Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah

REVIEW · SAVANNAH

Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah

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  • From $45
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Operated by Carriage Tours of Savannah · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 4.0 (14)Price from$45Operated byCarriage Tours of SavannahBook viaViator

If you love old streets and good storytelling, this tour delivers. A gentle horse-drawn ride at night pairs classic Savannah scenery with ghost and folklore narration that keeps things moving. Two things I really like here: the 45–50 minute format (easy to fit into any evening), and the mix of famed local legends like Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna. One possible drawback: it’s a story-focused ghost tour, and at least one family found it not very scary, so thrill-seekers may want a spookier option.

Carriage Tours of Savannah has been doing carriage tours for decades, and that shows in the pacing. The tour typically passes major haunted stops like the Sorrel Weed House and Colonial Park Cemetery, and you’ll hear why places like unmarked graves along a city street matter to Savannah’s ghost lore. The other consideration: you’ll mainly ride past historic sites rather than go inside homes or museums.

Key Things I’d Watch For on This Savannah Ghost Carriage Ride

Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah - Key Things I’d Watch For on This Savannah Ghost Carriage Ride

  • Savannah’s only horse-drawn ghost tour by night (so the timing and mood matter)
  • Small group size (max 12), which helps the guide keep stories clear and the horses calm
  • A tight 50-minute window that works well even if you’re short on time
  • Stops often include Sorrel Weed House and Colonial Park Cemetery, plus Anna’s legend
  • Mobile ticket and confirmation at booking make it simple to plan your evening
  • No museum entry included, so you’re there for narration and atmosphere, not indoor tickets

The 50-Minute Ride: Night Vibes With a Clear Pace

This is the kind of tour that respects your schedule. About 50 minutes is long enough to feel like you saw real Savannah streets, but short enough that you won’t lose the night to planning. Since it runs at night, you get that carriage-and-gaslamp feeling that day tours just can’t replicate.

The format also helps the storytelling. The guide moves from legend to legend with a steady rhythm, so you’re not stuck listening to one dense ghost explanation for half the tour. One review even praised how the guide transitioned stories smoothly—exactly what you want when kids are along or when you just want an easy, flowing experience.

And because the group cap is 12, it doesn’t feel crowded. You’re more likely to hear the narration clearly and less likely to feel jostled in and out of position.

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

Price and Value: Why $45 Can Make Sense for Savannah

Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah - Price and Value: Why $45 Can Make Sense for Savannah
At $45, this tour is priced like a short specialty experience, not a long multi-stop excursion. The key value is simple: you’re paying for (1) the carriage ride itself and (2) guided ghost and folklore narration tied to actual Savannah locations you can recognize later.

You’re not also paying for museum tickets or home admissions. That may sound limiting, but it can actually be a smart value choice if you’d rather spend your money on one memorable evening activity and keep the rest of your time flexible. This tour keeps you moving through the city while your guide handles the lore.

One family-style review called it worth the money and liked the ride through the city paired with a guide who told stories well. That’s the core bargain here: if you’ll enjoy narration on a night carriage ride, the price will feel fair.

Where You Start: Jefferson Street and West Saint Julian

Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah - Where You Start: Jefferson Street and West Saint Julian
You meet at Jefferson Street & West Saint Julian Street and the tour ends back there. That matters more than it sounds. It’s one less logistics puzzle when you’re planning dinner, tickets, and a safe walk back at night.

The ride is also described as suitable for most people, and service animals are allowed. It’s near public transportation, which is handy if you’re mixing this with other parts of your Savannah itinerary.

Because it’s mobile-ticket based with confirmation at booking, you don’t need to scramble for paperwork once you arrive. You can keep your attention on the ride, the horses, and the stories.

Sorrel Weed House Pass: Haunted Home Lore From the Carriage Seat

One of the frequent highlights is a pass by the Sorrel Weed House, a property tied to haunting tales (and it’s referenced as being featured on Ghost Hunters). Even if you’ve never heard of it before, the narration can give you a real sense of why people associate this area with ghost stories.

What makes this stop work from the carriage is perspective. From the street, you’re seeing the building in its urban setting, not as a museum exhibit. The guide can connect folklore to what you can actually picture while the carriage rolls—windows, shadows, street layout—so it sticks better in your mind than a generic ghost history lecture.

The practical catch: you’re not going inside. The tour does not include entrance to homes or museums. So if you’re the type who loves walking through rooms and reading plaques, you’ll need to plan separate daytime admissions. If you’re more into atmosphere and well-timed storytelling at night, this approach is perfect.

Colonial Park Cemetery: The Unmarked Graves Detail That Feels Real

Another common stop-by-vehicle is Colonial Park Cemetery. The narration specifically points to an unsettling detail: unmarked graves spill into the street you travel on. That’s one of those Savannah facts that gives you goosebumps even if you’re not normally a ghost-tour person.

From the carriage seat, the cemetery passing is also easier than you might expect. You get the emotional weight of the location without having to manage your time by foot through an active cemetery space. You’re still part of the scene, but the guide controls pace and storytelling so the experience feels guided rather than overwhelming.

Keep in mind again: you’re passing by. There’s no cemetery entry included. So treat this as an audio-and-view experience. If you want photos, walking time, or deeper self-guided exploration, you’ll have to add that separately.

