Savannah at night has a way of feeling older than the maps. This late-night haunted pub crawl pairs spooky storytelling with real city wandering, so you’re not just standing in the dark—you’re moving through it. I love that it starts at the 1790 Inn, one of the most talked-about haunted spots in town, with a guide who sets the mood fast. One thing to keep in mind: alcohol is not included, so plan on buying your own drinks if you want to sample along the way.
What makes this outing worth your time is how it blends two styles of fun: pub-crawl energy and a ghost-tour vibe. You’ll visit Colonial Park Cemetery for a proper spooky pause, plus several bar stops where the guide connects the dots between place, people, and what people claim to feel. My only caution is that bar stops can vary in how satisfying they feel if you’re hunting for a strictly paranormal experience.
In This Review
- Why the 10:30pm Start Works (1790 Inn first)
- The Two-Hour Plan: Bars, Walking, and a Real Cemetery Stop
- Stop One at the 1790 Inn: The Mood Setter
- Colonial Park Cemetery: Where the Tour Gets Serious
- What the Pub Crawl Part Feels Like (and what could disappoint)
- Guide Style: Raven, Spooky Steve, and Storytelling That Lands
- Value for $33: What You’re Paying For (and What You’re Not)
- Timing and Distance: What to Wear and Expect at Night
- If Your Description Promised a Specific Bar (Double-Check)
- Ending at Chippewa Square: Clean Finish, Great Nearby Options
- Who Should Book This Haunted Pub Crawl
- Should You Book Late Night Savannah Haunted Pub Crawl?
- FAQ
- What time does the tour start?
- Where does the tour meet?
- Where does the tour end?
- How long is the experience?
- How much does it cost?
- Is alcohol included?
- What’s included in the tour?
- Is it offered in English?
- What group size should I expect?
- Does it run in bad weather?
- Are service animals allowed?
Why the 10:30pm Start Works (1790 Inn first)

Meeting at 1790 Inn is more than a dramatic opener. The tour starts at 10:30pm, which means you’re catching the city when fewer people are around and the atmosphere turns cinematic. If you’ve only seen Savannah in daylight, this is a sharp shift.
You’ll meet your host at the President’s Street side of the building, under the big awning, and you’ll spot Raven—she’s listed as having purple hair, so it’s not a guessing game. That matters because a late tour needs clarity. The faster you find your group, the faster you’re out the door and into the story.
Also, there’s a practical upside: the first stop is handled efficiently (about 20 minutes listed), so you’re not trapped waiting early on while the night gets moving. You’re building momentum from the start.
The Two-Hour Plan: Bars, Walking, and a Real Cemetery Stop

This is a 2 hours to 2 hours 10 minutes style tour, capped at 30 travelers. In other words, it’s big enough that you’ll meet people, but not so large that you’ll lose the guide’s attention. The walking isn’t extreme, either. One review notes about 1 to 1.5 miles with intermittent stops, so you’re getting enough movement to feel like you’re touring, not so much that you’ll dread the next block.
From what’s described, you’ll hit multiple bar stops plus a cemetery stop. One review specifically calls out three bar stops and then the cemetery. The experience is paced so the guide can keep weaving the atmosphere into what you’re seeing outside.
Here’s how to think about the structure:
- Bar stops are where the guide talks history and hauntings while you’re around places that feel built for night energy.
- The cemetery stop is where the tour goes from spooky chatter to actual stillness. That contrast is a big part of the payoff.
The one caution: if your main goal is a deep, strictly paranormal tour, the bar portion may feel like more of a social night than a heavy investigation. A review that rated the tour lower points out that some bar visits felt less historically meaningful and not very spooky.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Savannah
Stop One at the 1790 Inn: The Mood Setter
The 1790 Inn is where you’ll start, and it’s treated like the centerpiece. The guide meets you on the President’s Street side and directs you to look for Raven under the awning. That’s your first clue that this is designed as a guided night out, not a free-for-all ghost walk.
Why this stop matters: starting at a single, highly associated haunted building gives the tour a clear theme. You’re not spending your first ten minutes trying to figure out what the night is about. You’re already in it.
The stop timing is listed at 20 minutes, and the entry/ticket for that stop is shown as free. That suggests the tour is aiming to keep your cost tight and focus on the experience rather than making you pay separately at each location.
If you’re the type who likes having one solid anchor point before you roam, this structure will feel good.
Colonial Park Cemetery: Where the Tour Gets Serious

The itinerary highlights Colonial Park Cemetery, and that’s the moment where the tone typically turns colder. One review ties the overall experience to visiting a cemetery after a series of bars, and that order makes sense: you work up the night energy, then you step into a place where the city quiets down.
Cemeteries in Savannah aren’t just tourist stops—they’re part of the city’s long memory. When a guide brings hauntings into this kind of setting, the environment does half the work. Even if you’re not chasing proof of paranormal activity, it changes how you listen.
If you’re sensitive to darker themes, take note: this style of tour is about ghost stories and “spooky Savannah” atmosphere. It’s not presented as a gentle history walk. You’re looking for the eerie side of the city.
What the Pub Crawl Part Feels Like (and what could disappoint)

