Nashville’s walls steal the show. This Murals of Nashville Instagram Tour turns Music City street art into an easy, hop-on photo run—driven by a local guide in a private open-air golf cart with planned mural stops. I especially like how you get lots of time for photos, and how the guide adds useful context as you roll through neighborhoods. One thing to plan for: it runs rain or shine, and on cold days you may wish you had something extra like a blanket.
The tour’s vibe fits right into a first visit. If you want something more fun than hunting murals on foot, you’ll like the way it mixes art with quick neighborhood sights. Guides like Tyler, Eric, Austin, Dylan, Will, Adam, and Scotty have been called out for being friendly, funny, and good at answering questions—so you’re not just following a route.
Pick a morning, afternoon, or evening start, then dress for the weather. The cart is open air, and you’re traveling through different parts of town in that 1.5 to 2 hour window, so layers help. This is also not a deep historical tour, so if you want museums and lectures, you’ll likely want to pair it with something else.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- Why this Nashville mural tour works better than walking
- Meeting at 833 9th Ave S and what the ride timing feels like
- The mural route: Gulch to East Nashville, with SoBro and Midtown in the mix
- Stop 1: Joyride Nashville, then downtown and Marathon Village murals
- Downtown Nashville mural hotspots
- Marathon Village mural stops
- Music Row and the What Lifts You Mural stop (with free admission)
- What Lifts You Mural
- Gulch, SoBro, and Midtown: where the guide helps you find the best angles
- The Gulch
- SoBro (South of Broadway)
- Midtown
- How many murals you’ll see in 90 minutes
- Guides make or break the experience: request your style
- Price and value: what $64.84 buys you
- Comfort and weather: open-air fun with real-world clothing advice
- Who should book the Murals of Nashville Instagram Tour
- Should you book it?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Murals of Nashville Instagram Tour by Golf Cart?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- Is the tour private?
- What areas of Nashville will we see?
- How many murals will we stop at?
- Is there any free admission included?
- Is the tour rain or shine?
- Are children allowed?
Key highlights at a glance

- Private open-air golf cart ride: smooth way to reach street art across multiple neighborhoods
- Photo-first stops: you’ll pause again and again for pictures, not just glance-and-go
- Neighborhood coverage: Gulch, Marathon Village, downtown, Music Row, SoBro, Midtown, and East Nashville areas
- Free ticket at What Lifts You Mural: one stop includes free admission
- Guides who tailor pace: guides can slow down for the shots you care about (or speed up when needed)
Why this Nashville mural tour works better than walking

Street art in Nashville is spread out. If you try to DIY it, you end up spending half your time figuring out where the next mural is, how to park, and whether you’re walking the right blocks.
This tour handles that mess for you. You ride in an open-air golf cart, then stop when you hit a mural that’s worth photographing. That structure matters, especially if your trip is short. In about 2 hours, you can cover several art zones without turning your day into a scavenger hunt.
The other big win is the “photo pause” rhythm. The tour is built around stopping for pictures, so you’re not standing behind a group and waiting for your turn. People also like that the cart route can take you down alleys and smaller streets, which helps you find murals you might miss from main roads.
The only drawback is simple: you’re in a golf cart, so it can get noisy. One guest said the cart exhaust was loud enough that it was hard to hear the guide at times. If you’re sensitive to sound, keep that in mind and bring patience.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Nashville.
Meeting at 833 9th Ave S and what the ride timing feels like

You meet at 833 9th Ave S, Nashville, TN 37203, and you come back there at the end. The whole outing runs about 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours depending on stops and how your group moves.
A few practical details that affect the experience:
- Each golf cart holds 5–7 passengers, and bigger groups split across multiple carts.
- The tour runs rain or shine, hot or cold. Dress for real weather, not Nashville’s best-case scenario.
- The experience is offered in English and uses a mobile ticket.
- There’s a 2 person minimum to book. If you’re a group of 2, you can be paired with others.
In practice, this means the “tour length” is not just driving time. It includes time at mural walls, plus time to reset for the next stop. When the light is good and the group moves at a comfortable pace, it feels relaxed.
The mural route: Gulch to East Nashville, with SoBro and Midtown in the mix

