Why Toulon needs a local guide
Toulon lives in the shadow of Marseille and Nice, which means tourists skip it. That's their loss. The harbor is dominated by the French Navy — grey warships next to fishing boats. The old town has been slowly cleaned up, market by market, square by square, without losing its rough edges.
Toulon is France's principal naval base and the largest military port in the Mediterranean, yet most tourists on the Riviera drive straight past it on the A57 between Marseille and Saint-Tropez. That blind spot is the opportunity. Around 600,000 cruise passengers dock here annually, stepping off ships to find a harbor where aircraft carriers sit next to fishing boats and the Cours Lafayette market sells olives from groves twenty minutes inland. To become a tour guide in Toulon is to claim a niche that no other Riviera city can offer: naval heritage. The arsenal, the maritime museum in the Tour Royale, the story of the French fleet scuttled in the harbor in 1942 — these are experiences you cannot get in Nice or Cannes. Becoming a tour guide in Toulon also means access to Bandol's wine country and the Iles d'Hyeres, both within thirty minutes. The old town has been rebuilt square by square without losing its port-city grit, and the Mourillon neighborhood's beaches give you a coastal product without Riviera pricing. If you become a tour guide in Toulon, you work a city that is genuinely undervalued, with cruise traffic that needs guides and almost nobody serving them beyond the generic bus tour.