REVIEW · SAVANNAH
Savannah Hauntings Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Savannah Hauntings Ghost Tour · Bookable on Viator
A 9 p.m. walk turns streets into whispers. This Savannah Hauntings tour mixes ghost stories with real Savannah setting, told as you stroll the Historic District at night. I like that it leans on book-based, source-anchored accounts rather than pure campfire chaos, and that guides (like Michelle, Eric, Nikki, and Hazel) keep both the spooky and the local history moving. One drawback to plan around: meeting-point directions can be confusing, and a couple of people missed the tour after being sent to the wrong nearby square.
What makes it work for you is the pace and length: about 1.5 hours of guided walking starting at 9:00 pm, with a small group size capped at 30. It’s also pitched as mobile-ticket and walk-friendly for most visitors, which is ideal if you want a low-effort, high-atmosphere night activity without booking a full evening show.
In This Review
- Key Things To Know Before You Go
- Night Walking in Savannah: What You’re Really Booking
- Where the Tour Starts at 9:00 pm (and How Not to Miss It)
- The Main Stop: Savannah Hauntings Ghost Tour (How the Story Gets Told)
- What Makes the Stories Feel More Credible (and More Fun)
- Guide Personalities: Why Your Experience May Feel Different
- The Night Views and the Walk Itself (No Transit Required)
- Family-Friendly, But Know the Scare Level
- Value for Money: What You’re Getting for the Price
- Tips to Get the Best Experience on This Tour
- So, Should You Book Savannah Hauntings?
- FAQ
- Where does the Savannah Hauntings tour meet?
- What time does the tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- Do I need a reservation?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- How big are the groups?
- Is it a mobile ticket?
- Is the tour family friendly?
- Are the stories based on sources or a book?
- Is free cancellation available?
Key Things To Know Before You Go

- Start at Wright Square (Bull & York): the tour meets at the corner of Bull & York Streets.
- 9:00 pm timing: plan to arrive a few minutes early so you don’t get stuck outside the group.
- Stories with a source trail: the tour is primarily built around the book Savannah Hauntings by Robert Edgerly, plus verifiable accounts.
- Small groups: maximum of 30 people.
- Family-friendly tone (not jump-scare horror): many guides keep it fun and accessible for kids.
- Guide style varies: some guides lean more theatrical; others focus more on history—so your “spook level” may depend on who you get.
Night Walking in Savannah: What You’re Really Booking
This isn’t a “sit in the dark and listen” kind of ghost tour. It’s a nighttime walk through the Savannah Historic District, run by a professional guide, with the story threaded into the streets and landmarks as you pass them. The timing matters here: 9:00 pm is late enough to feel that classic Southern-night hush, but not so late that the city feels empty or unsafe in the usual tourist sense.
The best part for value is that you’re not just getting scares. You’re getting story plus place—ghost encounters paired with Savannah context. Guides tend to bring the tales to life, too, with delivery that can be theatrical (Eric gets named often for performance-style storytelling) and an audience-friendly pace that works for groups with kids.
Your one main planning challenge is logistics: you need to get to the correct square at the correct corner. A couple of negative experiences specifically point to confusion around nearby squares when directions are followed too literally.
Other ghost & haunted tours we've reviewed in Savannah
Where the Tour Starts at 9:00 pm (and How Not to Miss It)

The tour meets at Wright Square, at the corner of Bull & York Sts. The start time listed is 9:00 pm, and the tour ends back at the meeting point.
Here’s how to protect your evening:
- Arrive early and confirm you’re at Bull and York, not a nearby plaza with a similar name.
- Don’t rely on one generic map pin. If your phone points you to another square, correct it before you commit.
- Give yourself a buffer. Even a few minutes of confusion can turn into an expensive “stand and wait” moment if the group has already started.
If you’re visiting Savannah for the first time, this is the kind of tour where one missed step can snowball fast. But once you’re at the right corner, the rest runs like a proper walking tour should.
The Main Stop: Savannah Hauntings Ghost Tour (How the Story Gets Told)

The experience is essentially one guided walking circuit—Stop 1 is the Savannah Hauntings Ghost Tour—and the point is to hear ghost retellings as you go from site to site. The total duration is listed around 1 hour 30 minutes, though at least one group reported the tour running longer (up to about 2.5 hours), which suggests some guides pace the stories to the group.
What you can expect from the storytelling:
- Ghost encounters presented as historic accounts, not just “spooky vibes.”
- Retellings tied to Savannah’s past, including how people lived and worked in the city.
- A guide who uses the walk to keep the audience engaged, whether that means humor, dramatic flair, or interactive moments.
One detail I really like from the format: it’s built around a book. The tour operator Robert Edgerly shares tales liberally sprinkled with Savannah history, and the tour description points to Savannah Hauntings as the primary companion source. That matters because it keeps the stories from feeling randomly stitched together. It also means you can prep a bit ahead of time if you want, without needing to do homework.
What Makes the Stories Feel More Credible (and More Fun)

