REVIEW · NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans : Best of Ghost & Voodoo Experience Walking Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Universal Tour Group USA · Bookable on Viator
Ghosts and voodoo meet on French Quarter streets. This 2-hour walk threads the occult past of the neighborhood through the French Quarter, connecting burial rites and voodoo practices to Marie Laveau and her snake Zombi.
I like how the tone stays story-first, not just stop-and-go sightseeing. When the guide is Kenyin, the pacing feels smooth and the details land in a way that makes the street scenes easier to read.
One thing to factor in: there are reports of last-minute cancellation or a no-show, so you’ll want to confirm right before you go and keep the day-of contact info.
In This Review
- Why This Walk Clicks in the French Quarter
- Stops, Stops, Stops: What You’ll Actually See
- The Stories You’ll Hear: Voodoo, Burial Rites, and Zombi
- The Haunted House Detail That Changes Your Expectation
- Guide Quality: What I’d Pay Attention To Before You Book
- Price and Value: Getting More Than $20 Worth of Story
- When the Tour Fits Best (And When It Might Not)
- Logistics That Matter: Where to Meet and What to Bring
- Quick Reality Check: The Average Rating
- Should You Book the New Orleans Best of Ghost & Voodoo Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the New Orleans Best of Ghost & Voodoo Experience Walking Tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where does the tour start?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
- Do you enter the haunted houses during the tour?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is food and drink included?
Why This Walk Clicks in the French Quarter

If you want New Orleans to feel specific, this is the kind of tour that gives you a lens. Instead of treating the French Quarter as a postcard, you get guided explanations for why people feared certain places, why rituals mattered, and why names like Marie Laveau became part legend.
The tour’s hook is simple: it links the spooky side of the city—ghosts, vampires, and voodoo rituals—to real people and practices that shaped local belief. You’ll also hear how the French Quarter has been used for popular occult-themed media, including True Blood, Interview with the Vampire, and American Horror Story (season 3). That context helps you spot what’s myth, what’s adapted, and what’s rooted in local culture.
I also like the practical setup. It’s only about 2 hours, with a single main area on foot, so it works even if you’re balancing dinners, parades, or a crowded sightseeing schedule.
Stops, Stops, Stops: What You’ll Actually See

This experience focuses on one core area: the French Quarter. You’ll meet at 528 Toulouse St, then the guide leads you through a route built around the most haunted places and the stories attached to them.
Here’s the key point: you’ll stop by haunted buildings, but you can’t enter them. That keeps expectations aligned and saves you from the usual frustration of tours that promise access and don’t deliver. It also means the tour stays flexible—your time is spent on what you came for: the narrative and the visible street setting.
Because the itinerary is short and concentrated, you’re likely to feel less scattered than with longer ghost tours that bounce all over town. You get a tighter sense of mood and history in a smaller footprint.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in New Orleans
The Stories You’ll Hear: Voodoo, Burial Rites, and Zombi
The heart of the tour is the way it connects folklore to belief systems. You’ll learn about burial rites and voodoo practices as part of the neighborhood’s older spiritual landscape, and you’ll hear how those ideas shaped fear, respect, and legend.
Marie Laveau is the main figure you’ll come back to. The tour explains how she became involved in divination, occult practices, and magic—and how the snake named Zombi ties back to an African deity referenced through the story. Even if you’re not a hardcore history person, those specifics are what turn a spooky walk into a more satisfying one: you’re not just collecting eerie vibes, you’re tracking names and symbolic details.
You’ll also get ghost and vampire stories woven into the walk. That matters because New Orleans ghost lore isn’t always purely supernatural. Often, it reflects social memory—what communities feared, what they mythologized, and what they refused to forget.
The Haunted House Detail That Changes Your Expectation

A lot of people book ghost tours hoping for creepy interiors. This one won’t do that for you. You’ll stop near haunted houses, but the tour is built around viewing from the street and learning the associated stories.
For you, that has two benefits:
- You spend your time on the explanations, not waiting around for door access.
- You don’t get trapped in a frustrating mismatch between what the brochure promises and what the building allows.
If you’re the type who wants to tour actual sites, you might find this limiting. But if you want haunted atmosphere plus context—without the hassle—this format fits well.
Guide Quality: What I’d Pay Attention To Before You Book

