REVIEW · FRENCH QUARTER
New Orleans Haunted Ghost, Voodoo & Vampire Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by The Witches Brew Tour Company · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Spooky stories meet real French Quarter streets. I love how this walk connects LaLaurie Mansion folklore with real places you can stand in front of, instead of relying on vague spooky vibes. You’ll also learn core ideas behind Vodou traditions from a live local guide, with history threaded through the ghost talk rather than floating above it.
The one thing to consider is that this is mostly an outdoor route focused on exteriors, so if you want lots of paid museum time, you’ll need to plan for extra entrances. It’s also an outdoor walking tour with uneven sidewalks, and there’s a short restroom and refreshment break about an hour in.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth your time
- French Quarter After Dark: What This Haunted Walk Really Delivers
- Meeting at 311 Exchange Place and How the 1.5–2 Hour Loop Works
- Start Point at Witches Brew Gallery & Oddities Shop Energy
- Muriel’s Jackson Square and the Old Ursuline Convent Area
- New Orleans Pharmacy Museum Exterior: Bloodletting and Leeching in the Story
- Jacques Saint Germain Vampire Rumor: Why That Name Gets Mentioned
- LaLaurie Mansion: The Grizzly Tale and the 15-Minute Break
- Historic Voodoo Museum Stop and How the Guide Explains Vodou Traditions
- Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar Finish and Where You’ll End Up
- Price and Value: What $33 Gets You (and What It Doesn’t)
- Guide Style Matters: Why Storytelling Energy Shows Up in the Reviews
- Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
- Practical Tips Before You Go: Shoes, Weather, and What to Bring
- Should You Book This Haunted Ghost, Voodoo & Vampire Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the New Orleans Haunted Ghost, Voodoo & Vampire Walking Tour?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- What does the tour include?
- Are entrance fees included?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- Is there a break during the tour?
- What should I bring?
- Are beverages and snacks included?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
- Is the tour dog friendly?
Key highlights worth your time

- LaLaurie Mansion storytelling plus a Madame LaLaurie tale that sets the tone fast
- Vodou lessons in the street at stops tied to local tradition
- New Orleans Pharmacy Museum exterior with 19th-century bloodletting and leeching in the story
- Jacques Saint Germain vampire rumor discussed as part of the lore
- Multiple French Quarter landmarks covered in a tight 1.5–2 hour loop of spooky sights
French Quarter After Dark: What This Haunted Walk Really Delivers

This is the kind of tour where you stop, look up, and suddenly the French Quarter feels like it has footnotes. The focus isn’t just that something is scary. It’s that the stories grew out of specific people, specific institutions, and specific eras—then got carried forward by rumor and tradition.
I like the balance here: you get ghost-and-vampire energy, but you also hear explanations that help the legends make sense. The route is built around recognizable stops like the Old Ursuline Convent area and landmarks tied to medicine and religion, so the supernatural part lands harder when you can picture the real setting. And because you’re with a live guide, the pacing feels more human than a recorded audio tour.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in French Quarter.
Meeting at 311 Exchange Place and How the 1.5–2 Hour Loop Works

You meet at 311 Exchange Pl, across from The Pelican Club restaurant. The instruction is to arrive about 30 minutes early so you’re not rushing into the group when it’s time to depart. If you’re planning to grab coffee or water first, do it before you meet the guide.
The tour runs about 1.5–2 hours, with check-in times depending on availability. Expect a steady walking pace through the French Quarter with multiple stops—built for “look and listen” more than “sit and explore.” You’ll also get a short break around an hour in, typically about 10 minutes, which is helpful on a longer night walk.
Start Point at Witches Brew Gallery & Oddities Shop Energy

One of the best parts of tours like this is the opening attitude, and this one starts in the right mood. The experience begins at an oddities shop stop—Witches Brew Gallery & Oddities Shop—where the guide sets expectations for the kind of stories you’ll hear.
Why it matters: it signals that you’re not just learning facts; you’re stepping into local storytelling style. That helps when the tour shifts from ghost tales to topics like Vodou traditions. You’re more likely to stay curious, not just jump from scary moment to scary moment.
Muriel’s Jackson Square and the Old Ursuline Convent Area

Early on, you pass outside well-known landmarks including Muriel’s Restaurant and the Old Ursuline Convent. Even without going inside, these stops matter because the guide can anchor the story in visible architecture and the feel of the street.
This is also a good time to pay attention to details like spacing, street corners, and how buildings face the walkway. A lot of “haunted” legends depend on what people could see and hear back when those streets were used differently. If you’re the kind of traveler who likes understanding why a place feels the way it does, these opening stops are where you start building that mental map.
New Orleans Pharmacy Museum Exterior: Bloodletting and Leeching in the Story

Next, you’ll see the exterior of the New Orleans Pharmacy Museum, where 19th-century bloodletting and leeching took place. That detail is a wild tonal shift from typical ghost stories, but that’s exactly why it works.
Here’s the practical takeaway: don’t expect a textbook lecture. You’ll hear how medicine, fear, and superstition tangled together in the past. The guide uses the building context to make it concrete, so it’s not just a random fact dump. If you enjoy macabre history more than pure mythology, this stop is one of the most interesting on the route.
Jacques Saint Germain Vampire Rumor: Why That Name Gets Mentioned