Anna’s Legend and the 17Hundred90 Connection

Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah - Anna’s Legend and the 17Hundred90 Connection
The tour often includes a pass connected to Anna’s former home, with a very specific storyline tied to a window jump. The legend says she jumped from her bedroom window, and the narration notes the location as now connected to guest room 204 at the famed 17Hundred90.

That kind of precise detail is exactly why people remember this tour. Ghost stories can be vague, but here the guide ties the legend to a named place and a specific room number reference, which helps your brain anchor it. Whether you believe the story or not, you’ll likely leave thinking about how modern Savannah reuses historic spaces.

One review even added a spooky human detail: Anna is said to take personal belongings of the ladies who stay there. Whether you treat that as folklore fun or ghost-lore with teeth, it adds personality to the narration instead of keeping the tour generic.

Horses in the Story: Why the Ride Feels Well-Tended

A carriage tour lives or dies by the horses. You can tell a lot by how the staff and guides handle them. In one account, the horses were praised as good at their jobs, and the kids even had a chance to give a horse some belly scratches at the end.

That small moment matters. It turns the experience from pure “sit and listen” into something more personal. It also reminds you that the tour depends on animal care and calm handling, not just theatrics.

The carriage setting is gentle by design. You’ll get that clip-clop rhythm and the subtle sway that makes night streets feel like a slow movie scene. If you’re traveling with kids, the horse interaction can be the “main event” even if the ghost stories are just part of the fun.

How Scary Is It? A Family-Friendly Night With Folklore Energy

This is where you should set expectations. One review described it as a fun family experience and said it wasn’t very scary. That doesn’t mean it’s boring—just that the tone tends toward storytelling and local legends rather than jump-scare scares.

Another review highlighted that the guide kept kids attention with interesting stories, and the tour made room for horse affection afterward. So if you’re bringing children or you want a creepy-cool evening that won’t traumatize anyone, this is a solid fit.

If you’re seeking maximum terror, you may find other ghost tours more intense or more dramatic. But if you want something that’s spooky-adjacent, atmospheric, and easy to follow, this hits the sweet spot.

What You’ll Hear: Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Savannah’s Society Ghosts

The tour narration doesn’t stick to one legend. You’ll hear about disembodied members of Savannah’s society and local folklore tied to the places you pass. Named stories can include Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna—each with its own flavor of ghost lore.

That matters because ghost tours can blur together fast. When you’re given distinct characters and connected locations, you start building a map in your head: which street ties to which story, which building holds which rumor, and why the city’s layout supports these legends.

And because it’s a night ride, the stories often feel more vivid. Not because you suddenly see supernatural proof, but because the dark street lighting and quiet pacing let your imagination do the work.

Comfort and Practical Tips for a Night Carriage Tour

This is a short ride, but it’s still outdoors and it’s at night. Dress for comfort and for the actual weather, not the daytime forecast. The tour also requires good weather, so you should plan your evening around it.

If poor weather cancels the tour, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That’s good to know, because night tours can be weather-sensitive. If you’re the type who plans with backups, build this into your itinerary early enough that a date shift won’t ruin your whole week.

Also consider timing. You’re meeting at a specific intersection and then returning there. Plan your dinner and other activities with buffer time so you’re not rushing at the start.

Who Should Book This Horse-Drawn Ghost Tour?

This tour is a great match if you want:

  • A night activity that feels uniquely Savannah, not just another walking tour
  • Ghost stories tied to named locations like Sorrel Weed House and Colonial Park Cemetery
  • A short, manageable outing that works for families and first-time visitors
  • A ride-first experience, where the horses and carriage atmosphere are part of the show

It may be less ideal if you:

  • Want to go inside historic homes or museums (entry isn’t included)
  • Seek a highly frightening production style (one family review said it wasn’t very scary)
  • Have a very strict schedule and can’t handle potential weather-related date changes

If your goal is an entertaining, narrative-driven night that gives you Savannah lore you can talk about later, this is an easy yes.

Should You Book the Savannah Horse-Drawn Ghost Tour?

I’d book it if you’re after a Savannah-at-night experience with guided ghost and folklore stories, especially if you’re traveling with kids or you want something spooky without being extreme. The $45 price feels reasonable because you’re paying for the carriage ride plus a tight, well-paced narration tied to specific haunted stops.

Skip it if you mainly want indoor access to haunted houses, or if you know you only enjoy ghost tours that aim for maximum fear. Otherwise, the small-group size, the night setting, and the chance to hear names like Alice Riley, Renee Ash, and Anna make it a memorable use of an evening.

FAQ

How long is the Horse Drawn Ghost and Folklore Tour in Savannah?

The tour lasts about 50 minutes.

Where does the tour start and end?

The tour starts at Jefferson Street & West Saint Julian Street in Savannah and ends back at the same meeting point.

What is included in the $45 ticket price?

The included item is the carriage ride, with narrated ghost and folklore storytelling during the ride.

Are entrance tickets to homes or museums included?

No. Entrance to any homes or museums is not included.

What happens if the weather is poor, or if I cancel?

The tour requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance of the experience’s start time.

How many people are on the tour, and can I bring a service animal?

The tour has a maximum of 12 travelers. Service animals are allowed.

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