REVIEW · SAVANNAH
Savannah History and Haunts Candlelit Ghost Walking Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Savannah History & Haunts · Bookable on Viator
A night walk in Savannah should be more than pretty streets. This candlelit ghost tour uses lantern light to guide you through historic squares and cobblestone lanes while your guide connects the city’s haunting stories to the darker side of its past. You get the fun atmosphere of a ghost walk, but the focus stays on the war, executions, murders, and mystery that shaped the town.
I like how the tour is history-first without feeling like a lecture. I also like that it moves at a steady pace, and the small group size (up to 30) keeps it engaging even when the stories get intense. A small drawback: if you’re hoping for nonstop jump scares or constant spooky moments, this one may feel more thoughtful than frightful.
In This Review
- Key Highlights I’d Prioritize
- First Impressions: Candlelight, Cobblestones, and a Darker Savannah
- Meeting Point and Timing: Getting There 15 Minutes Early Helps
- Price and Value: What You’re Really Paying For
- The Route: From Chippewa Square to Colonial Park Cemetery
- Chippewa Square (Where the Story Starts)
- Walking Through Squares and Cobblestone Streets
- Moss-Draped Oaks and Historic Buildings (Why It Feels So Haunted)
- Ending at Colonial Park Cemetery (The Final Mood Shift)
- What the Tour Style Feels Like: Fun, Slightly Creepy, Not Corny
- Who This Tour Works Best For (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- Practical Tips: Dress, Expect Weather, and Bring a Good Attitude
- Should You Book This Savannah History and Haunts Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Savannah History and Haunts Candlelit Ghost Walking Tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What should I do if the weather is bad?
- What is the walking like and what fitness level is needed?
- Is the tour suitable for children?
- Are service animals allowed?
Key Highlights I’d Prioritize

- Candlelight guidance: You get a lantern-led route at night, so the vibe is built in, not staged.
- History that many tours skip: Expect stories tied to war history and executions, not just generic spooky myths.
- Ends at Colonial Park Cemetery: The tour finishes at a major downtown resting place, so the mood lands hard.
- Multiple departure times: You can pick a start time that fits your evening without cramming your day.
- Small group size: A maximum of 30 keeps the guide’s attention more reachable.
- Professional guide format: Storytelling is structured and paced, not chaotic.
First Impressions: Candlelight, Cobblestones, and a Darker Savannah

Savannah at night already has that cinematic look: Spanish moss swinging above the street, warm light from older buildings, and corners that feel a little too quiet. This tour adds one thing that changes everything—you walk by candlelight. It’s not just for atmosphere. The lantern glow helps you actually see where you’re going while the guide tells the stories that made people talk long before modern tourism existed.
The big selling point is that it isn’t only a supernatural show. The tour is built around fraught history: executions, murders, and war-era details, plus the legends that stuck to those places. If you’re the type who likes your spooky with context, you’ll enjoy the balance. If you’re the type who wants pure fear, you might still have fun—but you’ll probably treat it as entertainment with historical weight rather than a horror set.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Savannah.
Meeting Point and Timing: Getting There 15 Minutes Early Helps

You start at 17 W McDonough St, Savannah, GA 31401 and the instruction is clear: arrive about 15 minutes before your tour time. That matters more than it sounds. When you’re meeting at night, you want time to find the exact spot, get your group together, and avoid rushing your first minutes. The tour runs for about 1 hour 30 minutes (approx.), so those early minutes help everything flow.
You also get flexibility in the schedule. The tour offers choice of departure times, which is great if you’re doing other things downtown during the day and want the ghost part to land at a comfortable hour. You’ll want to dress for the season, since this is outdoors and the pace includes walking, standing, and pausing for stories.
Price and Value: What You’re Really Paying For
At $39 per person, this isn’t the cheapest way to spend an evening in Savannah. But it also isn’t a “pay for a costume and a script” situation. You’re paying for a professional guide plus guided storytelling in a compact timeframe that hits multiple downtown locations and ends at a major cemetery site.
In my view, the best value part is how the tour targets the stuff most quick tours skip. A lot of Savannah sightseeing can be charming and surface-level. This one tries to explain why the city’s reputation for haunting exists in the first place—then lets the myths do their work on top of it. If that history angle matters to you, the price starts to feel fair fast.
One more practical note: it has a maximum of 30 travelers, which usually means you’re not stuck listening behind a wall of people. That matters for both enjoyment and safety when you’re walking at night.
The Route: From Chippewa Square to Colonial Park Cemetery

