Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour

REVIEW · SAVANNAH

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour

  • 5.03 reviews
  • 2 hours (approx.)
  • From $15.81
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Traveller rating 5.0 (3)Duration2 hours (approx.)Price from$15.81Operated byExplorialBook viaViator

Savannah gets more fun when you have a mission. This self-guided scavenger hunt turns the city into an interactive game you play on foot. You’ll chase hints, answer questions found on-site, and earn points as you move between key landmarks like the Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist and Monterey Square.

I especially like that it’s built for your pace. The tour isn’t limited in time, and the average run is about 1–2 hours, so you can slow down for heat, photos, or a quick rest stop. I also like the learning style: questions are designed to be answered from what you can see on signs and pictures right at the places you visit.

One thing to keep in mind: the experience relies on the app, and getting it going can take a minute. If you’re the type who hates troubleshooting on vacation, plan for a short ramp-up time at the start.

Key highlights before you start

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Key highlights before you start

  • Self-paced walking game with an app map to guide you between stops
  • On-site questions often hidden in signs and pictures you’ll encounter nearby
  • Photo tasks that earn points if you lean into creative thinking
  • Big-name Savannah stops including the Cathedral Basilica and Monterey Square
  • Flexible timing with no fixed end time, just an average 1–2 hour loop
  • A private group setup where only your group plays the activity

How this Savannah hunt turns sightseeing into a game

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - How this Savannah hunt turns sightseeing into a game
If you’ve ever felt like typical sightseeing is either too fast (rushing) or too passive (just reading plaques), this format hits a better middle. Instead of following a strict route with a talk-track, you’re doing short bursts of observation and problem-solving. It’s the kind of structure that naturally gets you to look up, slow down, and notice details you’d miss otherwise.

This also helps when you’re traveling with mixed interests. You can focus on the puzzle side—solving tasks and questions—or you can treat it as an excuse to roam between major sights and take photos. The point system adds energy without turning it into a sprint.

And because it’s self-guided, you control the pace. That matters in Savannah, where weather can shift fast. You can stop for water, step into shade, or take a longer break mid-route without feeling like you’re falling behind.

You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Savannah

Starting at 428 Bull St and getting the app ready

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Starting at 428 Bull St and getting the app ready
The hunt starts at 428 Bull St, Savannah, GA 31401, and it ends back at the same meeting point. That’s useful: you’re not trying to figure out a complicated “meet here, finish somewhere else” situation mid-adventure.

After you buy the ticket, you receive an access code to use in the app. Plan to do the basics right away:

  • Download/open the app and enter your access code when you arrive
  • Use the in-app map to reach the next spot
  • Start the first task before you wander off in search of “just one more photo”

A key practical tip: give yourself a few minutes to get oriented. The experience is interactive, and one review noted the app can be a little difficult to get onto. You don’t need to be techy, but you do want your phone ready with enough battery and service (or whatever your app needs) before you begin.

Once you’re underway, you can take breaks freely. The tour lasts on average about 1–2 hours, but there’s no strict time limit, so you can stretch it if you want.

Spot the sights: from St. John’s Cathedral to Monterey Square

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Spot the sights: from St. John’s Cathedral to Monterey Square
This is a scavenger hunt, so the landmarks aren’t just “places to look at.” They’re the settings for tasks. You’ll use hints in the app to find the best sights and hidden gems throughout the city (the phrasing is theirs, but the idea is straightforward: the route is designed to get you to noteworthy spots you might not stumble on alone).

A couple of named stops give you a sense of the route’s scale:

  • The Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist
  • Monterey Square
  • Plus other stops along the way

At each location, the game shifts from navigation to observation. You’ll arrive, then answer questions tied to what’s around you. In most cases, the answers are hidden in signs, pictures, or similar on-site visual clues.

That’s where the experience becomes more than walking. You’re not just seeing a famous exterior; you’re reading, looking carefully, and learning from what you’re already standing near. If you like history, street-level context, or learning by doing, this question mechanic is a strong fit.

If you don’t love trivia, don’t worry. The tasks are part of the sightseeing flow. You’ll still be walking between major areas and getting your bearings in Savannah while the game quietly nudges you toward meaningful spots.

How the clue-and-question system actually helps you learn

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - How the clue-and-question system actually helps you learn
Here’s what makes this format feel genuinely educational instead of random: the questions are designed to be solvable from the environment. You’re not expected to guess from memory, and you’re not stuck without context.

Typically:

  1. You reach the sight using app hints and the map function.
  2. You scan what’s in front of you—signs, pictures, and other visible material.
  3. You answer based on what you can read or observe on-site.

That means you’ll likely learn a bit without needing a guide to translate everything for you. It’s an active way to pay attention. And because you can work at your own speed, you can take a little longer at places that catch your interest and skim through spots that don’t.

One more small advantage: because you’re solving tasks, you’ll naturally pause in the right spots. That often improves your photos too. You stop where the viewing angle works, rather than moving on too fast.

Colonial Park Cemetery: a quieter stop with thoughtful pacing

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Colonial Park Cemetery: a quieter stop with thoughtful pacing
The game includes Colonial Park Cemetery, which changes the feel of the walk. A cemetery visit can be heavy, and it’s also the kind of place where rushing would feel wrong. The good news is the scavenger hunt design supports the opposite behavior: you can slow down, take in surroundings, and complete the tasks without feeling pressured by a group schedule.

I like that because it reduces the awkwardness some self-guided tours can have. You’re not just wandering aimlessly. You have something to do—reading clues, answering questions—yet the pace stays human.

