A few weeks ago, a guest asked me what “allora” meant — because her Italian neighbor had used it on her and she wasn’t sure if she’d been complimented or diagnosed.

We spent the next twenty minutes somewhere between Siena and a hilltop we were, in theory, driving toward — dissecting Italian hand gestures, the seventeen meanings of “dai”, and whether her neighbor was actually annoyed or just Italian.

You will not have this conversation on a bus tour. You will have a laminated map, a headset that smells faintly of the last forty tourists, and a guide reciting facts they memorized in 2011.

Private tours aren’t about seeing more. They’re about someone actually noticing you exist.

The question I get asked most often

A client once asked me, quite directly, why I cost more than a GetYourGuide or Viator listing.

Fair question. So I told her exactly what I’m about to tell you — and she booked anyway, which I’m choosing to interpret as proof I was right.

Comparing a private tour with me to a group listing on one of those platforms is like comparing business class to economy — except that analogy still doesn’t quite work, because at least on a plane you reach the same destination. A private tour isn’t a nicer version of what you’d find on a booking platform. It’s a different thing altogether.

Private tour in Tuscany
Talking one to one

What a Group Tour is actually optimized for

On a group tour, the guide’s real job is crowd control. Keep the group together. Hit every stop on schedule. Deliver the same script for the ten-thousandth time with the enthusiasm of someone reading terms and conditions. Nobody is going to notice that you’re obsessed with Tuscan cooking, or that your partner would rather sit in a café with a beer than see one more church interior — because nobody has time to notice anything except the head count.

With a private tour, the day is built around actual humans. Want twenty extra minutes with one fresco? Take thirty. More interested in how a Sunday lunch works than the exact year a palazzo was built? Great — let’s talk about lunch. I have opinions. I’m not performing a script. I’m having a conversation, and it goes wherever your curiosity takes it, which is usually somewhere far more interesting than the guidebook.

Private tour in museums

The stories that don’t come with a plaque

Here’s something I’ve learned about my guests, particularly those visiting from the US: they almost never just want art and history. They want gossip.

Why does the nonna across the street still hang laundry out to dry when she owns a perfectly good dryer? What does “paese” actually mean to someone who grew up in one, versus what it says on a postcard? Which hand gesture means “patience” and which one means “please leave before I say something I regret”?

That’s the good stuff. And you cannot get to it as one of forty people straining to hear a guide through an earpiece over the sound of a passing moped.

On a private tour, those conversations just happen — while we’re walking, while we’re waiting for coffee, while we’re stuck behind a tractor doing four miles an hour on a road that definitely used to be wider. It happens more than you’d think.

Nobody is watching the clock

I have one rule: nobody I’m with should ever feel herded.

Group tours run on a schedule designed to sort of work for everyone — which in practice means it works well for no one. 

Private tours run on your clock. Tired? We slow down. Fell in love with a tiny town I hadn’t even planned to stop in? We stay, and the itinerary adjusts around you.

Comfort isn’t a nice bonus here. It’s the entire point — and it’s genuinely not something a cheaper, faster, bigger group tour was ever built to deliver.

A relaxed moment in a private tour

So how do You actually choose the right Private Guide?

Not all private guides are the same. A few things worth checking before you book:

👉 Licensed and actually local: in Italy, tour guides are officially licensed under national law. Make sure yours is genuinely based in Tuscany, not parachuted in for the season with a highlight reel memorized on the flight over.

👉 Someone who asks about you first: a good guide wants to know what you’re curious about — food, history, art, local gossip — before the day even starts, then builds around that. If the first thing they do is talk about themselves, keep looking.

👉 Reviews that go beyond the stars: read what people actually wrote. Do they mention feeling rushed, or feeling seen? That’s a significant difference.

👉 Real flexibility: ask how adaptable the day really is. If the answer isn’t some version of “however you’d like,” that’s your answer too.

The Bottom Line

Yes, a private tour costs more than a seat on a bus.

But what you’re paying for isn’t extra hours — it’s someone’s full attention, the freedom to follow your own curiosity, and a day built around you instead of around a spreadsheet.

If that sounds like the kind of Tuscany you’re after, let’s talk.

I promise not to rush you. And I make no promises about not judging your gelato order.

👉  Ready for a day that actually goes at your pace?

I offer private guided tours of Florence, Lucca, Pisa, and the Tuscan countryside — built around your curiosity, not a script.