Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour

REVIEW · SAVANNAH

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour

  • 4.511 reviews
  • 2 hours (approx.)
  • From $12.00
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Operated by World City Trail · Bookable on Viator

Turn Savannah into a puzzle walk. For $12, this self-guided hunt lets you start from the Forsyth Park area at 24/7 times, using your phone instead of waiting on a guide. I like that it’s built for flexibility, so you can plan around your day rather than the tour’s clock.

You’ll also appreciate the GPS audio navigation and riddle stops that string together a 3.8 km loop through real Savannah sights. The biggest practical catch is that it’s outdoor-only and depends on your phone plus active mobile data, so it can feel like a bad day to try if weather or signal goes sideways.

Key Highlights to Know Before You Go

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour - Key Highlights to Know Before You Go

  • Start anytime, no meeting required using the World City Trail app and your 10-digit booking reference
  • A walk you can shape: 3.8 km, ~3 hours on average, with the ability to pause, resume, or skip stops
  • Savannah landmarks in puzzle form including Chippewa Square (Forrest Gump bench scene) and the Old Sorrel Weed House
  • Smart breaks built in at City Market (pralines) and River Street (ships passing by)
  • Help when you need it with 24/7 chat support, plus no phone line

Savannah Scavenger Hunt: A 2–3 Hour Self-Guided Game Plan

This is a scavenger hunt you run on your own schedule. You download the World City Trail app, log in with your 10-digit booking reference, and then follow the audio + GPS directions as you solve story-based riddles along the way. It’s designed for simple logistics: you start whenever you want, and you keep moving—or stop—whenever you need to.

The route is about 3.8 km, and the full activity usually takes around 3 hours depending on breaks and your walking pace. It’s also not a one-shot deal. Your access lasts for a full year, which is handy if you want to revisit your favorite stops later.

Price-wise, $12 per person is the main appeal. You’re paying for a guided experience without paying for a guide’s time, and you still get more than a basic route: audio storytelling, navigation, and insider recommendations for food and shopping. It’s also private in the sense that it’s just your group—no big tour herd.

One more thing: the tour is available in English and five other languages, and the audio/text content is delivered through the app. If you want a low-stress way to see Savannah’s center with structure, this is one of those “turn the city into a mission” setups.

Other pirate adventures and scavenger hunts in Savannah

Tech and Timing: The Stuff That Makes or Breaks It

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour - Tech and Timing: The Stuff That Makes or Breaks It
This scavenger hunt is smartphone-first. You’ll want a fully charged phone and active mobile data, because the app needs an internet connection to work properly outdoors. You should also disable any VPN and avoid city Wi‑Fi, since that can cause the app to disconnect or malfunction.

You don’t need special gear, but you do need comfortable shoes. The activity is built around walking, and it’s not a sit-and-stroll. If you’re thinking of it as a light walk, plan on a real route. One short reality check: if walking is hard for you, this may not be the best match.

The good news is that audio can play through your phone’s speaker, or you can use headphones if you prefer. I like that choice because it lets you decide how “quiet” you want the experience to feel while you’re out and about.

Timing is flexible in a way group tours often aren’t. Start anytime, pause as often as you want, and take breaks at your pace. There is no strict time limit built into the experience, so you can treat it like a route with optional missions rather than a ticking clock.

Where to Begin: Forsyth Park Fountain as Your North Star

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour - Where to Begin: Forsyth Park Fountain as Your North Star
The app suggests starting at the Fountain at Forsyth Park for the best route flow. That matters because the puzzles depend on the order of stops and the way the route unfolds. Starting there also gives you an easy mental anchor when you step outside.

You can technically start and finish anywhere, and the experience is meant to be adaptable. Still, if you want the smoothest “story walk,” follow the recommended start. It’s the difference between feeling like you’re collecting clues in order versus trying to force a route to fit your day.

Practical tip: since the tour is centered on Savannah’s core, you’ll likely be parking and starting near where you’re planning to spend time anyway—especially if you want to finish near River Street later in the route.

