Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour

Savannah at night has teeth. This Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour is a tight 90-minute guided walk through the Historic District, mixing colonial-era stories with the kinds of superstitions locals still trade.

I especially love the safe, under-control feeling of a real guided night stroll, and I like how the tour aims for spooky and place-based history rather than jump-scare theatrics.

One thing to consider: the experience lives or dies by guide delivery and meeting-point accuracy. A few unhappy moments came from confusion about where to stand, and sound can be an issue if you’re not close to the guide during quieter passages.

Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

  • Warren Square to Wright Square: you start in a small park and end at Savannah’s “hanging square.”
  • A compact 1.5-hour format: ideal when you want a ghost story without losing your whole evening.
  • Twilight mood, mossy squares, and walking ease: an easy route paced for conversation.
  • Stories that connect past and present: colonial government, Declaration lore, plus older traditions like Gullah superstition.
  • Small group size (max 30): more human scale than the huge crowd tours.
  • You’ll hear house hauntings and exorcism talk: not just legends from books, but the folklore Savannah keeps alive.

Twilight in Savannah Historic District: The Real Vibe

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Twilight in Savannah Historic District: The Real Vibe
This tour is built for people who want a nighttime Savannah that feels slightly off-script. You’re not just ticking off haunted labels. You’re walking through the same core area that mattered when Savannah was Georgia’s political center in the 1700s, including the story that the first reading of the Declaration of Independence in Georgia happened here. That historical anchor matters because it gives the ghost talk context instead of feeling like random spooky filler.

What you’ll feel on the ground is a slow shift from streetlight normal to square-at-night folklore. The tour description leans into twilight walking beneath moss-covered trees and through shadowy squares. That’s not decoration. It’s how Savannah reads at night, and it sets up why people stay superstitious here.

Also, manage expectations about what kind of spooky you’re buying. One of the strongest notes from praise is that the tour is more history-connected and story-driven than Halloween costume theater. If you’re hoping for a dramatic stage show, you may find it calmer than you imagined. If you like your ghosts with explanations and real local traditions, you’re in the right place.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Savannah.

Meeting Warren Square and Ending at Wright Square

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Meeting Warren Square and Ending at Wright Square
The start and finish points are part of the experience, not just logistics.

Start: Warren Square (22 Habersham St, Savannah, GA 31401)

End: Wright Square (Savannah, GA 31401), also called the hanging square

One detail you should not ignore: the written tour description also mentions Johnson Square as the start point of the Historic District walk. Since both names appear in the provided info, the safest move is simple: follow what your confirmation tells you about where to meet, and arrive a bit early so you’re not hunting in the dark.

Why the ending matters

Wright Square is framed as a long-standing focal point for haunting talk, and the tour ends there with that same playful warning energy: you make it through the walk, and then you arrive at the place people associate with the darkest reputation. Even if you’re not fully buying the supernatural, that last stop gives the whole evening a “final scene” feeling.

The 90-Minute Story Flow: From Colonial Government to House Hauntings

This is an approximately 1 hour 30 minutes walking tour, and it’s paced like a story you can follow. You move from one atmosphere to the next, with short stops that let the guide set the scene and explain why the story sticks in Savannah.

Here’s the kind of arc you can expect, in human terms:

1) Warren Square: the “start your night” moment

You begin at a small, stately park with monuments, benches, pathways, fountains, and shade trees. That setting matters because it gives you a safe-feeling staging area before you step into the broader Historic District.

This first section typically blends location cues with big-picture context: how this area functioned in the 1700s and why it became a place where major events were associated with the city center. When the guide connects the supernatural talk to these civic details, the ghost stories feel like they belong to the town, not to the guide’s imagination alone.

2) Colonial-era echoes and Declaration lore

As you move through the Historic District core, you’ll hear the long-thread story of Savannah’s development. The most useful part of this segment for you is how it explains the town’s mind-set. If you understand what people feared, believed, and relied on in the past, the modern superstition makes more sense.

The tour specifically calls out why Savannah is considered superstitious and one of the most haunted cities in America. Even if you treat that as folklore, the “why” is the important piece, and the guide is there to connect the dots.

3) Twilight squares and the legends that keep getting retold

This is where the walking gets slower and the storytelling takes center stage. The tour description points to twilight strolls beneath moss-covered trees and through shadowy squares, which is basically Savannah’s signature night texture.

In this stretch, you can expect local legends, superstitions, and stories that blend historical events with paranormal claims. This is also where the tour leans into “past and present,” so you’re not only hearing what happened centuries ago. You’ll hear the kind of tales that people still pass along now, which is what keeps the supernatural conversation alive in Savannah.

4) House hauntings, and yes, the occasional exorcism talk

One of the promised experiences here is house hauntings, including the occasional reference to exorcism. That’s a clear signal about the tone: the guide isn’t trying to keep everything mild or academic. The stories are meant to send a chill, while still tying back to Savannah’s older belief systems and local folklore.

If you’re the type who likes your ghosts with details and a plausible reason for why the story gained traction, you’ll probably enjoy this part most.

5) Old Gullah traditions and superstitions that still matter

The tour also calls out Gullah traditions and superstitions, including some that are reportedly still practiced. This is one of the most interesting angles because it isn’t just “here’s a scary tale.” It’s “here’s a cultural thread that influences how people interpret the unexplained.”

If you want more than generic hauntings, this segment is a good reason to book.