You’ll also hear the story connected to the house where Jacques Saint Germain was rumored to have lived. Whether you treat this as literal or legend, it’s part of the French Quarter’s habit of attaching dramatic names to places people can point to.
I like how the tour uses this moment to connect vampire talk to real-world fascination—especially in a city where stories circulate as quickly as music. It’s also a reminder to keep your brain switched on: when the guide names someone, listen for how they connect that person to the street you’re standing on.
LaLaurie Mansion: The Grizzly Tale and the 15-Minute Break

If you only remember one stop from this tour, make it LaLaurie Mansion. You’ll hear the chilling tale involving Madame LaLaurie and the grizzly details that made this story famous. This is the part of the tour where you feel the genre most clearly—ghost lore with a sharp edge.
The tour includes a 15-minute break around this stage. That’s useful because the stories can be intense and the walking adds up. Use the break to reset: water if you brought it, a quick bathroom stop if you need it, and a moment to look around at the surrounding streets before you jump back into the next segment.
Historic Voodoo Museum Stop and How the Guide Explains Vodou Traditions

One of the main promises of the tour is learning about Vodou traditions. You’ll pass the New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum, and the guide ties local folklore to what Vodou means in cultural and historical terms.
This matters because Vodou is often reduced to horror-movie clichés. Here, the goal is to teach you enough of the real context that the stories feel less like random shock content. I’d suggest you go in with a curious mindset. Ask yourself what the guide is trying to clarify: not whether you believe the supernatural, but why these practices and beliefs matter to the people who keep them alive.
Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar Finish and Where You’ll End Up

The tour ends outside Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar. That’s a fitting closer because the building area fits the vibe of French Quarter legend—part people-watching, part storybook setting.
One note for planning: the activity details say it ends back at the meeting point, but the route also lists drop-off locations around Royal St and Jackson Square. If your next stop is time-sensitive, I’d confirm with the guide on the night which end point fits your route.
Price and Value: What $33 Gets You (and What It Doesn’t)
At $33 per person for about 1.5–2 hours, you’re paying for a live guide, spoken storytelling, and a guided walk through key French Quarter sites. Compared to paying for multiple small ticketed attractions, this often feels like a cost-effective way to learn the area fast—especially if you’re already staying nearby.
What’s not included:
- entrance fees to the sites mentioned
- beverages and snacks
That means you should plan to bring your own water if you like to stay comfortable, especially since the route is outdoors and you’ll be walking. Also, this is not a museum ticket experience. You’ll see exteriors or pass by places, with the guide providing context on what happened there.
Guide Style Matters: Why Storytelling Energy Shows Up in the Reviews
This tour lives and dies by the guide’s storytelling. The names that come up again and again—people like Lacey, Graham, Nikki, Juju, Robby Rob, Chris, Tony, DeAnna, Jimmy, and others—are praised for voice, humor, and keeping the group together. That’s not just nice-to-have. It affects whether you can actually hear the stories over street noise and still follow the route.
In particular, I like when a guide balances facts with entertainment without turning it into a costume show. The consistent theme is clear delivery: you’re told enough to understand the setting, then the guide pushes the story forward so you feel like you’re walking through the legend, not reading about it.
Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
This tour is a strong choice if you want:
- a French Quarter orientation that includes the spooky side
- guided storytelling built around specific locations
- a mix of legend, local folklore, and topics like medicine and Vodou traditions
It’s also a good fit for families if everyone can handle darker stories. Some groups include kids and teens, and the tour’s structure seems built to keep attention through a mix of humor and history.
You might want to skip or choose a lighter option if:
- you dislike intense grim stories like the LaLaurie tale
- you want mostly indoor stops and paid entrances
- you need very limited walking on uneven sidewalks
Practical Tips Before You Go: Shoes, Weather, and What to Bring
This is an outdoor walking tour that operates in all weather conditions, rain or shine, with rare cancellations for severe weather. That means your comfort depends on what you wear.
Bring:
- comfortable shoes (seriously—French Quarter streets are not flat)
- cash
- weather-appropriate clothing
There’s also a dog-friendly policy, so if you’re traveling with a pet, this may be easier than some other tours. You’re welcome to bring your own beverages, which helps you stay hydrated during the walk.
Should You Book This Haunted Ghost, Voodoo & Vampire Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a guided night walk that feels like real French Quarter storytelling, with specific stops and a clear narrative thread. The price-to-time ratio is solid for $33, and the tour covers big-name lore like LaLaurie along with less expected angles like the pharmacy museum exterior and the Jacques Saint Germain vampire rumor.
I’d pass or adjust expectations if you’re looking for lots of indoor access or ticketed museum time. This is primarily an exterior-and-stories experience, and the walking matters.
If you like your New Orleans with a little spine and a lot of place-based context, this one is worth your evening.
FAQ
How long is the New Orleans Haunted Ghost, Voodoo & Vampire Walking Tour?
The tour lasts about 1.5 to 2 hours, depending on the starting time you choose.
Where do I meet the guide?
You meet at 311 Exchange Place, directly across from The Pelican Club restaurant. Plan to arrive at least 30 minutes before departure.
What does the tour include?
It includes a guided walking tour with live commentary in English.
Are entrance fees included?
No. Entrance to sites mentioned is not included.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes. It operates in all weather conditions, rain or shine, but may be canceled only in rare cases due to severe weather.
Is there a break during the tour?
About 1 hour into the tour, there may be a 10-minute restroom and refreshment break.
What should I bring?
Bring comfortable shoes, cash, and weather-appropriate clothing. You can also bring your own beverages.
Are beverages and snacks included?
No. Beverages and snacks are not included in the ticket price.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the tour is listed as wheelchair accessible.
Is the tour dog friendly?
Yes, the tour is dog friendly.