The Walk Itself: Stop-by-Stop Highlights (and How to Enjoy Each One)

Your route takes you through a sequence of Savannah squares, landmarks, and atmospheric corners. Each stop brings text or audio stories and a set of clues tied to what you’re seeing around you. The goal isn’t to speed-run. The goal is to look slower, then answer the prompt in a way that makes you notice details you’d normally ignore.

Also, don’t treat it like pure navigation. The value comes from solving riddles using your imagination and observation. If you keep your brain switched on, you’ll feel like the city is talking back.

1) Fountain at Forsyth Park: The Launch Point

You start right where the app frames the experience. This first stop is about getting your bearings and getting into the rhythm of how the puzzles work. Once you’ve got your first clue, the rest of the route starts to feel more like a guided conversation with the street.

If you’re someone who likes structure but hates rigid schedules, this opener works well. It’s a strong “begin here” moment.

2) Monterey Square: Settling Into Savannah’s Square-Game

From the start, the route moves you to Monterey Square as an early puzzle stop. Squares are ideal for scavenger hunts because they give you space to pause, read, and scan without feeling rushed.

Here, you’re likely building momentum—enough walking to feel like you’re doing something, not so much that you feel trapped in a long loop.

3) Cathedral Basilica St John The Baptist: Stories That Add Context

Next is Cathedral Basilica St John The Baptist. This is one of those stops where the tour’s audio/text content can turn a building you might otherwise pass into something more personal.

If you enjoy places with a named story tied to them, this is where you’ll appreciate the format: the audio helps you connect the clue to a real location.

4) Old Sorrel Weed House Museum & Tours: The Haunted-Style Interlude

You then reach The Old Sorrel Weed House Museum & Tours, specifically framed with haunted-style storytelling in the experience. Even if you’re not a full-on ghost-house person, the haunted angle is useful because it gives you a reason to slow down and look for the puzzle’s details.

This stop is a good example of what the tour does best: it uses narrative to make you pay attention.

5) Chippewa Square: The Forrest Gump Bench Moment

Chippewa Square is famous in pop culture, and this tour references the Forrest Gump bench scene. That connection can be a fun hook because you’re seeing an identifiable filming location while working through the riddle prompts.

If you’re traveling with someone who likes classic movies, this stop can turn into an easy shared laugh.

6) Colonial Park Cemetery: A Quiet Stop With a Different Vibe

The route continues to Colonial Park Cemetery. This is one of the moments where the scavenger-hunt format changes the pace—less “tap-tap photos,” more “read, think, answer.”

Because cemeteries tend to set a quieter mood anyway, having an audio prompt can guide you through without needing extra planning.

7) Owens-thomas House & Slave Quarters: Another Story-Linked Stop

You’ll also stop at Owens-thomas House & Slave Quarters. This is included as part of the puzzle trail, with storytelling content meant to match the location.

This is the kind of stop that benefits from taking your time. Even if you’re not reading every prompt word-for-word, you’ll get more out of it if you pause and let the clue connect to what you’re seeing.

8) Reynolds Square: Keep the Clues Moving

Then it’s Reynolds Square, another classic square stop where the route keeps its momentum. By now, you’re probably in the groove: follow the GPS, listen to the story cue, then figure out the next step.

This part is where the self-guided format shines. You can slow down if you like the vibe, or speed up if you’re ready to hit the food and waterfront later.

9) City Market: Pause for Pralines and a Reset

Now for the break stop at City Market. The experience explicitly calls out a famous Savannah praline moment here. Even if you don’t buy one immediately, the clue timing gives you a reason to stop, regroup, and make the day feel like a proper outing instead of a long chain of “next stop” distractions.

This is also where the app’s insider tips can help: restaurant and shop suggestions can steer you toward something local instead of guessing in the moment.

10) River Street Market Place: Watch the Ships Go By

Finally, you reach River Street Market Place, with a highlighted moment to watch massive ships passing by. This ending stretch is great because it gives you a sensory payoff that feels like Savannah.

