Topologically protected magnetic structures provide a robust platform for low
power consumption devices for computation and data storage. Examples of these
structures are skyrmions, chiral domain walls, and spin spirals. Here we use
scanning electron microscopy with polarization analysis to unveil the presence
of chiral counterclockwise N\'eel spin spirals at the surface of a bulk van der
Waals ferromagnet Fe3GeTe2 (FGT), at zero magnetic field. These N\'eel
spin spirals survive up to FGT's Curie temperature TC=220K, with little change in the periodicity p=300nm of the
spin spiral throughout the studied temperature range. The formation of a spin
spiral showing counterclockwise rotation strongly suggests the presence of a
positive Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in FGT, which provides the first
steps towards the understanding of the magnetic structure of FGT. Our results
additionally pave the way for chiral magnetism in van der Waals materials and
their heterostructures