Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl

REVIEW · DRINKING TOURS

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl

  • 4.358 reviews
  • 2 hours
  • From $30
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Operated by US Ghost Adventures · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Nighttime in Nashville gets spooky fast. This 2-hour haunted pub crawl mixes ghost stories with real honky-tonk landmarks, so you get a guided walk through the places that shaped country music lore and then hear the darker side of those same walls. I like that the tour isn’t just random scare tactics; it’s built around specific legends, including the Grand Ole Opry curse and the death of Hank Williams. I also like the “four historic locations” structure because it gives you multiple atmospheres in one evening. One thing to consider: drinks are not included, so you’ll want cash ready, and you’ll still be doing a noticeable walking stretch (it’s not for slow-movers).

You meet your guide outside Skull’s Rainbow Room at 6:00 PM, and they’ll be easy to spot with a black US Ghost Adventures t-shirt and a lantern. From there, the night flows stop-to-stop with entry included at four locations, plus plenty of time for your guide to connect spooky tales to what you’re seeing on the street. The specific bar lineup can shift by day and season, which keeps it fresh, but it also means you may not get every single venue you had in mind.

Key Things You’ll Actually Notice

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Key Things You’ll Actually Notice

  • Lantern-led meeting outside Skull’s Rainbow Room so you start on time and don’t hunt for your group
  • Four historic venues included for a simple “pay once, walk, enjoy” rhythm
  • Legend-focused storytelling, including the Grand Ole Opry curse and Hank Williams
  • Nashville nightlife landmarks like Tootsie’s and the Ryman Auditorium showing up in the story route
  • Craft beer or cocktail vibes at different stops, with cash needed since drinks aren’t included
  • Rain or shine means you’ll want real shoes and a layer that handles weather

What This Haunted Pub Crawl Really Gives You

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - What This Haunted Pub Crawl Really Gives You
This tour is built for people who want two things at once: a good Nashville bar night and a guided story trail that makes those bars feel more than just places to drink. The value isn’t the price tag by itself; it’s how the tour packages your evening. For $30 per person, you’re paying for a guide, entry to four historic locations, and a tight 2-hour schedule that keeps you moving and learning.

Here’s why that matters: Nashville can be easy to do wrong if you’re walking around on your own. You either spend time figuring out where to go, or you end up at one type of venue repeatedly. This tour mixes styles—high-energy honky-tonks, more refined stops, and legendary landmarks—so you experience how the city changes block by block.

You also get a clear theme: ghosts, boos, and booze. But it’s not just “spooky talk.” The guide connects the folklore to real music history and the kinds of stories people keep repeating because they stick. You’re meant to leave with a sharper sense of Nashville’s nighttime identity—why the same names keep coming back, and why some legends won’t die.

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Timing, Meeting Point, and How the Night Flows

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Timing, Meeting Point, and How the Night Flows
It starts at 6:00 PM outside Skull’s Rainbow Room. If you arrive a few minutes early, you’ll get the best experience: you can find your guide before the bars get crowded and you get swept into the wrong group.

Your guide is part of the “show” in a practical way. The black US Ghost Adventures t-shirt and lantern make it easy to identify them, which is especially helpful in Nashville’s busy entertainment areas. Then you just follow the group and listen—this is a walk-and-talk evening.

The tour is 2 hours, and the operator notes it’s not for people who can’t walk more than a mile. That’s a useful benchmark. Even if you’re not doing a long hike, you’re on your feet enough that comfortable shoes matter. If you’re someone who normally needs frequent breaks, plan for them now. The tour is rain or shine, so a weather-appropriate layer is smart.

One more practical note: smoking isn’t allowed and video recording isn’t allowed. That’s mostly about keeping the group experience focused, and about being respectful in venues.

Your Four Stops and What Each One Adds

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Your Four Stops and What Each One Adds
The lineup can vary, but the tour’s personality is consistent: four historic bars plus haunted stories threaded between them. Based on the venues highlighted, here’s how the stops generally shape your experience.

