REVIEW · SAVANNAH
Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah
Book on Viator →Operated by Carriage Tours of Savannah · Bookable on Viator
Night changes everything in Savannah. For 50 minutes, you’re carried through the city’s darker folklore with the gentle clip-clop of a horse carriage and a guide who strings the stories together scene by scene. I really like two things: the way the tour connects local legends to real places you can actually see from the street, and the classic, relaxing pace of a horse-drawn ride that still feels special at night.
There’s one catch to know up front: this is more fun and spooky-storytime than full-on horror. If you’re chasing maximum terror, you may find it lighter than other ghost tours. Still, with a group capped at 12 and a price point that’s friendly for a night activity, it’s an easy way to get your bearings fast and learn Savannah’s ghost lore without spending all evening in lines.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll feel on this Savannah night ride
- Why Savannah at night works on a horse carriage
- Where the tour starts: the Jefferson Street and West Saint Julian meeting point
- The 50-minute narration: what you’re actually getting
- Sorrel Weed House: a haunted-stop story you’ll hear in motion
- Colonial Park Cemetery pass: unmarked graves near the street
- Anna’s story near 17Hundred90 and the legend of stolen belongings
- The ghost names you’ll hear: Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna
- Price and value: why $45 can work for most budgets
- Family fit: fun spooky energy, not maximum fear
- Practical tips for a smooth ride (and better photos)
- Should you book this Savannah Horse Drawn Ghost Tour by Night?
- FAQ
- How long is the Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah?
- What does the tour cost?
- Where does the tour start?
- Does the price include entry to any homes or museums?
- Is the ticket mobile?
- How many people are on each tour?
- Is the tour dependent on weather?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key highlights you’ll feel on this Savannah night ride

- 50-minute narrated carriage ride that keeps the pace tight and the stories moving
- Max 12 travelers, so you get a more personal feel than big-group tours
- Sorrel Weed House, Colonial Park Cemetery, and Anna’s story near 17Hundred90 may be included depending on the route
- Three ghost names in the mix: Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna
- A family-friendly vibe for many groups, with light “not too scary” energy compared to darker alternatives
Why Savannah at night works on a horse carriage

Savannah is one of those cities where the nighttime lighting does half the work. On this tour, you don’t just stand around and look at buildings. You ride past them, slow enough to notice details, fast enough to keep your energy up. The result is that the folklore feels grounded, not like you’re hearing spooky stuff in the abstract.
I also like how the “ghost” side is built into the actual route. Your guide focuses on stories tied to recognizable local spots: houses, cemetery ground, and the kind of city corners where old tales tend to stick. And since this is a horse-drawn carriage, the trip itself becomes part of the experience. The horses set a calm rhythm, and that makes it easier to listen closely.
The other reason this format shines is timing. Fifty minutes is just long enough to feel like you did something meaningful, without eating an entire night. If you’ve got kids, grandparents, or anyone who doesn’t want a late, exhausting excursion, this length is a sweet spot.
Other ghost & haunted tours we've reviewed in Savannah
Where the tour starts: the Jefferson Street and West Saint Julian meeting point

You’ll begin at Jefferson Street and West Saint Julian Street, right in the heart of Savannah’s walk-and-drive area. The meet point matters because it keeps things straightforward: you’re not hunting for a remote parking lot or a complicated bus pickup.
You’ll also get a mobile ticket, which is convenient for phone-first travelers. If you’re juggling dinner plans and photos, being able to show your ticket on your device saves stress. And since the group size is kept to a maximum of 12, the start doesn’t turn into a chaotic cattle-call. It feels more controlled, like you’re joining a small nighttime outing.
One more practical note: this is a night carriage experience, so plan to dress for the evening. Comfortable layers are your friend. The tour depends on good weather, and if conditions are poor, the operator may switch dates or offer a refund. That means you’ll want to keep your schedule flexible enough to handle a change.
