REVIEW · NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans Ghosts Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl
Book on Viator →Operated by New Orleans Ghosts By Us Ghost Adventures · Bookable on Viator
A haunted pub crawl in New Orleans sounds like a dare, and this one is built for easy night-wandering. You get a guided walk with multiple stops, a handful of bars, and ghost stories meant to match the city’s mood.
I like the payoff for the price: $36 for about 1 hour 45 minutes, with a guide who focuses on stories you can actually picture as you walk. I also like that the route keeps you moving through famous spots like Jackson Square and Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, instead of sitting in one place and telling generic tales.
One thing to consider: the experience quality depends on the guide and timing. In one unhappy account, the guide missed the meeting point and the tour felt rushed and incomplete, so plan to arrive early and confirm you’re at the right spot at the right time.
In This Review
- Key Points at a Glance
- What Makes This Ghosts Boos and Booze Crawl Feel Like New Orleans
- Price, Timing, and Group Size: What $36 Gets You
- Start at Jackson Square: The Warm-Up Haunt Check
- Omni Royal Orleans: Elegance Meets the Afterlife
- The 1834 Haunted Building and the Voodoo Shop Opened in 1996
- Pirate’s Alley Cafe: Pirates, Drinks, and a Darker Side
- The Provincial Hotel Ice House Bar: The Most Active After-Hours Spot
- LaLaurie Mansion and the 1829 Serial-Killer House: When the Night Turns Grim
- Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar: Finish With a Pirate Classic and a Daiquiri Note
- What’s Included (and What You’ll Pay for Yourself)
- The Logistics That Matter for Enjoying the Tour
- Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Might Want Something Else)
- Quick Tips to Get the Best Night Possible
- Should You Book This New Orleans Ghosts Boos and Booze Pub Crawl?
- FAQ
- How much does the New Orleans Ghosts Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl cost?
- How long is the tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Are drinks included in the price?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- How many locations are included on the crawl?
- Is an EMF detector included?
Key Points at a Glance
- Four bar stops plus additional haunted landmarks keep the night varied and active.
- Thoroughly researched ghost stories are part of every stop, not just background chatter.
- Jackson Square is the warm-up point, where the vibe starts before you even get the first drink.
- English-speaking guide and mobile ticket make it simple to show up and go.
- Drinks aren’t included, so you control what you order and how much you spend.
- Optional EMF detector rental/purchase ($6) can add a fun extra layer if that’s your thing.
What Makes This Ghosts Boos and Booze Crawl Feel Like New Orleans

This tour is for nights when you want New Orleans to feel a little off-balance—in a good way. You’re walking through places locals and longtime fans associate with eerie energy, then stopping at bars where the atmosphere helps the stories land. It’s not a history lecture and it’s not a theater show. It’s more like a guided storytelling walk where every corner and building has a reason.
The pub-crawl format matters because it changes the pace. You aren’t just standing outside and listening. You’re breaking up the route with drink-and-chat stops, which also helps you reset between heavier stories. And since the stops are clustered around well-known areas, it stays practical for a short evening outing.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in New Orleans
Price, Timing, and Group Size: What $36 Gets You
The price is $36 per person for about 1 hour 45 minutes. That’s a solid value if you factor in what you’re actually buying: a guide, a walking route, and multiple storytelling stops spread across famous bars and haunted landmarks.
A couple of details help you plan:
- You should expect a walking tour with pauses at each location.
- The group can be up to 50 travelers, which means you’ll hear the guide best if you stay attentive and close enough to follow the story beats.
If you’re hoping for a long, slow bar crawl with lots of time inside each place, this isn’t that. This is a story-first tour. The bars are part of the route, but the clock is always moving.
Start at Jackson Square: The Warm-Up Haunt Check

The tour meets at Jackson Square and you’re expected 15 minutes before the start time. This is a smart choice for a ghost tour because Jackson Square is already a recognizable “stage.” Street energy, nighttime lighting, and that open central space make it easy to start in a spooky frame of mind.
The park itself is described as quite haunted, and the tour specifically sets up the idea that you might see or sense something even before the official start. Whether or not you buy into that, it works as an attention-getter: you’re paying attention to your surroundings from the first minutes.
