Walking Tour for Two, Four, or Six from Magic Walking Tours (Up to 54% Off)
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Walk among the graves at St. Louis Cemetery, historic mansions in the Garden District or the French Quarter’s dark past
After purchasing this deal, you will need to visit the website listed on your voucher to complete redemption.
- What’s included: 3 tours to choose from:Cemetery Tour, Garden District Tour, or French Quarter Ghost Tour
- Departure time: depends on the tour
- Departure locations: 441 Royal Street (meetup location for all tours except Garden District Tour); 2727 Pryrtania Street (meetup location for Garden District Tour)
- Age ranges for age-specific tickets: children 6-12
- Free admission for children under 6 (certain options)
- Online booking required to lock-in an appointment
Walk among the graves at St. Louis Cemetery, historic mansions in the Garden District or the French Quarter’s dark past
After purchasing this deal, you will need to visit the website listed on your voucher to complete redemption.
- What’s included: 3 tours to choose from:Cemetery Tour, Garden District Tour, or French Quarter Ghost Tour
- Departure time: depends on the tour
- Departure locations: 441 Royal Street (meetup location for all tours except Garden District Tour); 2727 Pryrtania Street (meetup location for Garden District Tour)
- Age ranges for age-specific tickets: children 6-12
- Free admission for children under 6 (certain options)
- Online booking required to lock-in an appointment
Need To Know Info
About Magic Walking Tours
Even unbelievers can glean some new knowledge from Magic Tours. Professors, historians, and journalists are among the guides that lead the cemetery and ghost tours, so they're not only spooky, but also historically accurate. And since New Orleans has a reputation for its cemeteries and outlandish burial customs, they have plenty of facts to spill on each tour. The oldest haunt they explore is the Saint Louis Cemetery, which has been open for business since 1789. Over the past two centuries, thousands of locals—famous and anonymous—have come to their final rest there, including legendary voodoo practitioner Marie Laveau.