to avoid the tourist flow. We need someone who can show Geneva beyond the UN district and the lakefront promenade — the city where real people actually live and eat.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Geneva?
LYA guides average +2,000€/month. Geneva's international visitors have high spending power — this is a UN, CERN, and banking city where business travelers expect quality recommendations. The city's compact size means a guide who knows Pâquis, Carouge, and the Old Town can cover the whole essential Geneva in one afternoon.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Geneva?
Live in Geneva. French is required — this is a francophone city. Know the city beyond the UN district — Pâquis street food, Carouge village life, Plainpalais flea market, the Old Town's quiet corners. Social media presence is a plus, especially if you already share content about Geneva's food or neighborhood life.
Is Geneva still available?
Yes. Geneva is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
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