Practical tip: arrive early, stand near the meetup point the operator uses, and give yourself a few minutes to orient before the group tightens up.
Omni Royal Orleans: Elegance Meets the Afterlife
Next comes Omni Royal Orleans, where you’ll be shown the hotel and hear stories tied to its reputation. This stop adds an interesting twist: the setting is elegant, but the stories are not. That contrast is part of what keeps the tour from feeling one-note.
There’s also a fun pop-culture detail here. The tour connects the hotel to inspiration behind an iconic Lez Zeppelin song. That doesn’t replace the haunting stories, but it gives you a quick cultural hook that makes the location more memorable while you’re standing right there.
You get about 15 minutes at this stop, so it’s built for the “listen, look, then move” rhythm.
The 1834 Haunted Building and the Voodoo Shop Opened in 1996
After Omni Royal Orleans, the route includes two more story-centered stops that add depth.
First is a building dating back to 1834, described as haunted by numerous ghosts connected to the structure. This is where your guide shares first-hand accounts tied to patrons of a book store who reported unexplained happenings. Even if you’re skeptical, this kind of storytelling works because it’s tied to a place you can see and remember, not a vague legend floating in the air.
Then you hit a Voodoo shop opened in 1996 that’s presented as reputable for Voodoo-themed goods. This stop is different from the ghost-only vibe. The guide shares how Voodoo is said to affect both the living and the dead. It’s less about jump-scare horror and more about cultural context and how belief and tradition show up in everyday objects and practices.
Together, these two stops help the tour avoid becoming only dark and dramatic. You get spooky energy, but also a sense of how New Orleans holds onto traditions and stories in real spaces.
You can also read our reviews of more drinking tours in New Orleans
Pirate’s Alley Cafe: Pirates, Drinks, and a Darker Side
Pirite’s Alley Cafe is the next major stop, with around 15 minutes here. This stop is framed around the pirate past of New Orleans. The idea is that you’re sitting in a place that looks friendly, but the guide brings out the darker edges of its reputation.
There’s also a practical detail: the tour setup mentions hearing a tale or two while having a round or two. Since drinks are not included, this is your chance to choose what fits your evening and budget.
Why I like this stop: it balances scares with swagger. Pirates don’t have to be grim to be creepy. The mood is playful, but the guide keeps the “history has teeth” approach.
The Provincial Hotel Ice House Bar: The Most Active After-Hours Spot

Next is The Ice House Bar of the Provincial Hotel. Expect about 20 minutes here, and expect the stories to get more intense. This location is described as one of the most active places in New Orleans, with reports of paranormal activity coming not only from bar tenders but also from guests.
This is the stop where you’ll likely hear some of the most vivid “you might feel it too” style storytelling. And since you’re in an actual bar space, the setting supports it: dimmer lighting, crowd noise, and the feeling of being in a real nighttime hangout.
A quick planning thought: if you don’t want the heaviest stories near the middle of the crawl, you might be ready for that now. This stop is positioned to keep the energy up before the tour turns into more well-known, darker landmark tales.
LaLaurie Mansion and the 1829 Serial-Killer House: When the Night Turns Grim
From here, the tour shifts into more notorious territory.
You’ll hear about LaLaurie Mansion, described as beautiful on the outside but tied to an ugly past, including turmoil, struggle, heartbreak, and revenge. This is the kind of story that lands differently at night. The building itself becomes part of the point: a reminder that old New Orleans glamour and old cruelty often shared the same addresses.
Then the route includes another haunted stop: a hotel from 1829 that’s described as the house of an ax murderer and serial killer. The guide brings back memories of the victims, and the story includes the idea that they’re still trapped there. After a stop like this, it’s easy to see why the tour frames it as a time where you’ll likely want another drink.
Important for your mindset: this isn’t all ghost comedy. Some stories are built to be dark. If you’re bringing someone who gets rattled by grim violence themes, you’ll want to gauge how they handle that.
Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar: Finish With a Pirate Classic and a Daiquiri Note
The last bar stop is Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop Bar, one of the oldest bars in America and a must-see for a New Orleans night. The tour frames it as an iconic pirate hangout back in the day, and it also brings the ghost-and-pirate tone back together for a strong ending.
