Spooky stories in real Nashville bars beat a museum tour. Seeking Spirits mixes a nighttime walking route with guided ghost tales and stops that feel tied to the city’s music-and-nightlife DNA. You get a drink here and there, plus history you normally would not hear just walking around.
I especially like the small-group size (up to 20) and the way guides can keep things moving at a comfortable pace. Names that kept showing up in strong reviews include Debra, John, Trevor, Steve, April, and Campbell, and the common thread is clear: the stories pair with real Nashville context, not just spooky noise.
The main drawback is hearing. Bars can be crowded and loud, and if a group is rowdy it can make it harder to catch every detail, even when the guide is doing a great job.
In This Review
- Key things I’d focus on before you go
- A 2-Hour Nashville Haunted Pub Crawl That Fits Your Night
- Meeting at the right spot (and why it matters): Hard Rock vs. Printer’s Alley
- No transportation, so wear shoes and pace yourself
- Stop 1: Hard Rock Cafe Nashville for drinks and a guided haunting
- Stop 2: Skull’s Rainbow Room and the story behind Skulls’ fate
- Stop 3: Ernest Tubb Record Shop and the Civil War hospital thread
- Stop 4 (the starting energy): Printer’s Alley and your first inside drink moment
- What makes the stories work: guide style, pacing, and the drink rhythm
- The big trade-off: crowds, noise, and interruptions
- Value check: is $34.99 a fair deal?
- Who should book this Seeking Spirits crawl?
- Should you book this Seeking Spirits Haunted Night-Time Pub Crawl?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How much does the Seeking Spirits haunted pub crawl cost?
- How long is the tour?
- What time does the tour start?
- Where do I meet, and where does the tour end?
- Is transportation provided?
- What stops are included on the route?
- Are any admissions included in the price?
- Can I cancel and get a full refund?
- Are service animals allowed?
Key things I’d focus on before you go

- Small-group feel: limited to a maximum of 20, with some nights reported as very small (like about five people).
- Two included drink moments: Hard Rock Cafe Nashville and Printer’s Alley both include admission/drinks time, while other stops are free to pass by.
- Nashville history you can feel: Civil War-era talk shows up alongside ghost storytelling.
- A true walking-night format: no rides between stops, so shoes and stamina matter.
- Timing that doesn’t drag: the tour is about 2 hours, with roughly half-hour blocks per stop.
- Crowd-noise trade-off: the bars are part of the experience, but they can be hard on audio.
A 2-Hour Nashville Haunted Pub Crawl That Fits Your Night

If you have one night to get oriented in Nashville, this is a strong fit. You spend about two hours walking around and then popping into venues for short, story-driven breaks.
At $34.99 per person, you are not just buying a single attraction. You’re paying for a guide, a guided route on foot, and multiple venue stops where at least two locations include admission/drinks time. It is also the kind of activity you can slot in early, so you learn where things are and what areas feel like at night.
And yes, you get the spooky part, but the better angle is that you get Nashville after dark with a storyline stitched through it. One guide is often praised for blending ghost claims with Nashville facts, so the whole night feels like a themed tour of the city, not random bar hopping.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Nashville
Meeting at the right spot (and why it matters): Hard Rock vs. Printer’s Alley

One practical thing I want you to pay attention to: the info lists Hard Rock Cafe (100 Broadway) as the start address, but the tour description also names Printer’s Alley as the starting location for the meet-and-first-story moment. That can sound confusing, especially if you arrive early and stand in the wrong place.
My advice: arrive a few minutes early and check your confirmation message for the exact meeting point instructions. The good news is the tour ends back at the meeting point, so you won’t be left wandering at the end.
The scheduled start time is 8:00 pm, and the tour runs with a walking route rather than vehicle transportation. That means you also want to plan for street-level navigation on a busy evening.
No transportation, so wear shoes and pace yourself

This is a walking tour with no transportation included. You also should plan on a moderate physical fitness level, since you’re moving between spots after dark.
That walking format is part of the value. I like tours that help you build a mental map of the city. You get to see how the streets connect, not just where one bar is located on a map.
Also keep in mind the “how long at each stop” rhythm. The tour uses about 30 minutes per stop, which is enough time to hear a story and have a drink, but not enough to lounge for long.
Stop 1: Hard Rock Cafe Nashville for drinks and a guided haunting

Your first big venue stop is Hard Rock Cafe Nashville. The format here is simple: you head inside for drinks and hear a haunted story, with about 30 minutes at the location and admission ticket included.
Why this stop is a good start: it sets the tone in a familiar, easy-to-find place. If it’s your first time in the area, you can orient fast. It also helps because the guide can pull you into the story right away, before the walk gets you deeper into the nightlife maze.
The main thing to watch is noise. Big-name venues can be louder, and you’ll be sharing space with other patrons. If you want to catch everything, you’ll hear better if you position yourself where the guide’s voice has a clearer path.
Stop 2: Skull’s Rainbow Room and the story behind Skulls’ fate
Next you pass by Skull’s Rainbow Room. This is one of those locations where the name alone signals the vibe, and the tour leans into it with a dark tale: the story of Skull’s first owner and an unfortunate fate.
This stop is listed as about 30 minutes, with admission ticket free. That “free admission” detail matters for value because it means the tour isn’t charging you for every single venue entry. It also suggests the time is more about the storytelling and less about lining up for attractions.
Because you’re passing by and listening, this is a good moment to stay alert. Pay attention to what the guide points out, because the tour is often about connecting the spooky narrative to the exact place you’re seeing in front of you.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in Nashville
Stop 3: Ernest Tubb Record Shop and the Civil War hospital thread