Skull’s Rainbow Room: Start With a Legendary Name

You begin outside Skull’s Rainbow Room, and that’s a good opening move. It sets a tone right away: you’re not starting at some random bar; you’re starting at a place already wrapped in Nashville lore. Expect your guide to lay down the backstory thread early—how stories attach to the music world, and why certain myths become part of the city’s nightlife vocabulary.

Drawback to know: because it’s a meeting point, it can feel busy before you even start moving. If you’re sensitive to crowds, arrive early and keep your first-minute focus on finding your guide.

Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge: Honky-Tonk Energy With a Big-Public Feel

Tootsie’s is one of those Nashville stops that hits you immediately. The atmosphere tends to feel lively and larger-than-life, and it’s the kind of venue where stories make sense because the crowd energy is part of the legend.

This is where you’ll likely hear more of the tour’s “doomed musicians” style of storytelling—tying the ghost angle to the reality that Nashville’s music scene has always been intense. You’ll get entry to this kind of landmark venue without needing to plan it yourself.

Possible drawback: because Tootsie’s is so well known, you may feel more like you’re part of the show than just watching from the edge. If you prefer quiet bars, this stop might be a bit much.

Nudie’s Honky Tonk: When the Style Turns a Little Classy

Nudie’s Honky Tonk is described as having a more refined elegance. That matters because it gives your night variety. Instead of staying in one energy level, you get a different vibe—something closer to the “costume and character” side of Nashville country culture.

Story-wise, this is a natural fit for the tour’s thread of spirits and legend-building: it’s not just spooky; it’s aesthetic. The guide’s job here is to connect the mood to the type of haunted lore people attach to famous venues—especially those linked to artists, performance, and the past.

Drawback to consider: if you’re only interested in craft beer and cocktails, the best parts of this stop may feel more about atmosphere than drink variety. Drinks are still on you to buy, since they’re not included.

Earnest Tubb and the Ryman Area: Country Roots Meets Haunted Lore

Earnest Tubb is another landmark name that belongs in any country-music conversation. This stop type helps you ground the ghost stories in the real fabric of Nashville: recording, performing, and the kind of music community that made legends possible.

The tour also highlights the Ryman Auditorium as a key landmark. Even if you don’t spend your whole time inside it (the tour is only two hours), it’s valuable to have it in the route. The Ryman is the kind of place where music history feels physical—so ghost stories land with more weight.

Possible drawback: because the tour has only four locations, you might want more time at your favorite venue. If you fall hard for one stop, you may feel tempted to go back afterward and spend real money there.

Ghost Stories: Grand Ole Opry Curse, Hank Williams, and Civil War Spirits

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Ghost Stories: Grand Ole Opry Curse, Hank Williams, and Civil War Spirits
The tour’s story menu is one of its strongest selling points. You’ll hear tales tied to suicide and doomed musicians, plus Civil War spirits—and you’ll also get a focus on specific Nashville legends rather than generic “haunted places” talk.

Here’s what that means for you as a listener:

  • You’re not just hearing random creepy facts. You’re hearing versions of legends and how they got repeated.
  • The tour zeroes in on famous names, including the Grand Ole Opry curse and Hank Williams. That gives you something to connect to if you already know the artists, or a starting point if you don’t.
  • The guide uses the surrounding venues as anchors. So the ghost stories feel tied to real places, not like a storybook with no geography.

A small but important tip: treat the “curse” and “mystery” portions like folklore. The fun here is in the storytelling and the way legends evolve—not in needing everything to be documented to the last detail. The tour is designed to give you chills with context.

Drinks, Cash, and Keeping It Fun (No Alcohol Package)

This is a pub crawl, but it’s not an all-in drink deal. Entry to bars is included, but drinks are not included. That affects how you plan.

