REVIEW · NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans Happy Hour Ghost Walking Tour Pub Crawl
Book on Viator →Operated by Nightly Spirits · Bookable on Viator
A street-level ghost story can be fun. This 2-hour happy hour pub walk strings together real French Quarter bar stops with spine-tingly lore, so you get your bearings fast and learn the city’s darker side without needing to sit through a lecture. I especially like the insider bar intel you’re given for the French Quarter, and I like that the stories come tied to actual places you can look at while you hear them. One thing to consider: you’re paying for the tour and the atmosphere, but alcohol is extra, so budget for drinks if you want a full happy hour.
It’s also a smart way to cap off a day of sightseeing, because it starts at 4:30 pm—right when the Quarter shifts into evening mode. The guide’s pacing keeps the walk moving, but the history and hauntings stay vivid enough that you’ll remember names of bars long after you leave. If you’re sensitive to scary stories, this leans spooky, though it’s staged as fun-history rather than full horror theater.
Here’s the trade-off: you’ll be walking between stops for the whole experience window, and you need to be ready for all-weather conditions. Wear shoes you’d actually wear to explore, not just to look good in photos.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel on the Street
- A 4:30 pm Ghost-Forward Happy Hour Loop
- Double Club Start: Getting Oriented Before the Quarter Gets Loud
- Chart Room Stop: Duel History With a Drink Break
- Toulouse Bar Stop: Coffin Ceiling Details and Jazz Lore
- Harry’s Corner Bar: Celebrity Hauntings and the Convent Girls
- Golden Lantern Finish: Closing With a Bloody Mary
- Price and Logistics: Why $32.50 Can Be Good Value
- What the Stories Are Like (and How Spooky This Really Feels)
- Walking Time, Weather, and Group Size Reality
- Who Should Book This (and Who Might Want Something Different)
- Should You Book This New Orleans Happy Hour Ghost Walk?
- FAQ
- What’s the cost of the New Orleans Happy Hour Ghost Walking Tour Pub Crawl?
- How long is the tour?
- What time does the tour start?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Are drinks included in the price?
- How many bar stops are included?
- Do I have to be a certain age to join?
- What’s the cancellation policy like?
- Is the tour affected by weather?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel on the Street

- A happy hour route with insider French Quarter bar picks so you’re not wandering blind later
- At least three haunted bar stops tied to duels, medicine scandals, and music lore
- Stories delivered at the locations, not in a classroom vibe
- Smaller group size (max 16) for better flow and less crowd noise
- Drinks not included so you control what you spend
- Ends at Golden Lantern, a practical final stop when you want one more pour
A 4:30 pm Ghost-Forward Happy Hour Loop

This tour is built for an easy evening in the French Quarter. You meet at the Double Club (307 Chartres St) and the timing—4:30 pm—is deliberate. It’s late enough to dodge some daytime heat and early enough that you’re still catching the neighborhood’s pre-night energy.
The format is simple: you walk, you stop, you hear a story, and you get pointed toward bars that locals and regulars actually use. It’s not about sprinting from one photo spot to the next. It’s about putting meaning onto the streets you’re already seeing.
And yes, it’s called a ghost walk—so you’ll get lore about the city’s specter-steeped past. The tone stays entertaining, not grim. You’ll hear about duels, hauntings tied to a physician’s broken oath, and even spooky connections to the arts.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in New Orleans.
Double Club Start: Getting Oriented Before the Quarter Gets Loud

Meeting at the Double Club is useful because it’s a central point for the French Quarter circuit. You start with a clear plan, which matters in a neighborhood where streets curve and it’s easy to lose your sense of direction.
You’ll also get a little momentum immediately. The first stop is the Chart Room, and the structure is designed so you’re never waiting long for the story to begin. Ten minutes at the first bar keeps it lively and prevents the usual “long intro, short payoff” problem.
I like tours like this because you don’t just pass through places—you learn how to read them. A good guide turns a bar front or an alley corner into a clue.
Chart Room Stop: Duel History With a Drink Break

Your first bar stop is the Chart Room. It’s positioned as a local favorite dive-style spot where you can settle in with your first drink of the evening.
The story angle here is duels in New Orleans. That’s an important thread for understanding the Quarter’s reputation: the city has a long history of reputations—who had power, who had influence, and how disagreements escalated. A ghost walk that starts with duels makes sense, because dueling culture is where you often find the ingredients for legend.
Practical note: the tour includes visiting the bar, but you’re responsible for what you buy. The upside is you can order something light if you want to stay sharp for walking and listening.
Toulouse Bar Stop: Coffin Ceiling Details and Jazz Lore

Next up is the Toulouse bar stop (listed as the Toulouse Dive Bar). This is the kind of place you remember because it has a visual hook: there’s a coffin from the previous owner hanging from the ceiling. It’s a spooky detail even before anyone tells you the backstory.
From there, the guide shifts into two key story threads. First is music history—the stop is tied to the venue that helped birth a jazz renaissance. Second is haunting lore tied to a hotel in the heart of the Quarter.
This stop is a good reminder that New Orleans ghosts aren’t only about tragedy. A lot of the supernatural energy here is wrapped around identity—music, nightlife, and famous addresses. You’ll feel that the city mythologizes itself, then keeps telling those stories until they become part of everyday culture.
The “15 minutes” timing is right for this kind of stop: long enough for a story and a quick sip, short enough that you don’t get stuck in one place while the group moves on.
Harry’s Corner Bar: Celebrity Hauntings and the Convent Girls

