Employers
The major employers of tour guides are, naturally, tour companies. Many tour guides work on a freelance basis, while others may own their own tour businesses. Approximately 57,300 tour and travel guides are employed in the United States.
Earnings - Outlook - Resources & Associations and more
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- Adventure Travel Specialists
- Amusement Park Workers
- Anthropologists
- Archaeologists
- Archivists
- Artists
- Bicycle Mechanics
- Book Conservators
- Campaign Workers
- Caterers
- Conservators and Conservation Technicians
- Cruise Ship Workers
- Education Directors and Museum Teachers
- Environmental Education Program Directors
- Ethnoscientists
- Event Planners
- Exhibit Designers
- Farmers' Market Managers/Promoters
- Flight Attendants
- Fund-Raisers
- Gallery Owners and Directors
- Gaming Occupations
- Grant Coordinators and Writers
- Historic Preservationists
- Hosts/Hostesses
- Inbound Tour Guides
- Lifeguards and Swimming Instructors
- Museum Attendants
- Museum Directors and Curators
- Museum Technicians
- Music Venue Owners and Managers
- National Park Service Employees
- Park Rangers
- Parking Attendants
- Pilots
- Recreation Workers
- Reservation and Ticket Agents
- Resort Workers
- Restaurant and Food Service Managers
- Ship's Captains
- Ski Resort Workers
- Spa Attendants
- Spa Managers
- Sports Facility Managers
- Sports Instructors and Coaches
- Stadium Ushers and Vendors
- Strength and Conditioning Coaches
- Taxidermists
- Travel Agents
- Wedding and Party Consultants
- Yoga and Pilates Instructors
- Zoo and Aquarium Curators and Directors
- Zookeepers
- Zoologists