Also, the app format is flexible enough that you can choose how much time to spend. If you finish quickly, you keep moving. If you need extra time, you’re not fighting a ticking clock.

Photo tasks and points: the fun creative layer

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Photo tasks and points: the fun creative layer
Not every part of the hunt is serious learning. You’ll also get photo tasks that ask for creativity. The game rewards “mastering the snapshots” with points.

This is more than gimmick. Photo challenges tend to solve a common vacation problem: people take pictures randomly, then later wish they had something more interesting to show for the day. Photo tasks give you a reason to compose, experiment, and look for the right setting.

It also keeps the hunt entertaining if you’re not the biggest trivia fan. Even if a question takes a few tries, you still have the option to reset your mood with a creative assignment.

If you’re with friends or family, photo tasks are a nice way to collaborate. You can discuss ideas, share roles (one person reads clues, another crafts the shot), and keep things moving without turning it into a competition.

Timing and route length: 1–2 hours, with no time pressure

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Timing and route length: 1–2 hours, with no time pressure
The activity is listed as lasting about 2 hours (approx.), and the average experience runs about 1–2 hours. That’s a sweet spot for a walking game: long enough to feel like you did something meaningful, not so long that you’re exhausted and over it.

The biggest scheduling win is this: the experience is not limited in time. So you can:

  • start when you want during open hours
  • stop for a break without rushing to “finish on time”
  • take your time with photo tasks and on-site questions

The posted availability is broad—daily from 12:00 AM to 11:30 PM within the date window shown—so you should be able to fit it into a day without forcing a tight plan.

If you’re planning a full Savannah day, I’d treat this as your “anchor activity.” It helps you explore efficiently while still leaving time for your own wanderings right after you finish back at the starting point.

Price and value: is $15.81 a good deal?

Savannah Scavenger Hunt and Sights Self Guided Tour - Price and value: is $15.81 a good deal?
At $15.81 per person, the price is relatively low for a structured activity that keeps you walking and learning for up to a couple hours.

Where the value comes from is the mix of:

  • navigation support via the app map
  • on-site questions that encourage reading and observation
  • photo tasks that add variety beyond walking

This isn’t a guided tour where you’re paying for a person to lead commentary. You’re paying for the game structure and the app experience. If you’re the type who enjoys self-guided travel, that’s a real benefit: you get direction without feeling locked into a group pace.

If you’re expecting a “tour guide explains everything” experience, you may feel like you’re paying for something more interactive than informational. But if your goal is to explore Savannah with purpose—and actually learn as you go—this price feels fair for what you’re doing.

Who this scavenger hunt fits best in Savannah

This type of activity works best for people who enjoy some mix of movement, puzzles, and curiosity. You’ll likely like it if you:

  • want to explore at your own pace
  • enjoy learning by looking at what’s in front of you
  • appreciate a route that nudges you toward important sights
  • travel with a smartphone and don’t mind using an app as part of the day

It’s also a good fit for travelers who want something flexible. Since you can take breaks and the game isn’t time-limited, you can build the day around your energy level.

A couple practical notes from the provided details:

  • It’s offered in English
  • It’s a private activity for only your group
  • Service animals are allowed
  • It’s near public transportation
  • Most travelers can participate

A realistic way to plan your day around it

To get the most out of the hunt, I’d plan like this:

  • Start near the midday or afternoon window that fits your itinerary and weather comfort
  • Arrive at 428 Bull St early enough to open the app and enter your access code
  • Use the in-app map for navigation, but keep your eyes open at street level
  • Expect the tasks to slow you down in short, satisfying bursts rather than constant pacing

If you want to add a personal break, this kind of route naturally pairs with a quick stop for food or a cool-down. One review shared that they paused for Leopold’s Ice Cream halfway through the tour as a treat during the Georgia heat. Even if that exact stop isn’t required for your game, the lesson is useful: give yourself permission to plan a mid-route reset.

When you finish, you’ll return to the starting point. That makes it easy to continue exploring Savannah in your own direction afterward—without needing a separate “getting back” plan.

Should you book this scavenger hunt?

I’d book it if you want an easygoing way to explore Savannah that still feels structured. The best part is the combination of self-paced sightseeing and tasks that push you to look around and learn from what’s actually there. The photo challenges add a playful break from trivia, and the route includes major landmarks like the Cathedral Basilica of St. John the Baptist and Monterey Square.

Skip it if you hate phone-based experiences or you need a traditional live guide to keep you engaged. And if app glitches would stress you out, set aside a few minutes at the start so you can settle in before the hunt begins.

If you’re looking for a low-cost, high-participation way to see Savannah, this is a strong option.

FAQ

How long does the Savannah scavenger hunt take?

The tour is listed at about 2 hours (approx.), with an average experience time of about 1–2 hours. The experience is not limited in time, so you can go at your own pace.

Where does the tour start and end?

It starts at 428 Bull St, Savannah, GA 31401, USA. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.

How do I access the scavenger hunt in the app?

After you buy the ticket, you receive an access code that you use in the app. Then you go to the starting point and start the game.

Is this a guided tour?

This is a self-guided activity. It’s also private, meaning only your group participates.

What language is the experience offered in?

The experience is offered in English.

What kinds of tasks will I complete?

You’ll find sights using hints and an app map, solve questions at the locations (often based on signs or pictures), and complete creative photo tasks to earn points.

Can I cancel and get a refund?

Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel within 24 hours of the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.

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