Price value check: at $30, you’re mostly paying for guide time, four venue entries, and the structure of a two-hour nighttime route. If you buy a beer or cocktail at each stop, you’ll likely spend extra. If you only buy at one or two places, it can feel like excellent value because you’re still getting four locations plus the stories.

Bring a practical wallet plan:

  • Have cash ready, since you’ll want to buy drinks at the venues.
  • Bring a valid ID because you must have it to purchase alcohol.
  • Pace yourself. Even though it’s short, it’s still a walking evening with multiple stops and more than one chance to order something.

Also note: the tour mentions you may have access to craft breweries and local bars, and that stops can appeal to both beer fans and cocktail drinkers. Just don’t assume a specific drink brand will be available at every stop.

Walking Comfort, Weather, and Simple Rules That Matter

A lot of haunted tours fail at basic comfort. This one gives you enough warning to avoid that problem.

  • It runs rain or shine, so wear a weather-ready outfit.
  • The tour isn’t recommended if you can’t walk more than a mile.
  • Smoking and video recording aren’t allowed, so don’t plan on filming the whole thing.

My practical advice: wear shoes you’d happily walk in for longer than two hours. The tour is short, but your brain will remember uneven sidewalks and crowded entryways. If you’re bringing a jacket, go for something you can keep with you easily, since you’ll be moving constantly.

If you have mobility needs, the operator says it’s not suitable for people with mobility impairments. That’s worth respecting rather than hoping it works out in practice.

Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Want Something Else)

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Who This Tour Fits Best (And Who Might Want Something Else)
This is ideal for you if:

  • You like Nashville history and legends, especially country-music lore.
  • You want a guided route so you’re not guessing where to go at night.
  • You enjoy a group vibe and you’re okay listening while walking.
  • You can stand for a couple hours and you want variety across multiple venues.

It’s not a great fit if:

  • You need a low-walking option.
  • You dislike nightlife crowds or loud bar environments.
  • You don’t want to spend additional money on drinks, since purchases are on you.
  • You prefer quiet, strictly factual tours. This one leans into folklore and the scary side of music storytelling.

And one more angle: if you’re in Nashville for a short visit, the tour is a handy way to get your bearings. It’s not just “do ghost stuff.” It’s also a compact way to understand why the city’s nightlife is built around landmark venues and music names.

Should You Book This Nashville Haunted Pub Crawl?

Nashville: Ghosts, Boos and Booze Haunted Pub Crawl - Should You Book This Nashville Haunted Pub Crawl?
I’d book it if you want a two-hour plan that’s easy to follow and feels like more than just bar hopping. The big reasons are simple: four historic venues included, a strong focus on recognizable Nashville legends like the Grand Ole Opry curse and Hank Williams, and a guide format that keeps the night moving.

You might skip it if you’re hoping for drinks to be included, or if you want long time inside one venue. This tour is designed for variety and storytelling, not deep hanging out at a single bar.

If you decide to go, come prepared: comfortable shoes, a layer for rain, and cash for drinks. Then lean in to the stories. The fun is how the haunted themes connect to the actual music places you’ll recognize.

FAQ

Where is the meeting point for the tour?

Meet your guide outside Skull’s Rainbow Room. The guide will be wearing a black US Ghost Adventures t-shirt and carrying a lantern.

What time does the tour start?

The tour begins at 6:00 PM.

How long is the tour?

The duration is 2 hours.

How much does it cost?

The price is $30 per person.

What is included in the price?

It includes the haunted pub crawl, entry to four historic bars, and a guide.

Are drinks included?

No. Drinks are not included in the tour package.

Do I need an ID?

Yes. You must bring a valid ID to purchase alcohol.

Is the tour rain or shine?

Yes, the tour takes place rain or shine.

Is smoking or video recording allowed?

Smoking is not allowed, and video recording is not allowed.

Is the tour refundable if my plans change?

There is free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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