We report on the photoelectrochemical performances of a nanocomposite photoactive material made of copper tungstate (CuWO 4 ) and multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT). The purpose of this work was to create a light absorber/charge collector composite material with tunable electronic transport properties to minimize the bulk resistance of CuWO 4 material class. Nanocomposite thin films (typically 2.0 ± 0.1 μm) were fabricated by means of spray pyrolysis using solutions containing copper acetate, ammonium metatungstate and MWCNT. Spray-deposited polycrystalline CuWO 4 films were found to be porous, though crack-free, and made of CuWO 4 nanoparticles with dimensions in the 10–50 nm range. Tauc plots derived from UV–visible and photocurrent spectroscopy techniques led to a consistent band gap value of 2.20 (±0.05) eV. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy performed in pH10 buffer solution under Air Mass 1.5 global (AM1.5 G ) at 0.8 V vs. saturated calomel electrode (1.63V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode) pointed out a bulk resistance reduction by 30% on nanocomposites photoanodes when compared to un-modified CuWO 4 control samples. It is worth mentioning that the reduction in bulk resistance was achieved with an extremely low MWCNT:CuWO 4 weight ratio (1:10,000), in which MWCNT absorbed less than 2% of incoming light. Subsequent linear scan voltammetry (LSV) performed in the same conditions revealed a photocurrent density increase of 26% at 0.8 V SCE (1.63 V RHE ) compared to control samples. Additional LSV and incident photon-to-current efficiency measurements demonstrated that MWCNT served as effective electron collectors distributed throughout the entire CuWO 4 bulk.