This is a haunted pub crawl, so you should expect bar stops. The big value is that you’re getting guided storytelling at each location rather than just getting a few locations and a route.
But the bar experience isn’t guaranteed to match your personal definition of spooky. One review praises the first bar and then says the other two felt less connected to history and weren’t very spooky. Another high rating mentions drink recommendations alongside hauntings at each location, which sounds like the guide leans into the social side of the crawl.
So how do you decide whether the bar portion fits you?
- If you like mixing a walk with night energy and hearing stories while you pause, you’ll probably be happy.
- If you want maximum paranormal focus and minimal bar time, you may find this is partly a social route.
The guide can change the feel. Raven is described in multiple comments as fun, engaging, and helpful with context and recommendations. Another review mentions Spooky Steve and says he was funny and packed with Savannah history.
Guide Style: Raven, Spooky Steve, and Storytelling That Lands

Two guide names show up in the feedback: Raven and Spooky Steve. Raven is specifically tied to the 1790 Inn meeting point and is described as very engaging and informative about Savannah history and paranormal perspectives. One review even calls out that Raven gives drink recommendations along with hauntings at each location.
Another comment mentions Spooky Steve as knowledgeable about Savannah history and notes the night felt like a great walking experience, even with the pace and distance. There’s also a review wishing the guide had taken them to more places or had more time for facts, which tells you the pacing works, but you might want longer story stops if you’re really fact-hungry.
Here’s the practical takeaway: show up ready to listen. This tour works best when you lean into the guide’s rhythm—short stories, quick movement, then a pause.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in Savannah
Value for $33: What You’re Paying For (and What You’re Not)

At $33 per person for about 2 to 2 hours 10 minutes, the value comes from three things:
- Time and pacing: you get guided structure at night rather than trying to assemble your own route.
- Two themes in one: pub-crawl energy plus ghost-tour storytelling.
- A memorable starting point: beginning at the 1790 Inn sets expectations and helps you feel like you’re doing something specific, not random wandering.
What you should know up front: alcoholic beverages are not included. So you’re paying for the tour experience, not for a drink package. That’s actually helpful for control. If you don’t drink, you can still follow along for the stories.
Also, the tour uses a mobile ticket, and English is listed as the offered language. That’s good for clarity and reduces last-minute stress.
Timing and Distance: What to Wear and Expect at Night

This is a late start at 10:30pm, and night weather in Savannah can swing fast. One review warns there’s not a lot of cover, so if rain shows up, bring an umbrella.
Walking distance is roughly 1 to 1.5 miles, spread out with intermittent stops. That means you’ll likely be on your feet for long stretches, but not the kind of walking that grinds you down. Wear shoes that handle wet sidewalks and uneven old-city surfaces.
Also, it’s listed as requiring good weather. If weather is poor, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That’s important because the experience depends on being outside and moving between stops.
If Your Description Promised a Specific Bar (Double-Check)

One review includes a complaint about an itinerary mismatch. The guest says the booking mentioned Moon River Brewing and access to a second floor and/or basement, but they did not visit Moon River Brewing on their night.
You can’t assume every night follows the exact same route, so here’s what I’d do before you go: if your confirmation or description mentions a specific venue or interior access, double-check that detail. If that option matters to you, confirm it ahead of time rather than hoping it’s built into the night.
This is the main red flag in the feedback: not the concept, but the exact place-and-access expectations.
Ending at Chippewa Square: Clean Finish, Great Nearby Options
The tour ends at Chippewa Square. That’s listed as a beautiful public square, and it’s the kind of finish that’s easy to build on. Once you’re done with the walking and stories, you’re back in a central area where you can decide your next move—late dinner, a final stroll, or a quick return to where you’re staying.
This kind of ending matters because late-night city wandering can get complicated fast. Ending at a known public square keeps the night organized.
Who Should Book This Haunted Pub Crawl
This tour is a great fit if:
- You want a fun night out that includes ghost stories and a walk.
- You like the combo of bars plus one standout spooky stop at the cemetery.
- You’re comfortable buying your own drinks and treating alcohol as optional.
- You enjoy guided entertainment more than “scientific investigation.”
It might not be your best match if:
- You want a purely paranormal, low-social experience.
- You expect every stop to feel equally spooky or equally tied to major historic events.
- Interior access to a specific venue is a must-have for you.
Should You Book Late Night Savannah Haunted Pub Crawl?
I’d book it if you’re in Savannah for the first time or you want a different way to see the city after dinner. The starting point at the 1790 Inn, the late start at 10:30pm, the cemetery stop, and the guide-led pacing create a full-night feel without requiring you to plan a route.
Skip the tour if you’re chasing a guaranteed, strictly paranormal-focused route where every stop is supposed to deliver the same level of depth—and you can’t handle the possibility that bar selections and exact stops may vary night to night. If a particular venue or access (like Moon River Brewing) is central to what you want, confirm that detail before you commit.
If your goal is a spooky, social, guided walk through Savannah’s night side, this one is priced reasonably and consistently high-rated.
FAQ
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 10:30pm.
Where does the tour meet?
You meet at 1790 Inn, 307 E President St, Savannah, GA 31401.
Where does the tour end?
The tour ends at Chippewa Square, Savannah, GA 31401.
How long is the experience?
It runs about 2 hours to 2 hours 10 minutes.
How much does it cost?
The price is $33.00 per person.
Is alcohol included?
No. Alcoholic beverages are not included.
What’s included in the tour?
The tour includes tickets.
Is it offered in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
What group size should I expect?
This tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
Does it run in bad weather?
It requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
If you want, tell me what weekend you’re going and whether you drink alcohol, and I’ll help you decide if a pub-crawl style ghost tour is the right match for your Savannah plans.
