You’ll see Savannah’s downtown in the way walking tours do best: at human speed, with real turns and street textures that you can’t get from a bus. The tour takes place at night and follows historic squares and cobblestone streets, with stops tied to local lore.
Chippewa Square (Where the Story Starts)
The first named stop is Chippewa Square. Even if you’ve seen it in daytime photos, nighttime changes it. The square’s mood gets darker when the guide starts connecting what happened around Savannah’s growth to the legends that followed. This is also where the tour’s tone sets. The stories can be eerie, but the guide aims to keep it grounded in history rather than pure theatrics.
A plus here: starting with a recognizable landmark gives you an immediate anchor. You can look up at moss-draped trees, orient yourself in the layout, and understand why Savannah’s squares became natural gathering points—then why those same spaces became the backdrop for darker accounts.
Walking Through Squares and Cobblestone Streets
Between the named start and the cemetery finish, you’ll be moving through the kind of streets that make Savannah feel like it belongs in an old novel: cobblestone underfoot, historic buildings close to the sidewalk, and those quiet pockets where sound seems to travel.
The guide’s job is to connect each moment to a story. Expect the conversation to cover war history, executions, murders, and paranormal activity as your route winds through downtown. If you want a tour that helps you notice what you’re seeing instead of just passing it, this is the part that delivers.
Moss-Draped Oaks and Historic Buildings (Why It Feels So Haunted)
You’ll be surrounded by the visual ingredients that people associate with Savannah hauntings: moss-draped oaks and older architecture. On a typical day, these look scenic. On this tour, they become cues in the storytelling. The guide uses the setting—where the street bends, where the darkness pools, what the buildings have witnessed—to make the legends feel more specific.
Just remember: the spooky feeling here comes from the combination of setting plus narrative. If you’re expecting constant shocks, you may notice the tone is steadier and more story-driven.
Ending at Colonial Park Cemetery (The Final Mood Shift)
The tour ends at Colonial Park Cemetery, across from Perry Street, at 218 Abercorn St. Ending at a cemetery is not a random flourish. It’s where the theme lands with the strongest emotional weight, because you’re closing your walk in a place designed for remembrance.
If you’ve been wondering how Savannah’s dark stories became part of everyday local identity, ending here gives you the closest thing to a punctuation mark. Even if you don’t buy into ghost claims, cemeteries make the past feel immediate. That’s the point of the experience.
What the Tour Style Feels Like: Fun, Slightly Creepy, Not Corny

From what I’ve learned about the guides who lead this experience, the strongest praise is about tone. The best part is that the storytelling doesn’t feel corny or full of jump-scare tricks. Instead, the guide uses humor and pacing to keep you engaged, even while the subject matter turns grim.
Several guide names come up repeatedly—Dan and Kel are mentioned often, and Kendra appears as well. Since you can’t always predict who you’ll get, treat this as a clue about the kind of energy the tour tends to deliver: animated, interactive when questions come up, and comfortable answering things you notice along the way.
One more pattern I’d highlight: many people like that the tour is entertaining even if they don’t believe in ghosts. That matters. It means you can enjoy this as history with a creepy edge, not a requirement to be scared.
Who This Tour Works Best For (And Who Might Prefer Something Else)

This is a solid match for:
- Couples and friends who want an evening activity that feels different from dinner and shopping.
- People who enjoy history with story, including war-era details and executions.
- Anyone who likes walking tours but wants them to include meaning, not just landmarks.
It might be less ideal if:
- You want a pure horror show with lots of intense scares.
- You don’t like outdoor night walking, standing, and cool-weather conditions.
- You’re looking for a tour focused only on modern ghost sightings without the historical context.
The physical level is listed as moderate. You should be comfortable walking at night on uneven cobblestones. Also note that the guide keeps a group moving, which is why dressing smartly is a big deal.
Practical Tips: Dress, Expect Weather, and Bring a Good Attitude

This tour runs in all weather conditions unless severe, so plan like a Savannah local. You’re outside for about 1.5 hours, and the tour is candlelit—meaning it’s a nighttime walk where you’ll feel the temperature while you listen.
A few practical moves that help:
- Wear layers and warm outerwear. People specifically recommend dressing warmly.
- Wear shoes with grip for cobblestones.
- Bring a jacket even if the daytime forecast looks mild. Night cool can sneak up quickly.
- If you’re the type who likes to take photos, keep in mind that candlelight is low. Your best shots may be more about moments and composition than bright clarity.
Should You Book This Savannah History and Haunts Tour?

If you want Savannah at night with a storytelling guide and you care about the historical roots of the city’s haunting reputation, I think you should book it. For $39, the value is strongest when you enjoy connecting legends to real events—war, executions, murders—and you like a tour that feels factual and respectful instead of gimmicky.
Skip it only if your goal is constant fright. This walk is creepy, yes, but the core is history turned into an engaging narrative. If that sounds like your kind of evening, it’s a great way to start (or rebalance) your Savannah trip and end at a place that makes the stories linger.
FAQ
How long is the Savannah History and Haunts Candlelit Ghost Walking Tour?
It lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes (approximately).
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $39.00 per person.
Where does the tour start and end?
You meet at 17 W McDonough St, Savannah, GA 31401 and the tour ends at Colonial Park Cemetery across from Perry Street (address listed as 218 Abercorn St, Savannah, GA 31401).
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
What should I do if the weather is bad?
The tour operates in all weather conditions unless severe. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’re offered a different date or a full refund.
What is the walking like and what fitness level is needed?
You should have a moderate physical fitness level. It’s a walking tour at night on cobblestones, with some standing for stories.
Is the tour suitable for children?
Children must be accompanied by an adult.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
If you want, tell me your travel month and preferred start time (earlier or later). I can help you decide whether this tour fits best with your other Savannah plans.