This isn’t one neighborhood and done. You’ll roll through areas that are packed with street art and good backdrops for Instagram-style shots.
Here’s what you should expect the tour to touch as it moves city to city:
- Gulch: murals paired with shops and restaurants vibe
- Marathon Village: a creative, art-friendly area where street art feels part of the culture
- Downtown and SoBro (South of Broadway): murals alongside the busier core of the city
- Music Row: country-music industry scenery, with murals in the surrounding art lanes
- Midtown: lots of wall-art and a more local-feeling hangout zone
- East Nashville: another pocket where murals give you that less-touristy feel
You may also pass by a world-famous museum between mural stops. The tour description encourages you to check it out if you have time—so it’s not just driving past landmarks, it’s an invitation to look beyond the cart.
The route is also flexible in feel. Guides can tailor pace a bit, so if you care more about getting photos than hearing every story, your guide can slow down just for the mural walls that matter most to you.
Stop 1: Joyride Nashville, then downtown and Marathon Village murals

The tour starts with Joyride Nashville, setting the tone for what’s ahead: art-focused stops with plenty of time to step out, frame a shot, and grab a friend who’s willing to take your picture.
From there, you move into:
Downtown Nashville mural hotspots
Downtown murals tend to be visually bold because they’re placed where people already walk and look. That makes them ideal for photos because you can build strong compositions quickly—wide walls for group shots and tighter angles for close-ups.
If you’re hoping for an easy, picture-friendly start, downtown is a smart place to begin. It’s also where the tour helps you move efficiently between art walls instead of getting stuck circling blocks.
Marathon Village mural stops
Marathon Village is a creative area, and murals feel like part of the streetscape rather than a one-off attraction. This is the section where the tour tends to feel more “street art lifestyle” than “photo wall.”
Drawback to know: some murals are massive. One review pointed out that you can’t always get the whole piece in one photo, especially when it stretches across entire buildings. You can still shoot great close-ups, but expect the photography strategy to be more than just standing in front of the wall and pressing the shutter.
Music Row and the What Lifts You Mural stop (with free admission)

Music Row shows up in the itinerary because it’s the symbolic heart of the country music industry. Even if your main goal is murals, this stretch gives you variety in the background: record label offices, radio stations, recording studios, and that classic Music City energy.
If you want context without turning the day into a lecture, this tour format works. The guide can point out what you’re seeing and why certain areas have so much street art.
Then comes the standout named stop:
What Lifts You Mural
This stop includes free admission. The mural is one of those you’ll want to treat like a photo moment, not a quick stop. Because it’s specifically called out with free admission, it’s likely planned as a key experience.
Photo note: if you’re trying to recreate an exact Instagram shot, give yourself extra time. Big-scale murals can be hard to capture in full, so think in terms of multiple photos: one wide shot for the whole scene and one or two tighter frames for details.
Gulch, SoBro, and Midtown: where the guide helps you find the best angles

After the early stops, you’ll spend time in areas where murals sit near everyday life—shops, restaurants, and streets where you can imagine yourself walking around for hours.
The Gulch
The Gulch portion is especially good for mixing art with atmosphere. The tour description points out that you’ll find murals along with places to browse and eat. That means the ride isn’t just about the art wall; it’s also about feeling the neighborhood.
SoBro (South of Broadway)
SoBro tends to deliver a lot of mural variety because you’re moving through a dense area. This section is great if you want different styles back-to-back—more than one look for your feed.
Midtown
Midtown is another mural-heavy zone, with a more local-feeling hangout vibe. One idea from the tour description: ask your guide if there’s time for a RootBeer Float photo. It’s a fun “Nashville snack + mural” combo, and it’s the kind of optional add-on that turns a good tour into a memorable one.
Not every tour includes the exact same small extras, so ask early if your guide has room for it. If your group is already moving quickly for photos, your guide may prioritize the mural walls.
How many murals you’ll see in 90 minutes

This is where expectations matter.
Some people get a shorter, slower run with fewer murals; others see a bigger range. The tour experience can land anywhere from about 5–6 murals to as many as 30–40, depending on how quickly your group stops for photos.
This is why the cart concept works: you’re not losing time commuting between far-apart spots. The time bottleneck is your group’s pace at each mural.
Two tips to get more value:
- Pick your priorities before you start (wide group shot vs. close-up details).
- Don’t fight the scale. If a mural is huge, shoot close-ups and don’t stress about capturing the whole wall in one image.
Also, the tour has a hard cap of 50 travelers, which helps keep it from feeling like a stampede at every stop.
Guides make or break the experience: request your style