Stop three takes you to Harry’s Corner Bar, another local haunt where you can grab a drink and hear more legend. This one is tied to the idea that celebrities and their circles have left fingerprints on the Quarter’s nightlife.
But the centerpiece story is the Convent Girls—their resting place. That’s where the tour becomes more than “spooky fun” and turns into a real prompt to notice how the Quarter holds onto the past. When you connect a name to a place, it’s harder to treat the city like just scenery.
Also, this stop keeps the same rhythm as the others: about 15 minutes. That matters because with only four bar stops total, the tour is basically designed as a compact evening event, not a half-day commitment.
If you like history that’s practical—meaning it helps you understand what you’re seeing—this is the stop that usually lands hardest.
Golden Lantern Finish: Closing With a Bloody Mary

Your final stop is Golden Lantern on Royal St (1239 Royal St). The walk ends here, and the tour recommends wrapping up with a bloody mary.
I like having the finish point named in advance because it reduces the last-minute scramble. You’ll know exactly where the group is headed, so you can plan whether you want to keep going afterward or call it a night.
Golden Lantern also works as a closer because it’s the kind of place where you can transition from ghost stories into normal evening life. After two hours of spooky lore, that feels like a good landing: drink in hand, feet tired, and your mind buzzing with names and places.
Price and Logistics: Why $32.50 Can Be Good Value

At $32.50 per person, this tour sits in the “pay for the experience, not the alcohol” category. That’s actually a helpful pricing model for the French Quarter. Alcohol here can get pricey fast, so keeping drinks separate lets you control the math.
What you’re paying for is:
- A local guide who steers you from bar to bar with stories
- Multiple haunted bar stops (at least three)
- The convenience of a ready-made evening plan with a clear start and finish
You’re not paying a cover charge at every stop, either. The stop details list admission ticket free, which suggests you’re not getting hit with extra entry fees just to stand and listen. Still, treat the total cost as “tour price plus drinks,” and you’ll avoid surprises.
Also, the guide’s suggestions matter. Getting pointed to a good happy hour bar is worth money in a city where you can waste time wandering.
What the Stories Are Like (and How Spooky This Really Feels)

This isn’t a jump-scare type tour. The scares come from lore and the way New Orleans history stacks up around specific places.
You’ll hear about:
- Duels in the city’s context (and why that kind of conflict leaves long shadows)
- A physician breaking the oath (which leans into moral horror and lingering guilt)
- The role of theatre in the Quarter’s haunting imagination
- A music renaissance connection (ghost lore tied to cultural identity)
- Haunted hotel and resting-place stories
The effect is like walking with a friend who knows how to make history feel personal. You start noticing details in doorways and interiors, and suddenly the bars feel less like random stops and more like chapters in a single evening.
If you’re comfortable with “scary but fun,” you’ll probably have a great time. If you’re not, you can still enjoy the bar atmosphere—but keep your expectations realistic about the subject matter.
Walking Time, Weather, and Group Size Reality
This is a 2-hour tour that includes walking time. With four bar stops, you’re looking at short story intervals, then a quick move on. It’s built to keep your attention and keep your legs from turning into the main event.
Group size is capped at 16 travelers, which is a big deal. Smaller groups usually mean the guide can steer conversations and keep everyone aligned. It also helps the walking pace stay manageable.
One more practical point: the tour operates in all weather conditions. That means you should dress for rain, heat, or wind. The Quarter can change fast between late afternoon and evening. Bring a light rain layer if storms are possible, and plan for walking on uneven streets.
Good shoes matter here. You’ll be on foot for the whole experience window.
Who Should Book This (and Who Might Want Something Different)
This tour is a strong fit if you:
- Want a fun, structured way to experience the French Quarter after daytime sightseeing
- Like history that’s tied to real places, not just facts on a page
- Enjoy spooky stories that are more legend and lore than gore
- Want bar recommendations you can use even after the tour ends
You might skip it if you:
- Don’t want to spend money on alcohol beyond the tour itself
- Are uncomfortable with haunted-themed storytelling
- Prefer longer sit-down activities rather than a walking-and-stopping format
It’s also 21+ only, so make sure everyone in your group meets the age requirement.
Should You Book This New Orleans Happy Hour Ghost Walk?
I think you should book it if you want an evening that’s equal parts social, cultural, and slightly spooky—without turning your night into a production. The timing works, the stops keep coming at a steady pace, and the bar intel is the kind of practical benefit that keeps paying off the next time you’re in the Quarter.
Just go in with the right mindset: it’s a walking bar tour with stories, and drinks are on you. If you plan a budget and wear comfortable shoes, you’ll leave with both a better understanding of the places you walked through and a reason to remember the route.
FAQ
What’s the cost of the New Orleans Happy Hour Ghost Walking Tour Pub Crawl?
It costs $32.50 per person.
How long is the tour?
It lasts about 2 hours, including walking time.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 4:30 pm.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at the Double Club, 307 Chartres St, New Orleans, LA 70130, and ends at Golden Lantern, 1239 Royal St, New Orleans, LA 70116.
Are drinks included in the price?
No. Alcoholic drinks are available to purchase separately.
How many bar stops are included?
The route includes four bar stops: Chart Room, Toulouse bar stop, Harry’s Corner Bar, and Golden Lantern.
Do I have to be a certain age to join?
Yes. The minimum age is 21, and you must have a valid photo ID.
What’s the cancellation policy like?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.
Is the tour affected by weather?
It operates in all weather conditions, but if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.





