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What does a private tour guide do?

And unlike a group tour, a private guide can share information and advice tailored to your particular interests and personality. Guides aren't just useful for sightseeing — they're also great at enhancing cultural experiences.



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While group tours may end up on buses with other travelers, private tours allow you to travel by a private car or minivan no matter if you're coming alone or with your family and friends. Private tours are also useful for those who need special care, including older relatives, small children, or disabled travelers.

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Most etiquette experts suggest a tip of 10-20% of the cost of a tour for outdoor guides like ours. A typical gratuity on a full-day tour is $20-$40 per person, and on a half-day trip, $15-$20 per guest.

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Private tours give you the freedom to choose what you want to do and when. You don't have to consider the needs of other travellers, which provides you with far more room for flexibility and changes to your itinerary at every step of the way.

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A tour guide is the best way to enjoy an organised travel. While traveling to a place unknown, you might need a person who already knows about the place. It is safe and secure, and there are less chances of getting tricked by locals. During a group travel, everything is well-organized with precautionary measures.

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There are exceptions if your specific tour experience includes gratuities or you simply didn't have a good time, but in general, tipping your guide at the end of the tour is customary in the U.S. and Europe, though it's much more common in the States.

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Private tour cons Private tours are usually considered much more expensive due to the luxury, convenience and personal attention they offer. While there is some truth in this, as personal tours can often be more expensive than group tours, this isn't always the case.

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A half-day tour with a private guide usually costs $100–300. Guides generally don't charge per person, so hiring one isn't nearly as budget-straining if you can split the cost with fellow travelers. (To get some of the same local info for less, join a group walking tour or hop a sightseeing bus.)

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Types of Tours
  • Sightseeing Tours. ...
  • Shore Excursion Tours. ...
  • Adventure or Sporting Tours. ...
  • Other Types of Tours. ...
  • Combining Tours.


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Types of tour guides
  • Historical guide. A historical guide leads tourists around historical landmarks and points of interest like ruins, temples, battlefields and other sites of historical importance. ...
  • Adventure guide.
  • Museum guide. ...
  • Nature guide. ...
  • City guide. ...
  • Park guide. ...
  • Freelance guide.


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According to the UN World Trade Organization, there are three kinds of tours - domestic, inbound, and outbound - and thus three kinds of tour operators who hire tour directors. Many companies offer both domestic and outbound tours.

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As a tour guide, you are expected to know everything about your destination. From amazing beaches to narrow side lanes, best restaurants, the striking landscapes, the history behind a famous bakery, local superstitions, and haunted houses, you must know it all!

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By reserving large groups of people, these companies are able to get a cheaper price, which makes the price per person cheaper as well. This is great if you have a large family, or a large group trying to travel together. If you are looking to save money, a group tour is definitely the best way to do that.

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At table-service restaurants, the tipping etiquette and procedure vary slightly from country to country. But in general, European servers are well paid, and tips are considered a small bonus — to reward great service or for simplicity in rounding the total bill to a convenient number.

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Tipping tour guides in France doesn't have to be expensive. You can tip between 2 and 5 euros a day for a day tour guide and 1 to 2 euros for a museum or gallery guide. Don't forget to tip the driver if you have one in addition to the tour guide on your trip.

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Tipping at restaurants and cafés depends on the service Unlike the United States, waitstaff in Italy are paid a living wage, and tips do not make up the majority of their income. Go ahead and follow their custom or, if you think the service was great and you want to leave more, feel free to do so.

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