REVIEW · BOSTON
Boston: Haunted Pub Crawl of Historic Pubs and Taverns
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Ghost City Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Boston at night has a way of getting under your skin. This is a 2-hour haunted pub crawl that links Revolutionary War Boston to stops tied to patriots and places with darker secrets. I especially like the story-first pacing and the focus on real local history that still feels spooky when you’re standing there. One drawback to keep in mind: drinks are not included, so you may end up buying whatever’s on the menu once the stories build up.
You’ll start at a landmark you can’t miss: the Samuel Adams Statue outside Faneuil Hall Marketplace, right at the intersection of North and Congress Streets. The crawl runs rain or shine, so plan on moving in Boston weather and wearing shoes you trust for uneven sidewalks. If you’re hoping for an era-specific drink experience, calibrate your expectations, since the tour is built around narration and haunted stops more than themed tastings.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- A Wicked Two-Hour Ride Through Revolutionary Boston
- Starting at Faneuil Hall: How to Find the Samuel Adams Statue
- Price and What You Actually Get for $34
- Revolutionary War Stories That Make Boston Feel Alive
- North End Streets and Cemetery-Linked Haunting
- The Stops You’ll Hit: Double Cola Company, Mountain City Club, Miller Plaza Pavilion
- Double Cola Company
- Mountain City Club
- Miller Plaza Pavilion
- Union Oyster Pub and the Real-World Pub Crawl Feel
- Guide Power: Humor, Timing, and Managing the Crowd
- What to Bring, What to Wear, and What’s Off-Limits
- Who This Tour Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Boston Haunted Pub Crawl?
- FAQ
- How long is the Boston Haunted Pub Crawl?
- What is the price per person?
- Are drinks included in the ticket price?
- Where does the tour start?
- What should I bring?
- Is video recording allowed?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- Is the tour suitable for younger people?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key things to know before you go

- Revolutionary War focus: the haunt is tied to Boston’s patriot era and early city life.
- Storytelling drives the night: you’re here for the guide’s characters and the creepy context.
- Drinks aren’t included: budget for purchases at the stops.
- You’ll walk the North End area vibe: think old streets and cemetery-adjacent gloom.
- Live English guide: the experience is built for a small-to-medium group format.
- No video recording: bring your ID and your camera roll stays put.
A Wicked Two-Hour Ride Through Revolutionary Boston

If you only have one evening to get your bearings in Boston, this style of tour works fast. You get a guided route through historic parts of the city, plus haunting lore that’s anchored to the Revolutionary War era. The result is a night that feels like you’re watching Boston’s origin story from the shadows.
I like that the tour doesn’t treat the supernatural as random decoration. It connects the ghosts to the people and places that shaped early Boston, including famous Patriots such as Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Paul Revere, and John Adams. That matters, because it turns spooky talk into something with local traction.
Your time is also respected. At 2 hours, you’re not committing to a half-day event, which is handy if you’ve got dinner plans or you just want a first-night activity. Just keep in mind the “pub crawl” part means you’ll be stopping at bars and taverns, but the tour itself covers the guide, not alcohol.
You can also read our reviews of more historical tours in Boston
Starting at Faneuil Hall: How to Find the Samuel Adams Statue

Meet your guide at the Samuel Adams Statue outside Faneuil Hall Marketplace, 1 S Market Street, at the corner of North and Congress Street. This is one of the best kinds of meeting points for a walking tour: easy to recognize, close to transit options, and central enough that you don’t spend your evening hunting for the group.
Once you’re lined up, the tour moves like a planned night out rather than a long museum lecture. The guide uses the Revolutionary War theme to stitch together each stop, with the city acting as your layout. You’ll be walking enough to work up a mild buzz, but the total time stays tight.
Also note the practical stuff: it’s rain or shine. Boston weather changes quickly, so bring a layer you can move in. Comfortable shoes matter even more than you think, since the crawl’s concept relies on walking between historic locations.
Price and What You Actually Get for $34

At $34 per person for a 2-hour guided experience, the value here is the storytelling and the route. You’re paying for a live guide, a themed way to see older Boston, and context you won’t get from wandering on your own.
But here’s the part to plan for: drinks aren’t included. That means the tour can be fantastic even if you choose to drink nothing, but if you want a pint or a cocktail at each stop, you should budget accordingly. In practice, your night may include a mix of bar atmosphere and paying for current-day drinks.
If you’re the type who wants a “history drink sampler” style experience, be aware that the crawl is described as a guided haunted experience, not a pre-paid tasting package. You’ll still visit pubs and taverns, but you should expect to order at the places you stop.
Revolutionary War Stories That Make Boston Feel Alive

