
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the polished limestone of Old Montreal lie the scarred foundations of a city born from blood, fire, and broken treaties. Uncover the truth behind the tourist facade with this immersive self-guided audio tour. Navigate the winding streets of Ville-Marie to find the hidden layers of history that most travelers walk right over. Why did the city walls of the Château Ramezay once hold the fate of a revolution in their grasp? What secrets remain buried under the silent, shifting floorboards of the Notre-Dame Basilica? Who really triggered the scandalous betrayal that left the ruins at Pointe-à-Callière haunted by phantom whispers? Traverse the chilling corridors of time as the past rises to meet your footsteps. Experience the raw intensity of a city shaped by forgotten rebellions and long-lost scandals. Relive the drama. Reclaim the history. Start your journey into the shadows now.

Smoke curls from century-old delis while secret messages echo from neon-lit facades—Le Plateau-Mont-Royal hides more beneath its murals than met your tourist map. Turn your phone into a backstage pass with this self-guided audio tour. Wander between bustling smoked-meat counters, bohemian cafés, and scandalous cinemas while uncovering stories most visitors stroll past. What riots once erupted where tables now burst with laughter? Whose double life flickered behind the velvet curtains at Cinéma L’Amour? Can a single sandwich spark a rivalry so fierce it still divides locals today? Move from cobblestone corners to shadow-soaked theaters as doors unlock to untold secrets and larger-than-life legends. Each step peels back layers of rebellion, heartbreak, and raw ambition. Rediscover Montreal not just with your eyes but through the pulse of hidden drama under every streetlamp. Ready to chase the smoke and secrets of Le Plateau? Press play and begin.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Montreal solved the problem of winter not by fighting it but by going under it. The RESO is a 33-kilometre underground city connecting 80 buildings, 60 residential complexes, 1700 shops, cinemas and metro stations below the surface of downtown -- the largest underground pedestrian network in the world, built so that Montrealers could go about their lives without touching the January air. Above ground, the same ingenuity that made the underground city also gave the world Cirque du Soleil, Arcade Fire and the Montreal Jazz Festival, the largest jazz festival on the planet. The city does not apologise for the cold; it makes things that are genuinely good inside it.
Old Montreal (Vieux-Montréal) is the limestone core of a French colonial city founded in 1642, with cobbled lanes that reach the St.
Lawrence waterfront. The Mile End neighbourhood, north of the Plateau, is where the Hasidic Jewish community and the Francophone artists have lived in improbable adjacency for decades -- Fairmount and St-Viateur bagel shops (baked in wood-fired ovens, smaller and sweeter than New York's) are the two poles of an ongoing argument about which is better. Schwartz's on Saint-Laurent has been making smoked meat since 1928 and the queue is always there, which is its own kind of quality guarantee.

Before you walk.
The STM metro is clean, frequent and covers Old Montreal, downtown, the Plateau and Mile End. A Tram card (monthly or daily passes available) works on both metro and buses. BIXI bike-sharing is excellent from April to November, with docks throughout all central neighbourhoods.
Yes -- Montreal is consistently ranked one of the safest large cities in North America. Old Montreal, the Plateau, Mile End and downtown are all very comfortable during the day and evening. The Plateau's streets in particular are quiet, residential and ideal for a relaxed walk.
Poutine (fries, cheese curds, gravy) from La Banquise on Rachel Street, which is open 24 hours, is the local comfort food. A Montreal-style bagel from Fairmount or St-Viateur is best eaten warm from the bag. Smoked meat from Schwartz's on a rye with yellow mustard is a city ritual worth joining.
No. Most Montrealers in tourist areas speak English comfortably, and the audio tours are in English. That said, a few words of French go a long way in terms of warmth -- 'Bonjour' and 'Merci' are appreciated and open doors that might otherwise stay politely shut.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.