This type of tour lives and dies on the person driving and explaining. The good news: several guides have been praised for being fun, flexible, and helpful with photo moments and practical Nashville tips.
Examples you might want to look for when booking or asking:
- Tyler: friendly and knowledgeable, with a pace that helps you take your time
- Dylan: very informative and friendly, with a little humor
- Eric: praised for kindness and helpfulness, and for taking great photos
- Will: tailored the tour to the group and used the cart to access alleys for photo ops
- Scotty: pointed out things you might not find on your own
- Adam: a fun intro to the city, especially if you’re brand new in town
- Joe: made the ride enjoyable and kept it moving without rushing photos
There’s also a perk that shows up with some guides: a few guests describe getting additional photos shared after the tour from the guide’s own collection. That’s not guaranteed, but it hints at the overall service level.
Food and drink moments can happen too. One review mentioned a complimentary moonshine tasting as a way to warm up on a cold day. If that’s your kind of stop, ask your guide what’s possible when you’re dressed for the weather.
Price and value: what $64.84 buys you
At $64.84 per person, this tour isn’t a budget walk. So the question is: what are you buying?
You’re paying for four things that save time and effort:
- Local guide time for route choices and mural context.
- Private transport by golf cart, including access to streets that are hard to reach on foot efficiently.
- Photo stops built into the schedule, so you’re not paying for a “drive-by.”
- All fees and taxes, plus ticketed items like the free admission at What Lifts You Mural.
Also, the tour price includes $6.99 per person 24-hour trip insurance. That’s not the main reason you’d book, but it does add a bit of safety coverage without extra paperwork.
When it feels worth it:
- You’re in Nashville for a short time and want a quick, art-focused overview.
- You care about photos and want lots of stops.
- You don’t want to self-navigate mural clusters across several neighborhoods.
When it might feel steep:
- If you don’t care about street art and only want music-industry landmarks.
- If you prefer slow, self-guided wandering where you control every stop. (You can DIY, but it’s more planning.)
Comfort and weather: open-air fun with real-world clothing advice
This tour is open-air, and it runs rain or shine. That means your comfort depends on what you bring.
Cold-day reality: one rider specifically mentioned it was freezing and wished the company offered blankets. So assume you’ll handle the cold with your own layers. Bring warm outerwear and gloves if the temperature dips.
Hot-day reality: one review described a very hot, 96-degree day and said the guide kept things pleasant. Still, plan for sun exposure—water and a hat can help.
Rain reality: there’s no “skip because it’s wet.” You’ll ride and stop anyway, so consider a light rain layer and shoes that handle damp sidewalks.
And if the cart noise bothers you, you might need to angle yourself so you can still hear the guide. One person had trouble hearing due to loud exhaust, so it’s not imaginary.
Who should book the Murals of Nashville Instagram Tour
This tour fits best if you:
- Want street art and photo stops without doing map math all day
- Enjoy the feel of exploring neighborhoods like SoBro, the Gulch, and East Nashville
- Like guides who keep the experience friendly and allow flexibility
- Are traveling as a couple, friends group, or small family (with the right age rules)
A few “watch-outs”:
- Kids: children under 4 aren’t allowed, and ages 5–8 must be in a booster or car seat.
- Minimum booking: you need at least 2 people to reserve.
- It’s not an historical tour. You’ll get context, but it’s mural-first.
Should you book it?
If you want a fun, efficient way to see Nashville’s street art across multiple neighborhoods, this is an easy yes. The combo of an open-air golf cart, repeated photo pauses, and a guide who helps you make sense of what you’re seeing is exactly the kind of “time well spent” activity that works on a first trip.
If you hate crowds, hate noise, or only want deep museum-style history, you might prefer something else. But for most visitors chasing murals, this tour is a strong value because it turns scattered walls into a structured, walk-ready photo plan.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Murals of Nashville Instagram Tour by Golf Cart?
It runs about 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours.
Where do I meet for the tour?
The meeting point is 833 9th Ave S, Nashville, TN 37203, USA, and the tour ends back at the same location.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $64.84 per person.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes. The tour uses a mobile ticket.
Is the tour private?
It’s described as a private golf cart tour, but groups of 2 may be paired with others. Larger groups use multiple carts.
What areas of Nashville will we see?
You’ll visit areas including the Gulch, 12th South, Marathon Village, downtown, and East Nashville, plus stops around SoBro and Midtown.
How many murals will we stop at?
Depending on group pace, the tour may include as few as 5–6 murals or as many as 30–40.
Is there any free admission included?
Yes. The What Lifts You Mural stop is listed with admission ticket free.
Is the tour rain or shine?
Yes. The tour operates rain or shine, hot or cold.
Are children allowed?
Children under age 4 are not allowed. Children ages 5–8 MUST be in a booster or car seat.
























