Why Naples needs a local guide
Naples is loud, chaotic, and completely itself. The centro storico is a UNESCO site that functions as a living, breathing, laundry-hanging, scooter-honking neighbourhood. Pompeii is a train ride away. The Amalfi Coast starts at the end of the Circumvesuviana line. Naples is the base camp — raw and unfiltered.
Naples has spent years as the city tourists passed through on the way to Pompeii or the Amalfi Coast. That is changing fast. The centro storico is a UNESCO site that functions as a living neighbourhood — laundry overhead, Vespas weaving past, shrines to Maradona on every corner. Around three million visitors come each year, and increasingly they come for Naples itself. To become a tour guide in Naples means embracing the chaos and translating it. The Quartieri Spagnoli are tight alleys where family life spills onto the street through the bassi — ground-floor apartments with open doors. The Sanita neighbourhood has catacombs, emerging street art, and a community that has turned anti-Camorra activism into cultural regeneration. Spaccanapoli cuts through the old town like a knife, and the underground Greek-Roman tunnels beneath it add a second city below your feet. Become a tour guide in Naples and Pompeii is a Circumvesuviana ride away — most guides combine both. But the street food tour format is where Naples truly outperforms: pizza at Sorbillo, sfogliatella at Pintauro, fried cuoppo from a Quartieri Spagnoli cart. To become a tour guide in Naples is to work a city that does not apologize for itself and does not need to.