You also stop near Ernest Tubb Record Shop. The tour doesn’t treat this as just a music stop—it connects the location to a much darker local past, sharing that the site was tied to a former Civil War hospital.
This is a smart mix for people who like their paranormal with grounding. Ghost stories can feel thin if they have no local roots, but tying in the historical use of a site gives the night more texture.
The stop is again about 30 minutes with admission ticket free. Since you’re not necessarily going in for a paid attraction, think of it as a “listen and look” moment. You’ll get more out of it if you keep your eyes up for details the guide calls out as you move through the area.
Stop 4 (the starting energy): Printer’s Alley and your first inside drink moment

The tour description also names Printer’s Alley as the starting location, where you meet outside and then travel inside for drinks and the first haunted story. That stop is listed as about 30 minutes, with admission ticket included.
If your timeline feels off—Hard Rock shows as the start address while Printer’s Alley is described as the start spot—it’s exactly why I recommend confirming your check-in location in your booking details. On paper, the order can read like a mismatch, but the practical goal is straightforward: you’ll meet, then you’ll be guided to the first venue moment where you hear the first story.
Why Printer’s Alley is a good choice for a starting point: it’s an easy neighborhood to feel. If you’re new to Nashville, you will leave with a better sense of where you want to wander later.
What makes the stories work: guide style, pacing, and the drink rhythm
What I like most about this type of haunted pub crawl is the balance between structure and spontaneity. The tour gives you a set route and time blocks, but the venue energy keeps it from feeling like a script reading in a classroom.
From strong feedback, guides such as Trevor and John are often praised for staying engaging and weaving together Nashville context with the ghost narrative. Debra and April are also mentioned as friendly and detail-focused, with some guides noted for keeping the pace just right—fast enough to keep momentum, slow enough for you to hear.
You should also know that drink timing matters here. Some reviews describe the tour as allowing enough time for about one drink at each bar stop. That lines up with the half-hour structure and is a helpful expectation to set in your head before you go.
One extra detail that popped up in feedback: one person mentioned using an EMF device during the tour. That is not spelled out in the main feature list you were given, so treat it as a possible surprise rather than a guaranteed part of your night.
The big trade-off: crowds, noise, and interruptions
This tour happens at night in popular bar areas, and that affects what you hear. A few critiques pointed to trouble hearing the guide at times, especially when venues were crowded or loud.
Some stops are inside busy spaces (like Hard Rock), and others are in nightlife corridors where sound bounces. Even with a great guide, a crowded room can turn a clear story into a partial one.
There’s also the human factor: if a portion of the group is disruptive, it can slow the rhythm or break concentration. That doesn’t mean the tour is poorly run—it means you should go with realistic expectations. If you want the quietest ghost stories possible, this style may be more “fun night with tales” than “intense narration in a calm setting.”
Value check: is $34.99 a fair deal?
For $34.99, you’re getting a guided walking route plus multiple venue stops, with admission included at Hard Rock Cafe and admission included at the Printer’s Alley inside-drinks moment. Other locations are described as free admission (at least for the stop-by and story time), which helps keep the total cost from creeping up.
You’re also buying into something that is hard to replicate on your own. If you just walk around Nashville bars, you might find cool places, but you likely will not get the guided threads that connect a Civil War hospital reference to the same night you’re hearing about a haunted owner.
What is not included is transportation, and gratuity is not included either. That’s typical for this format, but it matters for planning your total spend. If you budget for tip, you’ll feel better about the overall value.
My bottom line: this feels priced for a fun night out that also gives you a story framework and a local guide, not just a place to drink. If you enjoy mixing history with entertainment, it is a good deal.
Who should book this Seeking Spirits crawl?
This is a great match if you:
- Want a first-night activity to learn Nashville areas on foot
- Like your nightlife with guided stories and short venue visits
- Prefer small-group formats over big bus tours (max 20)
- Are traveling with a partner, friends, or even solo and want a structured plan
It may be less ideal if you:
- Hate loud bars or struggle to hear in crowded indoor spaces
- Want a quiet, deeply detailed séance-style experience where every word is crystal clear
- Are hoping for private pacing or no distractions at all
Should you book this Seeking Spirits Haunted Night-Time Pub Crawl?
I’d book it if your goal is a fun Nashville night with a guide who connects spooky stories to the city you’re walking through. The combination of multiple named stops and included admission moments makes it feel like more than just a theme walk.
But choose smart: confirm the exact meetup instructions for your night (Hard Rock address vs. Printer’s Alley starting point). Then come with the mindset that you are there for atmosphere, short story segments, and a moving route—not for a quiet lecture.
If you want to maximize what you get, pick a position where you can hear the guide at each venue and stay present through the walking sections. That’s where the tour often makes the connections feel real.
FAQ
FAQ
How much does the Seeking Spirits haunted pub crawl cost?
It costs $34.99 per person.
How long is the tour?
The tour lasts about 2 hours.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 8:00 pm.
Where do I meet, and where does the tour end?
The start location is listed at Hard Rock Cafe, 100 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37201, and the tour ends back at the meeting point. The tour description also mentions meeting outside at Printer’s Alley to start.
Is transportation provided?
No. There is no transportation included, and it is a walking tour.
What stops are included on the route?
The tour includes Hard Rock Cafe Nashville, Skull’s Rainbow Room, Ernest Tubb Record Shop, and Printer’s Alley as a start/inside moment.
Are any admissions included in the price?
Admission ticket is listed as included for Hard Rock Cafe Nashville, and admission ticket is listed as included for the Printer’s Alley inside-drinks moment. Skull’s Rainbow Room and Ernest Tubb Record Shop stops are listed as free admission.
Can I cancel and get a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
