The core theme is Revolutionary War Boston, with a spooky twist. The guide sets you up with tales connected to the early days of the city and the people who became symbols of independence. Names like Samuel Adams and John Hancock aren’t just name-drops. You’ll hear them tied to the kinds of places Patriots gathered and the atmosphere of the time.
I like how this theme gives structure. Instead of wandering from “haunted building” to “random legend,” you’re following a line: early Boston life, then the darker edges that people remember. That’s exactly what makes a haunted walk useful. It’s not only scary; it’s also explanatory.
You should expect the vibe to be dark but playful. The tour leans into horror story energy, with historic details that help you picture the past rather than just accepting ghost folklore. If you’re a fan of early American history, this is the kind of haunted tour that rewards attention without needing you to be a history professor.
North End Streets and Cemetery-Linked Haunting
A big part of the mood comes from the idea of walking Boston’s older streets and the atmosphere around historic cemeteries. The description leans into the North End setting, and that makes sense: this is the kind of neighborhood where old stone, narrow streets, and age-old architecture do half the work for the storyteller.
Cemetery-adjacent stories hit differently in Boston because the city is dense with layers. You’re not in a theme park town built from scratch for visitors. You’re moving through a real place with real history sitting under your feet.
Here’s a practical tip: keep your phone ready for photos, but remember video recording is not allowed. Still, you can snap images as you go, then later map out what you saw and look up details you want to read more about. That’s a great way to turn the tour into a start-point for deeper exploration.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in Boston
The Stops You’ll Hit: Double Cola Company, Mountain City Club, Miller Plaza Pavilion
Even without a giant, formal museum feeling, you’ll visit specific places that anchor the spooky theme. Three named stops in the tour description stand out as the kind of locations you can picture on your next walk through Boston.
Double Cola Company
The Double Cola Company stop adds a “worked-in history” layer. It’s a reminder that haunted locations aren’t only mansions and churches. Industrial-era and everyday commerce sites can carry stories too, and the tour uses that idea to make the city feel textured and real.
Mountain City Club
The Mountain City Club also points to a different kind of history than you might expect from a typical pub crawl. Places like this help explain the social side of Boston—who gathered, how people lived, and where power and influence played out.
Miller Plaza Pavilion
Miller Plaza Pavilion is framed as charming on the surface, with darker secrets behind it. That contrast is key to a good haunted tour: the creepiest stories usually work best when the location still looks normal today. It makes you look twice, and it makes the guide’s narration land harder.
The upside of these named stops is clarity. You’re not guessing where you went later; you have recognizable anchors. The potential downside is that if you’re expecting every stop to feel like a classic “old-timey tavern,” you may be surprised by the variety of settings. Still, that variety is part of what makes the crawl feel like a wider view of Boston.
Union Oyster Pub and the Real-World Pub Crawl Feel

One stop that pops up in the experience is Union Oyster Pub. This is the kind of place where the atmosphere can get loud, especially on a busy night. That’s not a flaw—it’s part of the pub crawl reality. If you’re going for a social night out plus history, the noise can even be a feature.
But it’s worth planning for group energy. One of the tour’s strengths is how it handles lively bar scenes and keeps the storytelling going without losing everyone. Still, if you’re the kind of person who wants a quiet, classroom-style experience, you may need to balance your expectations and aim for an early start time when possible.
Also, since drinks aren’t included, the pub vibe depends on how you want to participate. You can take the tour with no pressure to drink. Or you can pace yourself and order one drink while you enjoy the guide’s stories. Either way, you’ll get the same core value: the haunted Boston narrative tied to recognizable places.
Guide Power: Humor, Timing, and Managing the Crowd

This tour lives or dies by its guide, and the roster shows a lot of range. Guides including Nicole, Bee, Victoria, Liberty, Mara, Drew, and Max have been credited for strong storytelling and keeping things fun. If you get a guide who knows how to read a room, the crawl can feel like a friendly night out with a history nerd who’s also entertaining.
One theme across the guide experiences is handling busy bar conditions. On a Saturday-night type crowd, you can have groups that get a bit rowdy at the stops. A good guide keeps the flow moving and makes sure the story doesn’t disappear under the noise.
I also like that the tour seems designed to reduce downtime. There isn’t a “wander for 30 minutes then hear one story” feel. The walking is part of the experience, but the storytelling stays central.
What to Bring, What to Wear, and What’s Off-Limits
You only need a few basics to keep the night smooth.
Bring:
- Passport or ID card
- Comfortable shoes
Off-limits:
- Video recording
Other important planning notes:
- The tour runs rain or shine, so pack for weather changes.
- The tour language is English.
- It’s not suitable for people under 21, which helps keep the bar stops aligned with the setting.
Shoes are the big one. This is Boston. Sidewalks can be uneven, and you’ll be moving through historic streets. If you wear uncomfortable shoes, your “haunted” experience turns into a foot-care problem fast.
Who This Tour Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)
I’d put this in the “fun adult night” category. It’s ideal if you want:
- a first-night activity in Boston
- a way to learn Revolutionary War context without sitting through a long lecture
- haunted history that’s tied to real places you can revisit later
You should also consider it if your group likes a social atmosphere. The crawl format pairs well with friends, couples, and small groups who want to do something different from the usual museums-and-bus tours.
Skip it if:
- you’re under 21
- you hate any bar setting at all
- you want drinks included as part of the price
- you’re expecting a quiet, museum-like experience without noise
Should You Book This Boston Haunted Pub Crawl?
Book it if you want a short, guided, spooky-night plan that gives you Revolutionary War context and recognizable stops without a huge time commitment. The $34 price makes sense when you view it as paying for a live guide and a curated walk, not as a full alcohol package.
Don’t book it if you’re expecting pre-included tastings or a strictly “pub-then-pint” historical re-enactment style. The tour is about haunted storytelling and site-based history, and the bar part still runs on normal ordering at the stops.
If your goal is to learn the city’s early story, laugh a little at the dark bits, and feel like you’re seeing Boston with sharper eyes, this crawl is a strong pick.
FAQ
How long is the Boston Haunted Pub Crawl?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
What is the price per person?
The price is $34 per person.
Are drinks included in the ticket price?
No. Drinks are not included. You’ll need to purchase drinks separately if you want them.
Where does the tour start?
It starts at the Samuel Adams Statue outside Faneuil Hall Marketplace, 1 S Market Street, at the intersection of North and Congress Street.
What should I bring?
Bring passport or an ID card and comfortable shoes.
Is video recording allowed?
No. Video recording is not allowed.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes. The tour takes place rain or shine.
Is the tour suitable for younger people?
No. It’s not suitable for people under 21.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. It offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now & pay later.
































