REVIEW · SAVANNAH
Savannah Beyond Good & Evil Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Ghost City Tours · Bookable on Viator
Night in Savannah turns spooky fast. This walking tour delivers an outdoor, night-time spin on the city’s most notorious legends, with guides who know how to keep the mood light. I especially like the start at Colonial Park Cemetery and the way the stories blend ghostly folklore with real-life crimes and court details. The main drawback is simple: it’s a full 90 minutes on your feet, and Savannah’s brick and cobblestone can feel unforgiving.
You’ll finish back in downtown near Chippewa Square after stops at two big-name sites: Colonial Park Cemetery and the Mercer-Williams House Museum area in Monterey Square. It runs in English, usually with small groups (max 30), and it’s set up as a fun evening activity rather than a deep scholarly lecture.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Why This Savannah Night Walk Feels Worth It
- Price and Value: Is $34.99 a Good Deal?
- Meeting at Colonial Park Cemetery: Atmosphere Without the Inside Access
- Mercer-Williams House Museum Area: True Crime Meets Local Legend
- The Walk Itself: Timing, Surfaces, and Staying Comfortable
- Guides Are the Real Secret Sauce: Evie, Nikki, Austin, Leroy, and More
- How Spooky Is It, Really?
- Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Should Skip It)
- Tips to Get More Out of Your Night
- Should You Book This Savannah Beyond Good & Evil Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Savannah Beyond Good & Evil Tour?
- Where does the tour start and where does it end?
- What is included in the price?
- Is this tour scary?
- What should I wear?
- What are the age requirements?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Colonial Park Cemetery sets the tone fast with centuries-old atmosphere from the gate
- Monterey Square facts over jump scares with true-crime details tied to the Mercer-Williams House area
- It’s designed for night walking—even in rain, you’ll be out there on real streets
- Humor helps you stay relaxed while the stories get dark
- You typically won’t go inside the cemetery or historic houses due to access restrictions
Why This Savannah Night Walk Feels Worth It

Savannah at night is already a little theatrical. This tour leans into that, but it doesn’t turn into pure stage fright. The goal is a guided storytelling walk: you move street to street, stop at a couple of key locations, and get a clear picture of how certain names and events became part of local mythology.
I like that the pace feels built for a relaxed evening. The stops are short, the route is outdoors, and the hour-and-a-half format makes it easier to fit into a tight itinerary. You’re also not stuck listening to one long monologue the whole way—your guide will point, explain, and connect details as you walk.
The other thing that really matters: the tone. You get spooky material, but it’s delivered with humor. That balance is what keeps the experience from getting overly heavy.
Other Midnight in the Garden of Good & Evil tours in Savannah
Price and Value: Is $34.99 a Good Deal?
For $34.99, you’re paying for a guided walk with a local guide plus a professional guide included in the experience. That’s a big part of the value here: you’re not just buying a route or a collection of pins on a map. You’re buying a live narrator who can steer the group, keep the story moving, and—based on guide impressions—answer questions in real time.
This also isn’t a long, all-day commitment. At about 1 hour 30 minutes, it’s the kind of activity you can do even if you’re already spending daytime hours touring museums or houses. And because it’s evening-based, it helps you use nighttime without wasting it.
A smart way to judge value is to think about alternatives. If you’ve ever paid for a “ghost tour” that feels like generic spooky background noise, this one stands out because it ties legends to specific historical events and local names. You get the entertainment, but you also get story substance—especially around the Mercer-Williams House topic.
Meeting at Colonial Park Cemetery: Atmosphere Without the Inside Access

The tour starts at Colonial Park Cemetery, right at 200 Abercorn St. The cemetery gates are where the atmosphere starts to do its job. You get a look at a real historic space—one that has held generations of memory—and your guide sets the tone with the kinds of legends that stuck around long after the events.
Important practical note: this tour is built around what you can access from the street or gate. You should plan on hearing stories from outside rather than touring inside. Some people book expecting cemetery entry, and that’s not what this experience is designed to do.
If you want the full “walk among graves” vibe, you might feel disappointed. But if you’re there for the guided narrative and the feel of Savannah at night, the outside view can still work. It’s dark, it’s quiet, and your guide’s story framing turns the surroundings into part of the show.
Mercer-Williams House Museum Area: True Crime Meets Local Legend
Next you head toward Mercer Williams House Museum in Monterey Square. This stop is where the tour’s darker side leans into something more specific and less vague: the brutal murder of Danny Hansford, and how the prosecution reportedly chose to use a root doctor in the conviction.
This is the kind of detail that makes a tour feel grounded. Instead of generic hauntings, you get a named event and an odd historical method used in a real trial. That gives you something to hold onto as you walk—like a thread connecting the spooky idea to an actual “this is what happened” storyline.
Another practical point: the admission ticket for the Mercer-Williams House Museum is not included, and the tour experience is not presented as a museum-entry visit. So don’t count on walking through the interior spaces on this tour. You’re there for the guided story tied to the location.
If you like true crime, you’ll probably enjoy the way this part of the evening shifts from cemetery mood to story-driven context. And if you’ve read Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, you may recognize some of the names and cultural references around Savannah’s darker edges, even if you haven’t been on a tour like this before.
The Walk Itself: Timing, Surfaces, and Staying Comfortable

