New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour

REVIEW · NEW ORLEANS

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour

  • 4.56 reviews
  • 2 hours
  • From $25
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Operated by NOLA Ghost Riders · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.5 (6)Duration2 hoursPrice from$25Operated byNOLA Ghost RidersBook viaGetYourGuide

The French Quarter has a darker bedtime story. In this 2-hour haunted walk, I like how the local guides connect voodoo, vampires, and murder mysteries to the city’s real Creole-era hardships. The storytelling is built around specific, memorable places like Madame Lalaurie’s house and the Axeman’s territory, and guides such as Carlo and Rob bring personality (including personal anecdotes). One clear drawback: this tour is not a good fit if you have limited mobility, since it’s a walking route on uneven streets.

You’ll cover about a half-mile, but you won’t feel rushed. I also like that the tour runs rain or shine, so you can plan around it without guessing the weather too much. Just note that sound can be an issue when the group stretches out, and one guide in a past tour lineup was flagged for needing a microphone, so it helps to position yourself where you can hear well.

Key highlights worth your time

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Key highlights worth your time

  • French Quarter haunted route: about a half-mile, designed for an easy walking pace with frequent story stops.
  • Voodoo and vampire legends with context: supernatural themes tied to everyday life in earlier New Orleans.
  • Specific stops you can point at later: Madame Lalaurie’s house and sites linked to the Axeman.
  • Pop culture crossover: you may spot places connected to Anne Rice’s Interview With a Vampire and the King Creole balcony sighting.
  • Local guide energy: smaller groups and personal storytelling styles from guides like Carlo and Rob.
  • 2 hours of night-time storytelling: a good length for people who want creepy without committing to a long evening.

French Quarter cobblestones and the 2-hour haunted setup

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - French Quarter cobblestones and the 2-hour haunted setup
This tour is designed for one thing: walking through the French Quarter while the stories get darker and more specific. It lasts about two hours and covers roughly half a mile, which is a smart pace in a neighborhood where streets can feel tight and slow.

I like that the focus stays local. You’re not bouncing around the city chasing vague “haunted” claims. Instead, you move block by block through a tightly packed area where preserved facades and long memory make the past feel close.

You’ll also get a rhythm that works well for first-timers. Each stop is a story beat: a person, a legend, a crime, a ritual, or a rumored encounter. That structure matters because it keeps the supernatural from feeling random.

Comfort-wise, plan for standing and walking on uneven ground. Even if you’re an experienced walker, the French Quarter can be slower than you expect. For this reason, it’s not recommended for people with limited mobility.

You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in New Orleans

What the tour actually tells you: voodoo, vampires, and real trouble

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - What the tour actually tells you: voodoo, vampires, and real trouble
The big promise here is history meets the supernatural. The guide’s job is to connect New Orleans legends to the city’s three centuries of layers, including the hard years when violence, famine, disease, fire, and natural disasters were part of daily life. That context is more than background. It helps you understand why certain myths stuck around and why fear became a kind of local language.

The supernatural themes are front and center. You’ll hear about voodoo beliefs, vampire myths, murders, and mysteries, all framed through the French Quarter’s physical landmarks and the people tied to them. You’re not getting a generic ghost lecture. You’re hearing how legends may have formed, how they were told, and why they fit the city’s temperament.

I also like the way the stories treat both villains and heroes. The tour looks at Creole society’s darker side while also pointing to the characters people later romanticized. That balance keeps it from turning into a nonstop horror show.

If you’re a fan of spooky lore, this kind of story-to-place format is what makes it land. You can’t unread the things you see. Later, when you walk past a facade on your own, the story clicks back in.

Madame Lalaurie’s House: when cruelty becomes a lasting legend

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Madame Lalaurie’s House: when cruelty becomes a lasting legend
Madame Lalaurie’s name shows up in a lot of New Orleans hauntings for a reason: the story is infamous, and the location is unforgettable. On this tour, you’ll stop to hear the chilling tales tied to her and what people believe lingers in connection to her house.

What makes this stop valuable is how it’s handled. The tour doesn’t treat this as pure spectacle. It frames cruelty and consequence in a place where the past left marks that locals didn’t erase. You get the sense that the building is more than a backdrop; it’s evidence in the storytelling.

There’s also a practical payoff. If you’re the kind of traveler who hates leaving a city with vague impressions, this stop gives you something concrete to remember. You’ll be able to say: I saw the place, and I understood why that name became a legend.

One more thing: stories like this can feel heavy. That’s normal. If you prefer lighter themes, you may want to mentally pace yourself. There are other stops on the route, but this one is the kind that sticks.

The Axeman’s hangout: fear, timing, and why myths survive

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - The Axeman’s hangout: fear, timing, and why myths survive
Another standout stop is the hangout favored by the Axeman, a serial killer who terrorized the city in the early 20th century. This isn’t just a creepy label. You’ll hear how the fear attached itself to neighborhoods and why a specific figure can become a shorthand for anxiety in a place like New Orleans.

This is where the tour’s “history meets supernatural” approach gets interesting. You’re not only learning about the crimes; you’re learning how the stories around them grew. The goal isn’t to turn reality into fantasy. It’s to show how the city’s long memory gives rumor somewhere to live.

The Axeman stop also feels different in delivery. The guide tends to connect the legend to the physical environment, so the story has a kind of street-level credibility. Even if you don’t believe in supernatural encounters, you’ll still walk away with a clearer picture of how fear becomes local lore.