The 50-minute narration: what you’re actually getting
This is not a tour where you go inside buildings. You’re on the carriage, listening to a narrated route that passes notable places connected to Savannah’s folklore. The key included item is the ride itself, so your value is in the combination of carriage time plus guided storytelling.
At $45 for roughly 50 minutes, the value comes from what you avoid: long self-guided research, wandering in the dark trying to match street corners to ghost tales, and paying separate admission fees. That said, the tradeoff is also clear. If you want to tour inside places, you won’t get that here. The stops are mainly about passing by and hearing the story, not entering.
In one recent family-focused experience, the guide’s storytelling was praised for staying organized and transitioning smoothly from one tale to the next. That matters more than people think. Ghost tours can turn into random lists of scary names. A good guide keeps the threads together so you leave with an actual mental map of Savannah’s legends.
Sorrel Weed House: a haunted-stop story you’ll hear in motion
One of the places you might pass is the Sorrel Weed House, highlighted because it has been featured on Ghost Hunters and is often cited as among the most haunted homes in Savannah. Hearing that while you’re riding past makes the whole idea feel less like internet lore and more like local legend with a location you can point to later.
Since you’re not going in, the experience is about mood and context. Your guide likely frames the haunting through the house’s reputation and the kinds of stories people attach to specific Savannah addresses. Even from the carriage, you can usually spot enough exterior detail to connect it to the ghost talk.
The big benefit for your trip planning is that this stop fits neatly into a short tour. You get the “this is what people whisper about here” moment without turning your night into a museum crawl. The drawback is also predictable: you’ll miss any behind-the-scenes information that could come from an interior visit. If you want photos inside or access to exhibits, you’d need a different stop on a different day.
Colonial Park Cemetery pass: unmarked graves near the street
Another possible stop on the route is Colonial Park Cemetery. This one has a built-in eerie detail: unmarked graves spill into the street you’ll travel on. That’s not just a scary-sounding line. It changes how you see the space while you ride through, because you’re watching the city edges where the past seems to bleed into the present.
Cemeteries can be heavy in the daytime, but at night they can feel even more personal. The carriage pace helps here. You’re not rushing. You’re not standing in one spot for too long. You can look, listen, and let the mood settle without feeling overwhelmed.
The main consideration: if you’re sensitive to cemetery settings, go in prepared for that tone. This is a story tour, not a walkthrough of individual graves. Still, the narrative ties the location to the darker side of Savannah’s folklore, and that may feel more intense than you expect if your goal is light entertainment.
Other horse-drawn carriage tours in Savannah
Anna’s story near 17Hundred90 and the legend of stolen belongings
One of the most specific tales on the tour involves Anna. Your carriage may pass by Anna’s former home, which is now guest room 204 at 17Hundred90. The story centers on Anna jumping from a bedroom window, and the legend goes further: Anna is said to love taking personal belongings of the lovely ladies who stay there.
This is exactly the kind of ghost lore that works well on a carriage tour. It’s detailed enough that you’ll remember it, but it’s also tied to a place you can actually recognize later. Even though you won’t enter the guest room, you’ll leave with a very clear image in your head: a specific room number, a specific modern address, and the idea that the old story still lingers.
If you’re traveling with kids, this kind of tale can be a sweet spot. It’s spooky without needing gore or jump scares. One family experience wasn’t very scary overall, and that fits the type of ghost storytelling here: creepy details presented in a controlled, guided way.
The ghost names you’ll hear: Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna
Ghost tours can become generic fast. This one avoids that by using named legends connected to Savannah. You may hear about Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna. Those names matter because they turn “haunted Savannah” from a vague concept into something you can track.
When the guide names specific people, you’re less likely to lose interest midway. It’s also easier to compare stories later with fellow travelers or with your own notes. And it’s a simple form of learning that doesn’t require homework.
I’d suggest you treat the names like a mini game. If you catch two or three, you’re already getting more out of the tour than if you only remember the general spooky vibe. The payoff is that Savannah’s folklore sticks with you longer.
