FR
🇬🇷 Thessaloniki, Greece |
Available

Become a tour guide
in Thessaloniki

Athens argues about politics. Thessaloniki argues about which bougatsa shop is the best. Both take it equally seriously.

Take Thessaloniki

Why Thessaloniki needs a local guide

Greece's second city has better food than the first and the locals will fight you on this. The waterfront promenade runs 5km along the Thermaic Gulf. Ano Poli, the old upper town, still has Ottoman-era houses with wooden balconies and stray cats on every step.

Thessaloniki receives around 4 million visitors a year, and most of them stick to the White Tower, the waterfront, and a quick look at Aristotelous Square. They leave without ever climbing to Ano Poli where the Byzantine walls frame a view of the entire Thermaic Gulf. They never sit in a tsipouradiko in Ladadika where the meze plates keep arriving until you tell them to stop. To become a tour guide in Thessaloniki is to fix this. The city is Greece's food capital and that is not up for debate. The Kapani and Modiano markets sit side by side in the center, spilling over with olives, dried peppers, pastourma, and stacks of bougatsa fresh off the griddle. A guide who walks someone through those markets on a Saturday morning and explains the Sephardic, Ottoman, and Pontic Greek layers of the city's cooking is doing something no audioguide will ever match. If you want to become a tour guide in Thessaloniki, you need opinions. Which of the six bougatsa shops on Irakliou Street is actually the best? Where do students go for souvlaki at 3am after the Valaoritou Street bars close? Becoming a tour guide in Thessaloniki means being ready to argue about food with total strangers and enjoy every second of it.

Food & drink
Thessaloniki invented bougatsa, perfected souvlaki, and still argues about both. Try the mussels at Bit Bazar or the whole-fish tavernas in Kalamaria.
Neighborhoods
Ladadika for nightlife in old olive-oil warehouses, Ano Poli for Byzantine walls and panoramic views, Kapani Market for the real food shopping.
Who we need
A food-obsessed local who knows the difference between the six major bougatsa shops and has an opinion about all of them.
Bougatsa Giannis on Irakliou Street has been open since 1960. The custard version is the classic order. Don't ask for the cheese one on your first visit.

Become a guide in Thessaloniki

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

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

Take Thessaloniki
FAQ

Questions about guiding in Thessaloniki

How do I become a tour guide in Thessaloniki?
Create your Lya profile and show us you know Thessaloniki beyond the White Tower. Tell us about your favorite tsipouradiko in Ladadika, which bougatsa shop you defend to the death, and where you take friends who visit for the first time. Generic profiles get skipped.
How much can I earn as a city guide in Thessaloniki?
Thessaloniki guides earn EUR 35-75 per experience. Food walks through Kapani and Modiano markets do particularly well, especially on Saturday mornings when the produce peaks. Evening meze-and-tsipouro crawls through Ladadika pull strong bookings from May through October.
What do I need to be a LYA guide in Thessaloniki?
No license needed for informal food and culture experiences. What matters is that you can walk Kapani Market and name every spice, and that you have a real opinion on the bougatsa debate. For archaeological site tours at Rotunda or the White Tower, a licensed guide credential is an advantage.
Is Thessaloniki still available?
Yes. Thessaloniki is open right now. One guide per city, first come first served.
Explore

Other cities looking for a guide

← All positions