With tours like this, the guide is everything. The strongest feedback tied directly to the storytelling style: people praised guides for being engaging and for answering questions with poise.
You should look for signals like:
- You feel pulled along rather than rushed.
- The guide explains details in a way you can repeat later.
- Q&A feels welcomed instead of shut down.
One name that comes up in the best feedback is Kenyin. When the guide is strong, the tour stops feeling like a checklist and starts feeling like a guided conversation about the city’s darker legends.
That said, there’s a darker edge to the practical side. There are reports of no-shows and last-minute cancellations, and that’s the sort of thing you should treat as a real risk, not a rumor. I’d handle it like a pro traveler: plan to arrive a little early, keep your phone charged, and have the operator contact ready so you’re not stuck waiting silently.
Price and Value: Getting More Than $20 Worth of Story

At $20 per person for roughly 2 hours, this tour is priced for accessibility. It’s not a premium museum-ticket experience. It’s a walking story experience, and the value comes from what the guide brings to the streets—especially when that storytelling is lively and well-paced.
Think about what you’re paying for here:
- A local guide to frame ghost lore and voodoo practices with context
- A focused time window, so you can do it without carving out an entire half day
- A small-group feel (the tour caps at 28 travelers)
If you love the French Quarter but want it to make more sense than just bars and balconies, this is a good way to add meaning fast. If you hate walking or you expect building access, the price won’t save the mismatch.
When the Tour Fits Best (And When It Might Not)
This experience is designed for people who like:
- Spooky folklore paired with cultural context
- Short walking segments you can finish without exhaustion
- A guided route that stays in one neighborhood zone
It’s also said that most travelers can participate. That’s helpful if you’re traveling with friends who aren’t sure they’ll enjoy a longer or more intense outing.
Still, it’s wise to consider your own comfort level. The subject matter covers occult themes, voodoo practices, and burial rites. If those topics feel too intense for you, you’ll want to choose accordingly.
Logistics That Matter: Where to Meet and What to Bring

You meet at 528 Toulouse St in New Orleans. Since it ends back at the starting point, you’re not left hunting for a way home or joining another plan mid-route.
A couple more practical notes:
- The ticket is mobile, so you’ll want phone battery.
- The tour is near public transportation, which is handy if you’re mixing it with other stops around town.
- There’s no food or drink included. Plan for water, and don’t count on snacks being part of the experience.
- Haunted houses are viewed from outside; you won’t be entering them.
For timing, build in a little buffer. Because there have been reports of day-of problems, arriving early is your best insurance.
Quick Reality Check: The Average Rating
The overall rating is 3 out of 5 based on the available feedback. That isn’t a dealbreaker for a walking tour, but it does tell you the experience can vary based on operator reliability and guide presence.
I’d treat this as a tour you can enjoy a lot—if everything runs smoothly on the day you go. And I’d plan to be proactive so a hiccup doesn’t steal your evening.
Should You Book the New Orleans Best of Ghost & Voodoo Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a 2-hour French Quarter story walk that connects Marie Laveau and voodoo lore to the neighborhood you’re already seeing. The price makes it easy to add, and the format keeps things focused: a single area, a guided route, and plenty of narrative instead of long detours.
I would pause before booking if building entry is a must for you, or if you’re the type who can’t handle last-minute uncertainty. In that case, you’ll still enjoy the French Quarter on your own—but you might prefer a tour with a stronger reliability track record.
If you do book, do it smart: arrive early at 528 Toulouse St, keep your phone ready for your mobile ticket, and confirm day-of with the operator so you start the walk in a good mood.
FAQ
How long is the New Orleans Best of Ghost & Voodoo Experience Walking Tour?
It lasts about 2 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $20.00 per person.
Where does the tour start?
The meeting point is 528 Toulouse St, New Orleans, LA 70130, USA.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes. The tour uses a mobile ticket.
Do you enter the haunted houses during the tour?
No. You stop by haunted houses, but you cannot enter them.
What’s included in the price?
A tour guide is included.
Is food and drink included?
No. Food and drink are not included.




























