The honest truth about free walking tours
Free walking tours are a clever marketing term. The tours are free to join but the guide earns nothing except your tip. Most guides in Europe take home 50 to 80 percent of the tips they collect (the rest goes to the tour company). In a typical city, a guide needs 8 to 10 tippers a day to make a living wage.
When you join a free walking tour, you are not getting a gift. You are accepting an invisible contract: quality time in exchange for a fair tip at the end.
Fair tips by region in 2026
| Region | Low tip | Fair tip | Generous tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Western Europe (Paris, Amsterdam, London) | EUR 8 / GBP 7 | EUR 12 to 15 / GBP 10 to 12 | EUR 20+ / GBP 15+ |
| Southern Europe (Barcelona, Rome, Lisbon) | EUR 8 | EUR 10 to 12 | EUR 15 to 20 |
| Central Europe (Prague, Budapest, Vienna) | EUR 6 | EUR 8 to 10 | EUR 15 |
| Nordics (Stockholm, Copenhagen) | EUR 12 | EUR 15 to 20 | EUR 25+ |
| UK and Ireland (Edinburgh, Dublin) | GBP 8 / EUR 8 | GBP 10 to 15 / EUR 10 to 15 | GBP 20+ / EUR 20+ |
| USA (New York, Washington) | USD 15 | USD 20 to 25 | USD 30+ |
| Latin America (Mexico City, Lima, BA) | USD 5 to 8 | USD 10 to 12 | USD 15 to 20 |
When to tip more
- The guide gave personal recommendations you actually used later
- They handled a rude or disruptive tourist gracefully
- The tour went over the scheduled time without rushing
- You learned things that made the city feel alive instead of just factual
- You are a group of 3 or more sharing one guide (tip by headcount, not as a group)
When the lower end is acceptable
- Guide read from a script without eye contact
- Tour was rushed or cut short
- Group was huge (30+ people) and you could not hear
- Guide spent more time advertising paid tours than giving content
How to hand over the tip
At the end of the tour, the guide will gather the group for a 30-second speech (usually about paid tours and the tip itself). Then they stand there while people come up individually. Cash in a folded bill is standard. Say thank you, hand over the bill, make eye contact. That is it.
If you only have large bills, it is totally fine to ask if they can break it. Most guides carry change. If you want to tip by card, they will have a reader but the transaction can take 30 seconds per person, so cash keeps the line moving.
Prefer a fixed price? Book a premium walking tour
Premium walking tours via Viator have upfront prices, small groups, and expert guides. No tipping pressure, no crowds.
Frequently asked questions
In Europe, 10 to 15 EUR per person for a 2.5 hour tour is fair. In the US, 15 to 20 USD. In Latin America, 8 to 12 USD equivalent. Tip more if the guide was exceptional.
Technically no, but guides work entirely on tips. If you take the tour and do not tip at all, you are not paying the person who just spent 2 hours educating you. The standard is to tip something, even a small amount.
Cash is strongly preferred. Most guides accept cards via SumUp or iZettle but lose 2 to 3 percent in fees. Having small bills (10s, 20s) in local currency is the respectful way to tip.
Yes. Guides remember people who tip 20 EUR or more and often pass their contact for private follow-up tours. A great tip is a personal thank you plus real money.