You get about 20 minutes here, enough time to settle into the final story round and order something to close out the night. The tour also recommends the iconic daiquiris for soothing the soul after a chillingly fun crawl.
This stop is a good closer because it’s both famous and fun to be in. You’re ending where the city’s legend machine is already well-oiled.
What’s Included (and What You’ll Pay for Yourself)
Here’s the deal on the money and the “stuff.”
Included:
- A knowledgeable guide
- Ghost stories and researched historical storytelling
- Stops organized to keep the walk-and-talk pace
Not included:
- Drinks (this is actually a benefit, because you choose what you want)
- Gratuity
- If you want an EMF detector for extra effect, that’s not included. Rental or purchase is listed at $6
This structure is valuable because it lets you control your spending. You can keep it light—one drink with the stories—or make it your night out. Just remember that the tour doesn’t build in time for long bar binges.
The Logistics That Matter for Enjoying the Tour
Small details affect the whole evening.
Meeting and ending:
- Meet at Jackson Square.
- The tour ends back at the meeting point.
Language and format:
- Offered in English.
- You’ll have a mobile ticket.
Timing:
- Confirmation is typically received within 48 hours, based on availability.
Walking comfort:
- It’s a walking tour through key areas, so comfy shoes matter. Even when the stops are short, the cumulative walking is real.
Group size:
- Up to 50 travelers means you may want to stay near the front half of your group so you don’t miss the story turns.
And yes, there’s at least one red-flag story in the mix about a guide missing the meeting point and leaving people in the wrong place at the end. You can’t control that, but you can control what you do: show up early at Jackson Square and stay alert when the group begins moving.
Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Might Want Something Else)
This tour is a great fit if you:
- Want spooky storytelling paired with real bars
- Like a night walk and don’t mind a route that changes locations often
- Prefer paying a set price for the guide, then choosing your own drinks
It may be less ideal if you:
- Want a slow, relaxed crawl with lots of time to linger inside each bar
- Prefer lighter ghost stories and would rather avoid darker landmark accounts
- Are the type who needs strict, ultra-reliable timing and long stops, since the experience is structured around short story windows
On the positive side, the guide quality can make a big difference. In feedback tied to this style of tour, a guide named Royale was specifically praised for learning a lot about the area and having lots of fun while sharing history and local tips. That’s the kind of storytelling energy you want to bet on.
Quick Tips to Get the Best Night Possible
- Arrive at Jackson Square early so you don’t get swept into confusion.
- If you drink, pace yourself. Some stops include heavier themes and you’ll still want to enjoy the walk.
- If you’re curious about tech effects, plan for an EMF detector option ($6), but don’t expect it to replace the stories. This tour is still a guided narrative first.
- Bring a mindset shift: you’re not hunting proof of ghosts. You’re enjoying New Orleans through its own ghost-lore lens.
Should You Book This New Orleans Ghosts Boos and Booze Pub Crawl?
If you want a fun, concentrated dose of New Orleans ghost lore with bar stops and a real guide-led route, I think this is a strong booking choice—especially for your first or second night in town when you want context fast. The structure makes it easy to do in a short window, and the inclusion of multiple stops around major landmarks keeps the stories from feeling repetitive.
Just go in with clear expectations: it’s about stories and pacing, not a long party tour. If you can handle darker themes and you show up early at Jackson Square, you’re set up for an evening that feels like New Orleans at night—spooky, historical, and unmistakably its own.
FAQ
How much does the New Orleans Ghosts Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl cost?
It costs $36.00 per person.
How long is the tour?
The duration is about 1 hour 45 minutes.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Jackson Square and ends back at the meeting point.
Are drinks included in the price?
No. Drinks are not included, which lets you choose what you want to order.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, it is offered in English.
How many locations are included on the crawl?
You’ll have four bar stops, plus additional haunted landmarks along the walking route.
Is an EMF detector included?
No. An EMF detector rental or purchase is available for $6, and it is not included in the tour price.






