6) The finale at Wright Square

When you reach Wright Square, the tour closes with that hanging-square reputation. If the earlier parts worked, you’ll feel the payoff right away: you’ve walked through context, legends, and local belief, and now you’re standing in the place that people associate with the most intense haunting talk.

Guide Style: What Gets Praised, What Can Frustrate

A ghost tour lives and dies by the guide. And in this case, the best experiences sound very specific.

One guide name that stands out in the provided info is Skippy. He’s praised for being highly effective at making the stories land, and for bringing Savannah history into the paranormal talk in a way that feels fun rather than lecture-y. Another strongly positive note is that some guides actively manage sound when traffic approaches, even stopping mid-sentence or raising voice so everyone can hear.

That kind of attention matters, because Savannah night walks come with real distractions: cars, street noise, and groups chatting while you’re trying to listen.

What can go wrong (and how you protect yourself)

You should plan for a couple of risks that show up in the provided feedback:

  • Hearing and pacing: Some people describe guides as soft-spoken or hard to hear, or as less engaged. The fix is in your control: stand where the guide can reach you easily. Don’t hang back at the edge of the group.
  • Meeting-point confusion: Several unhappy situations came from people going to the wrong place or arriving without a matching reservation situation. Protect yourself by arriving early, checking your confirmation for the correct square, and keeping your phone available.
  • Crowds: The route can be busy, especially around major tourist seasons. If you show up when it’s packed, you’ll naturally feel more clustered and less theatrical.

My practical advice: treat this as a listening tour first and a walking tour second. If you’re actively watching the guide and staying close, your odds go up fast.

Comfort, Crowds, and Night-Walk Practicalities

This tour is built to be manageable on foot. It’s a walking experience in the Historic District, and the tour info says to wear comfortable shoes. That’s not generic advice. Savannah’s sidewalks and square edges can be uneven, and at night you’re better off with shoes you can move confidently in.

Group size and feel

The tour caps at 30 travelers. For ghost tours, that’s a sweet spot. Big enough for lively energy, small enough that the guide can still keep the story moving for your group.

Pets

Pets are welcome, which is handy if you’re traveling with a companion who can handle a quiet night walk.

Crowds and timing

Some feedback points to heavy crowds on the route, with Halloween time described as peak season for this style of tour. If you prefer less congestion, picking an earlier departure time (when options are available) may help, but you’ll still be walking through a popular part of Savannah at night.

Language and ticketing

It’s offered in English, with a mobile ticket and confirmation at booking.

No hotel pickup

There’s no hotel pickup and drop-off. So you’ll want to plan to get yourself to the square on time. This also means you’re not waiting around for a vehicle while the best twilight turns into full dark.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
This is a strong match if you:

  • Want a time-efficient ghost experience that still feels connected to Savannah’s real places.
  • Prefer storytelling over cheesy theatrical effects.
  • Like local traditions and cultural context, especially stories that reference Gullah superstition and lingering beliefs.
  • Enjoy walking tours you can actually finish without rushing.

You might be less happy if you:

  • Want a high-energy performance with big theatrical staging and costumes. The tour is more grounded in history and folklore than in Halloween showmanship.
  • Are extremely sensitive to audio and background noise. If the guide’s voice is hard to hear, you’ll need to position yourself well to catch details.
  • Have trouble with meeting points in the dark. Do yourself a favor: arrive early, confirm the correct square, and don’t assume signage will solve it. City ordinances mentioned in the provided information can limit how guides present tour identifiers, so you should rely on confirmation details.

Quick Value Check: Is It Worth Your One Night?

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Quick Value Check: Is It Worth Your One Night?
Here’s the honest value math for you:

  • 1.5 hours is just long enough for a complete, start-to-finish story arc, without draining your whole evening.
  • 30-person max keeps it from feeling like a cattle line, as long as you show up prepared to listen.
  • The focus on the Historic District, plus anchors like Warren Square and Wright Square, gives you a structured way to see Savannah at night.
  • The guide factor is the wild card. Some guides clearly hit the sweet spot with clear delivery and engaging storytelling. Others can feel quieter or less confident, especially when the group is crowded.

The overall rating shown in the provided info is 3.4 across 201 reviews, which is a reminder that ghost tours are personal. Your best bet is to show up ready to listen, stand close, and follow the meeting-point instructions carefully.

Should You Book the Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour?

Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour - Should You Book the Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour?
I’d book it if you want a compact, guided night walk that uses Savannah’s real historic geography as the backbone for ghost stories. The tour’s promise of mossy squares, local superstition, and cultural threads like Gullah traditions is exactly the kind of “this feels like Savannah” experience that stays with you.

Skip it (or choose a different style) if you’re hunting for big theatrical scares, or if you strongly dislike walking tours where you need to hear the guide to enjoy it. And if you do book, protect your evening with two habits: arrive early, and stand close enough to hear clearly.

If you want a safe, spooky stroll that’s built for history-and-legend fans more than costume-show fans, this one is worth serious consideration.

FAQ

How long is the Haunted Savannah Paranormal Ghost Tour?

It lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.

Where does the tour start and where does it end?

It starts at Warren Square (22 Habersham St, Savannah, GA 31401) and ends in Wright Square.

Are there different departure times?

Yes, there are two evening departure times to choose from.

Is the tour offered in English?

Yes, it is offered in English.

Do I need hotel pickup?

No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.

Is a mobile ticket used?

Yes, it includes a mobile ticket.

Are pets allowed?

Yes, pets are welcome.

What if weather is bad?

This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

Is there free cancellation?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Savannah we have reviewed

Scroll to Top