Camera time may come up here too. The tour suggests that you might even capture a ghostly encounter through your lens. Realistically, you’ll probably get regular photos. But the fun is in trying in that moment, especially since New Orleans nights create dramatic lighting on old stone and ironwork.

Anne Rice and King Creole sightings: when local myth meets pop culture

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Anne Rice and King Creole sightings: when local myth meets pop culture
If you’ve read Interview With a Vampire, you’ll probably perk up at the tour’s pop culture connections. You may get to see the hotel that Anne Rice was inspired to use for the story. That kind of link does a lot for travelers because it builds a bridge between New Orleans as a real place and New Orleans as a creative world.

You’ll also have a shot at a King Creole sighting: the balcony where Elvis sang, tied to the film. That’s a clever contrast to the darker parts of the route. It reminds you that the French Quarter doesn’t only produce fear. It produces music, performance, and stories that get exported around the globe.

I like these stops because they help you see the city’s legends as living material. Some stories are handed down through oral tradition. Others get amplified through books and movies. Both help visitors connect emotionally to the streets.

Just keep your expectations grounded. The tour points you toward these recognizable cultural references, but you’re still walking in a real neighborhood, not stepping into a themed set.

Guide energy and small-group focus: Carlo and Rob’s storytelling style

The tour’s quality heavily depends on the guide, and this lineup seems to have personality covered. Carlo is described as very fun, and he doesn’t just recycle the standard ghost script. He shares personal experiences from himself and friends, which makes the stories feel less like a performance and more like someone telling you what they know and what they’ve heard.

Rob is also highlighted for doing a fantastic job with the stories. The key detail here is clarity. If you’re paying attention on a walking tour, you want a guide who can keep the plot moving while also pointing out the next place.

Group size also matters. One tour experience emphasized a really small group, which helps you move around more easily and see the sights without constantly losing track of everyone. Even if your own group isn’t tiny, the intent is the same: keep the pace human.

Sound is the one variable to watch. A past participant noted the need for a microphone, which suggests that audio can get tricky when people spread out. If you want the full experience, try to stay closer to the guide when possible. If you’re at the back and you’re straining to hear, the tour can feel less fun fast.

Practical stuff before you go: what to wear and how to make it work

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Practical stuff before you go: what to wear and how to make it work
This is a walking tour in the French Quarter, so think comfort first. Wear shoes that handle uneven pavement. Even if you’re just doing half a mile, you’ll likely stand still for parts of the stories, and cobblestones can slow you down.

The tour runs rain or shine. Plan for wet streets because the French Quarter can get slick, and you don’t want to turn the evening into a slip-and-slide mission. A small umbrella or a light rain layer can help, but avoid anything that blocks the person behind you.

Heat can also be real. One past experience called it hot, but still informative, which is a hint to bring water and take quick sips when the guide pauses.

If you’re sensitive to scary themes, you should still be able to enjoy it. The stories span murders, voodoo, vampires, and notorious figures, so it’s not a “cute ghosts only” tour. On the other hand, the historical context helps it feel grounded instead of purely sensational.

And bring your camera. The tour suggests you might be able to capture something ghostly with photos. Even if you only get normal images, you’ll still end up with proof you stood at the places where the legends live.

Is it worth $25 per person?

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Is it worth $25 per person?
At $25, this is priced like a budget-friendly evening activity, not a splurge. The value comes from the combination: a live guide, a compact walking route, and story stops tied to well-known names. Two hours is long enough for multiple strong story beats, but short enough to fit into a normal travel schedule.

You also get flexibility features that help when plans are fluid. The tour offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and there’s a reserve now and pay later option. That lowers risk, especially if you’re building your trip around other evening plans.

The one cost detail to remember is that tips are not included. If you plan to tip (and you probably should for a live guide), factor that into your total budget.

Should you book this Haunted Ghosts and Supernatural tour?

New Orleans: Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural Walking Tour - Should you book this Haunted Ghosts and Supernatural tour?
Book it if you want a French Quarter evening that feels specific, not generic. I’d especially recommend it if you like legends tied to real places and you enjoy learning the human reasons behind myths. The stops around Madame Lalaurie’s House and the Axeman story are the kind of anchors that make the walk memorable long after you leave the street.

Skip it if you need a low-walking, low-standing experience. This isn’t designed for limited mobility, and it’s also the sort of tour where hearing the guide clearly matters.

If you’re traveling with friends and you want a shared story experience, this is a strong pick. You’ll come away with names to remember, places to picture, and a New Orleans night that’s a little stranger than your hotel corridor.

FAQ

How long is the Haunted Ghosts & Supernatural walking tour?

The tour lasts about 2 hours.

How far is the walking route?

It is a half-mile walking tour.

What does it cost?

The price is $25 per person.

Is the tour guided by a live person?

Yes. It’s a guided walking tour with a live English-language guide.

What kinds of supernatural topics will I hear about?

You’ll hear chilling legends and mysteries, including voodoo and vampire stories, plus tales tied to murders and other historical secrets.

Will the tour run in rain?

Yes. It takes place rain or shine.

Is it suitable for people with limited mobility?

No, it is not recommended for people with limited mobility.

Are tips included in the ticket price?

No. Tips are not included.

Can I cancel for a refund?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Where is the tour located?

It takes place in New Orleans, focused on the French Quarter in Louisiana, United States.

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