If you’ve been walking in concentrated city blocks, the waterfront view helps the whole route feel finished and satisfying. It’s a natural place to take final photos and decide if you want to keep wandering on your own.

Breaks, Food, and Local Tips That Don’t Feel Forced

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour - Breaks, Food, and Local Tips That Don’t Feel Forced
One of my favorite parts of a self-guided tour is when it lets you build in comfort. This one does that with built-in pause points that fit Savannah’s rhythm, not just a straight-line checklist.

City Market is your built-in snack moment, with pralines specifically called out. River Street gives you a visual break where the scene changes from “historic sights” to “waterfront action,” with ships as the spectacle.

The app also includes hand-picked recommendations for local restaurants and shops. Since those suggestions are embedded in the tour experience, they feel timed rather than random. You don’t have to stop and scroll for ideas mid-walk.

And because there’s no time limit, you can stretch the day. If you want to linger at City Market, do it. If River Street calls you back for one more lap by the water, you can.

Support and Troubleshooting: What to Do If the App Acts Up

You get 24/7 live support via chat, and the experience notes there’s no phone support. That’s fine as long as you remember to use the in-app chat link if something doesn’t make sense.

For best results, handle setup carefully:

  • Log in with your 10-digit booking reference
  • Start the correct activity inside the app
  • Keep your phone charged
  • Use active mobile data, and skip VPN/city Wi‑Fi

If you ever feel like you’re just walking place-to-place with no puzzle prompts, don’t assume the hunt is broken. Re-check that you started the activity correctly in the app and that the GPS/audio is running. This type of tour depends on the app being connected and active.

Also, the experience is available 24/7 for starting, which means you can pick a time when you’re less rushed or when the light makes the waterfront feel better.

Who Should Book This Scavenger Hunt in Savannah

This one is best for travelers who like structure but want freedom. It suits you if you enjoy:

  • figuring out riddles while you walk
  • having audio storytelling tied to real stops
  • building breaks into your day at your own pace
  • exploring Savannah’s center without paying for a live guide

It also fits small groups well, since it’s a private experience for your group only.

On the flip side, consider skipping if you can’t comfortably handle a walking route around 3.8 km. Even with pauses, the format still expects you to move between outdoor stops.

One more practical fit test: it’s outdoor-only and internet-dependent. If you’re traveling with a low-data plan, weak reception, or a phone that struggles with GPS, it’s worth thinking twice.

Should You Book the Savannah Scavenger Hunt?

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Highlights Self Guided Audio Tour - Should You Book the Savannah Scavenger Hunt?
Book it if you want an organized way to see Savannah’s key sights with audio guidance, and you like the idea of learning the city through prompts instead of reading lists. The $12 price is especially compelling given that you get navigation, audio, and local recommendations, plus access for a full year.

Skip it if your day is already tight, your phone connection is unreliable, or walking long outdoor stretches isn’t realistic. In that case, you might spend the day frustrated instead of entertained.

If you want a fun middle ground between a museum day and a wandering day, this scavenger hunt is a smart, cost-friendly choice.

FAQ

How do I start the Savannah scavenger hunt?

Download the World City Trail app, then log in using your 10-digit booking reference. Use the create option to start, and you can begin anytime 24/7.

Is there a live guide waiting for me?

No. This is 100% self-guided. No one will be waiting at the start, and you can start whenever you like.

How long and how far is the route?

The activity is about 2 hours as an approximate duration, with an average activity time closer to 3 hours depending on your pace and breaks. The walk is about 3.8 km.

Do I need to pay entrance fees for attractions?

No. The activity is designed so you won’t need to pay extra entrance fees, since the puzzles relate to the outdoor areas of the attractions.

Does the tour work if I need to pause for breaks?

Yes. There’s no time limit, and you can pause and resume as often as you like.

What phone and internet do I need?

You’ll need a fully charged smartphone and active mobile data. Disable any VPN and avoid city Wi‑Fi, since these can cause the app to disconnect or malfunction.

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