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

Beneath the polished facade of modern Malmö lies a foundation built on blood, rebellion, and fire. This city is not merely a collection of squares and libraries. It is a stage where centuries of power struggles and forgotten secrets still echo against the cobblestones. Unlock these hidden layers through a self-guided audio tour designed to peel back the surface of the city. Navigate the streets to uncover the scandalous histories and pivotal moments that most travelers walk past without a second glance. Why did the city bells toll in mourning for a man who never existed? Which dark political conspiracy was plotted in the shadows of St. Peter’s Church? How did a seemingly quiet library corner become the site of a vanished local fortune? Pulse with the rhythm of historic resistance and architectural wonder. Transform your walk into a journey of discovery. Start your investigation now.

A lone stone gargoyle gazes over Malmö’s medieval heart, its secrets buried beneath centuries of cobblestones and revolution. Beyond the pretty facades, the city pulses with untold scandals, power struggles, and whispered legends waiting to be uncovered. Set off on a self-guided audio adventure through winding alleys and atmospheric squares. Unlock stories few visitors ever hear as you slip past grand chapels, historic theaters, and ancient churches. What happened when smoke filled St. Peter’s Church during a forgotten uprising? Which tragedy at the Hippodrome still lingers in backstage shadows? Why does an ordinary plaque in The Shopkeeper Chapel hint at forbidden rituals once carried out in plain sight? Let these haunting questions pull you from plaza to portal. Follow in the footsteps of rebels and visionaries and rediscover Malmö as a city of conspiracies, miracles, and strange beauty. Press play and begin where the stone gargoyle’s gaze meets yours.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
When the Kockums shipyard closed in 1986, it felt like Malmö might simply stop. For years it had been a worker's city -- unglamorous, utilitarian, built around the enormous crane that still dominates the western harbor skyline. Then the Öresund Bridge opened in 2000 and something shifted. Suddenly Malmö was fifteen minutes from Copenhagen, and people arrived in numbers the city had never seen. The crane now stands next to the Turning Torso, a 190-meter residential skyscraper completed in 2005 that twists as it rises and has become the new skyline landmark.
The city that emerged from this transformation is one of Sweden's most diverse, with nearly half its population carrying foreign backgrounds and 187 nationalities represented.
The neighborhoods of Rosengård and Möllevångstorget have long been home to large Middle Eastern and North African communities, and the food around Möllan square reflects that -- döner, falafel, and Lebanese grocers alongside Swedish konditori. Ingmar Bergman ran the municipal theater here in the 1950s, launching Max von Sydow's career. Eurovision came three times, the only non-capital city in the world to host it more than once.

Before you walk.
Very easy. The Öresund Bridge carries trains between Copenhagen Central and Malmö Central in about 20 minutes, with departures roughly every 20 minutes. The main tour start points are within walking distance of Malmö C station.
Malmö has 410 km of cycling paths and around 40% of daily commuting happens by bike -- it is genuinely one of Europe's better cycling cities. City bikes are available for hire near the station. Walking tour routes work well on foot too, but a bike lets you cover the Västra Hamnen waterfront and the beach at Ribersborg far more efficiently.
The city center, Västra Hamnen, and the tourist-facing areas around Malmöhus Castle are relaxed and safe. Stay aware of your surroundings as you would in any city, and keep one ear open at pedestrian crossings -- the cycling traffic is dense and moves fast.
Easily. The area around Möllevångstorget is particularly good for affordable and flavorful food -- the square's market sells fresh produce and surrounding streets have Middle Eastern bakeries, falafel spots, and Thai restaurants. Pause the tour, eat well, then continue.
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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.