Price and value: why $45 can work for most budgets

Let’s talk value directly. At $45 for around 50 minutes, you’re paying for a nighttime carriage ride plus narrated ghost storytelling. The included part is straightforward: you get the ride. Entrance to homes or museums is not included, so you’re not paying museum prices on top of it.
That matters because many Savannah experiences either cost a lot more or require longer time commitments. This one hits a good middle ground: it’s short enough to fit between dinner and dessert, and it doesn’t require buying additional tickets for each stop.
The group size also supports the value. With a maximum of 12 travelers, the tour doesn’t feel like you’re swallowed by a crowd. That generally leads to better audio focus and more of that guided, back-and-forth feel that makes storytelling land better.
And based on reviews, the storytelling itself seems to be the main driver of satisfaction. One group praised the guide for being a strong story teller and smoothly transitioning between tales, which is exactly what you want for a tour like this. If the narration is well organized, you leave feeling like you got your money’s worth.
Family fit: fun spooky energy, not maximum fear
If you’re deciding whether to bring kids, this is the part to weigh carefully. One family described the experience as fun but not very scary, especially compared with other ghost tours that felt more immersive and creepier.
So I’d frame this as a “safe introduction to Savannah ghost lore.” You get scares-lite folklore, a good nighttime outing, and a carriage ride that feels like a real treat even for non–ghost-tour people.
There’s also a horse factor that kids often love. In one experience, kids had a chance to give belly scratches to the horses at the end, and the horses were named Teddy and Mr. Jinx in that tour. That kind of interaction is never the headline, but it’s memorable and it breaks up the spooky tone with something sweet and silly.
Practical tips for a smooth ride (and better photos)
Here are the small moves that make the experience feel easier when you’re standing around at night.
First: dress for the evening and expect the need for good weather. The tour is weather-dependent. If it gets canceled due to poor conditions, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund, so don’t book it as your one fixed plan if you’re locked into only one night in town.
Second: keep your phone ready but don’t let it take over the moment. The stories are timed to the ride. If you’re constantly filming, you’ll miss the details that make the legends memorable. Instead, save photos for the start and for any quick pauses in the route.
Third: plan your expectations around what’s included. You’re not touring inside houses or museums. You’re learning the stories that surround them, while you ride past. If you’re hoping for interior access, you may leave feeling like something’s missing.
Finally: if you want the best experience, treat the tour like guided listening plus sightseeing. Look up at the buildings, but also let the guide lead. The fun is in the combination.
Should you book this Savannah Horse Drawn Ghost Tour by Night?
I think you should book it if you want a short, low-effort way to learn Savannah’s ghost folklore without paying museum admission or losing half your day to planning. It’s especially worth it if you like nighttime walking cities but want a break from long distances, crowds, and cold feet.
You should be cautious if you’re chasing scary intensity. This tends to land closer to “spooky stories on a carriage” than “full-on terror.” And because you’ll be passing by sites rather than entering them, this is not the choice if you need inside access.
If your group includes kids or you’re traveling with someone who prefers gentle thrills, this tour’s pacing and tone are a strong match. If you’re visiting Savannah for the first time, it’s also a smart way to start building a mental map of the city’s most talked-about places while the night still feels new.
In short: for $45, you’re buying a ride, guided storytelling, and a handful of named legends tied to real stops. That’s a practical deal for most visitors, as long as you’re in the mood for spooky-but-friendly folklore.
FAQ
How long is the Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah?
It’s approximately 50 minutes.
What does the tour cost?
The price is $45.
Where does the tour start?
The tour starts at Jefferson Street & West Saint Julian Street, Savannah, GA 31401.
Does the price include entry to any homes or museums?
No. Entrance to homes or museums is not included.
Is the ticket mobile?
Yes, it uses a mobile ticket.
How many people are on each tour?
The tour has a maximum of 12 travelers.
Is the tour dependent on weather?
Yes. It requires good weather, and if canceled due to poor weather you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, but cancellations within 24 hours aren’t refunded.




























