Why Nice needs a local guide
The Promenade des Anglais gets all the photos, but Nice is a layered city. Vieux Nice has Baroque churches squeezed between laundry lines. The Colline du Château gives you a panorama most people only see on postcards. Behind the tourist front, there's a Niçois identity that's fiercely local.
Around twelve million tourists visit Nice each year, making it the second most visited city in France after Paris. Most of them walk the Promenade des Anglais, eat a salade nicoise near the Cours Saleya, and leave without understanding that Nice was Italian until 1860 and still carries that identity in its food, its architecture, and its dialect. To become a tour guide in Nice is to work in a market where supply has not kept up with a clientele that increasingly wants local depth over surface sightseeing. The Baroque churches of Vieux Nice sit behind ordinary facades — visitors walk past them every day. The Cimiez neighborhood holds a Matisse museum and Roman ruins that most beach tourists never reach. If you become a tour guide in Nice, you can build half your business around the Riviera day-trip circuit — Eze, Villefranche, Saint-Paul-de-Vence — while anchoring your story in the city itself. The Niçois food tradition alone — socca from Chez Theresa, pissaladiere, pan bagnat — is a full walking tour that nobody else is running well in English. Becoming a tour guide in Nice means working one of Europe's highest-traffic coastlines with a product that actually says something.