This is a walking tour, outdoors for the full evening portion. It’s about 90 minutes total, with quick stops along the way. That sounds simple until you remember Savannah streets are not all flat asphalt. Reviews and practical advice both point to a key reality: brick and cobblestone can be rough on feet and ankles, especially in the dark.
Here’s how I’d plan it:
- Wear comfortable walking shoes you’d trust for a long sidewalk stretch.
- If you have balance issues or leg pain, take it seriously. The tour is not built around frequent long breaks.
- Bring a drink if you like—this tour’s setup explicitly welcomes it.
Weather is also part of the equation. The tour runs in all weather conditions, so you should dress like you’re going out for an evening walk, not like you’ll be indoors between stops. If humidity tends to slow you down, plan for that too.
The upside: because the stops are short and the group moves, you’re not stuck trudging for hours without payoff. You’ll be listening, looking, and moving, which keeps energy from draining too fast.
Guides Are the Real Secret Sauce: Evie, Nikki, Austin, Leroy, and More

On this type of tour, the guide can make or break the experience. The good news is that this one has a reputation for guides who can tell stories without sounding like they’re reading off a script.
Names that have stood out include Evie, Nikki, Austin, Sarah, Daniel, Leroy, and Noah Davis. People consistently praised guides for being:
- funny and engaging without turning the night into pure theatrics
- good at answering questions
- attentive to the group (including when someone has hearing loss)
One of the best “value signals” here is clarity. If you’ve ever been on a night tour where you can’t hear, you know how painful that is. This experience has a track record of guides who project clearly and look at the group while speaking.
That said, there is a storytelling style difference to be aware of. Some visitors want the facts straight and short; others enjoy a more theatrical voice. The tour can lean more narrative than minimal explanation, so if you prefer very dry history, you may need to adjust expectations.
How Spooky Is It, Really?
This is not billed as a horror movie. The focus is haunted history and infamous figures, with humor woven in so the tone doesn’t tip into scary overload.
It also helps that the stops themselves aren’t “scary attraction” style. You’re at actual historic places and landmarks. That naturally limits how intense the experience can get. You get spooky atmosphere through story and setting, not through jumpy effects.
So if you’re the kind of traveler who wants spooky vibes but still wants to enjoy dinner after, this is likely your lane. If you’re chasing adrenaline and nightmares, you may find you want something more intense than a facts-and-legends walking tour.
Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Should Skip It)

This is a strong fit if you:
- want a quick, memorable night activity in downtown Savannah
- enjoy combining local history with ghost stories
- like true crime elements, especially when they’re tied to named events
- want a guided experience rather than reading signs on your own
It may be less satisfying if you:
- want to go inside the cemetery or enter historic buildings as part of the tour
- want a very short walk with lots of sitting
- struggle with uneven surfaces at night
One more note: some people expect the tour to be more “haunted house” style. This one is more about the stories behind places. If you’re mainly after interactive scares, you might feel like it’s too story-forward.
Tips to Get More Out of Your Night
You’ll enjoy this more if you show up ready to listen and look. I’d do three simple things:
- Arrive early enough to settle in before the first story starts at the cemetery gate.
- Keep your footing in mind. If you’re nervous on cobblestone, slow down and choose short steps.
- Bring questions. A good guide can turn your curiosity into a better night, especially when the stories connect crimes, social context, and local folklore.
And if you’re doing other Savannah attractions the same day, save your biggest energy for night. This tour is active, but it’s also a great “story anchor” that helps everything else you see make more sense.
Should You Book This Savannah Beyond Good & Evil Tour?
Book it if you want a fun, story-driven night walk that mixes Savannah’s haunted reputation with real events, delivered with humor and clarity. At $34.99 for about 90 minutes with live guidance, it’s a solid value when you care about narrative and place-based context.
Skip or reconsider if you’re expecting guaranteed inside access to the cemetery or historic houses, or if uneven pavement at night is a real problem for you. Also, if you need a strictly factual presentation with zero theatrics, you may want to compare style before committing.
Overall, this is the kind of tour that helps you feel like you’re in Savannah, not just visiting it. If you’re game for walking, listening, and leaning into the city’s darker legends, it’s a great way to spend an evening.
FAQ
How long is the Savannah Beyond Good & Evil Tour?
It runs for about 1 hour 30 minutes.
Where does the tour start and where does it end?
The tour starts at Colonial Park Cemetery (200 Abercorn St, Savannah, GA 31401). It ends in downtown Savannah near Chippewa Square, depending on the route taken.
What is included in the price?
You get a local guide and a professional guide. Admission tickets for the stops are not included.
Is this tour scary?
It focuses on haunted history and spooky stories with a healthy dose of humor. It’s more story-and-atmosphere than jump-scare style.
What should I wear?
Wear comfortable walking shoes. The tour involves walking outdoors, and brick and cobblestone can be tough if you’re not used to them.
What are the age requirements?
The minimum age is 16 years.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund (but not if you cancel within 24 hours). Weather-related cancellations may offer a different date or a full refund.





