You’ll see a big theme in the tour’s approach: it’s meant to be not just tall tales. The tour uses a variety of reliable sources and leans on eyewitness-style accounts, with the book providing the narrative backbone.
For you, that can change the mood. Instead of the ghost story being the entire point, the ghost story becomes a lens—something that pulls you toward the real Savannah context: the people, the era, and why certain locations became legendary. That’s why people who’ve lived in Savannah (one reviewer noted they’ve been around for decades) can still pick up new stories they didn’t know.
That said, keep your expectations realistic about what “credible” means in this genre. It’s still folklore and haunting narrative. The promise is source-based storytelling, not academic lectures.
Guide Personalities: Why Your Experience May Feel Different
A ghost tour is only as good as its guide, and the reviews you provided highlight that this one has a noticeable range of styles.
Positive guide traits that show up repeatedly:
- Michelle is praised for mixing ghost stories with solid local history.
- Eric gets multiple mentions for theatrics and for grasping the audience.
- Nikki/Nicky is praised for speaking clearly and for combining haunting talk with Savannah context.
- Hazel gets credit for being strong on both story and history, and for getting that “touch of scary” feel without turning it into chaos.
- Several reviews call the tour patient and good for families, including kids around age 10.
Where people sometimes get disappointed:
- Some negative feedback says a guide leaned too heavily into personal experiences and didn’t give much place-based history.
- Another complaint points to guide style including off-topic political opinions. If you want a strictly neutral history narration, this is worth considering because it could affect your enjoyment.
Bottom line: the tour concept is consistent, but the delivery can swing. If you’re sensitive to distractions or you want history-first storytelling, arrive with the right mindset: it’s still a performance, just an informed one.
The Night Views and the Walk Itself (No Transit Required)
One practical win: this is downtown walking, starting at a well-known square. You don’t need tickets for transport, extra reservations, or a complicated route. It’s simply a guided circuit, so the city becomes your “venue.”
And because it’s at night, you get a different Savannah than daytime sightseeing:
- Old buildings look sharper in the dark.
- Shadows make every corner feel like a potential “wait, what was that?”
- Even if you’re not chasing fear, the visual atmosphere adds a layer you don’t get on a daytime tour.
If you’re visiting early in your trip, this is also a smart orientation move. People often recommend doing it early because it points you toward sites you’ll want to revisit when the light is better.
Family-Friendly, But Know the Scare Level
This tour is repeatedly described as family friendly and “not cheesy.” That’s a real signal. It means you can likely bring kids and still have a worthwhile experience, especially if your goal is education plus a little goosebumps.
But ghost tours also attract a spectrum of expectations:
- If you want jump scares and relentless horror, you might find the tone lighter than you hoped.
- If you want a fun way to see Savannah at night while learning why these places have reputations, you’ll probably feel satisfied.
The safest way to frame it is this: you’re buying a guided storytelling walk with spooky elements—not a horror movie in walking form.
Value for Money: What You’re Getting for the Price
You didn’t list a specific dollar amount in the data you provided, so I can’t tell you the exact cost. What I can say is how people judge the value: the tour is described as more reasonable than some other ghost tour groups, and people call it a great price for a tour that mixes sightseeing and history with the haunting stories.
Why that matters:
- A 90-minute guided walk is easy to fit into your schedule.
- You’re not paying only for “scary talk.” You’re paying for a guide to connect the city’s past to the legends.
- With a group cap of 30, you’re less likely to feel like a ticket number waiting in a crowd.
If you’re weighing this against other Savannah ghost options, treat the “value” question as this: do you want history woven into the stories, delivered by a guide who can keep kids and adults interested? If yes, this is a strong contender.
Tips to Get the Best Experience on This Tour
These are the small choices that make the evening smoother:
- Verify the meeting corner: Bull & York at Wright Square is the key.
- Bring a positive attitude: ghost stories are storytelling first, sources second. If you can enjoy the genre, you’ll get more out of it.
- Choose your expectation level: think “fun spooky history,” not “constant terror.”
- Plan for slightly longer than listed: one group reported the tour running longer than 1.5 hours.
- Dress for night walking: Savannah nights can feel cooler once you’re on foot for a while.
So, Should You Book Savannah Hauntings?
If you want an evening activity that’s part ghost lore, part Savannah context, this tour is an easy yes to consider. The biggest plus is that the stories are tied to a known book and framed using reliable accounts, so you’re not stuck with random tall tales. Add in the repeated praise for guides like Michelle, Eric, Nikki, and Hazel, and you’ve got a good shot at a night that feels both spooky and meaningful.
I’d skip or at least think twice if:
- You’re very strict about logistics and meeting-point accuracy (because some people had trouble when directions led them to the wrong square).
- You strongly prefer a purely neutral historical lecture style and want no guide opinions slipping in.
If you handle the start location carefully and you’re ready for a guided performance that mixes night sights with source-based ghost stories, you’ll likely have a fun, memorable way to see Savannah after dark.
FAQ
Where does the Savannah Hauntings tour meet?
The tour meets at Wright Square, at the corner of Bull & York Streets in Savannah, Georgia.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 9:00 pm.
How long is the tour?
The duration is listed at about 1 hour 30 minutes, though it may run longer depending on the group.
Do I need a reservation?
Reservations are not required, but they are encouraged.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
How big are the groups?
The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
Is it a mobile ticket?
Yes, it uses a mobile ticket.
Is the tour family friendly?
It’s described as family friendly, including experiences where kids were brought along and the tone was suitable.
Are the stories based on sources or a book?
The tour is based on a variety of reliable sources and primarily follows the book Savannah Hauntings by Robert Edgerly.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


























