Why Granada needs a local guide
Granada is a small city that punches far above its weight. The Alhambra is the most visited monument in Spain. The Albaicin quarter across the valley has unchanged Moorish streets and cave houses in Sacromonte where people still live — and where flamenco happens in actual living rooms.
The Alhambra alone draws nearly three million visitors a year, making it the most visited monument in Spain. Tickets sell out months in advance, and the timed-entry system means every slot matters. To become a tour guide in Granada is to build your entire practice around one building — and then prove you know the rest of the city too. The Nasrid Palaces require a guide who can read the Arabic inscriptions on the walls, explain the water engineering that keeps the fountains running by gravity alone, and connect the Reconquista rooms to the political deal that ended Moorish Spain in 1492. But Granada is not just the Alhambra. The Albaicin across the valley is a Moorish neighbourhood that has barely changed in five hundred years. Sacromonte's cave houses host zambra flamenco that is raw and unpolished. Become a tour guide in Granada and your evening walk through the Albaicin — tea houses, mirador views of the Alhambra at sunset, free tapas on Calle Navas — becomes a second product that doubles your daily earning potential. To become a tour guide in Granada means mastering the monument that everyone came for and then showing them the city they did not expect.