REVIEW · NEW YORK CITY
Greenwich Village Group Haunted Ghost Tour, in NYC
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Greenwich Village feels different after dark. This 1-hour walking ghost tour starts near Washington Square Park and leans hard into the neighborhood’s eerie past, including stops tied to where bodies were buried on Waverly Place.
You’ll hear stories from a live guide as you move through the Village, with a quick audio segment and a final stop that keeps the night rolling.
What I like most is how fast it gets you into the mood: the Washington Square Park audio stop is short, focused, and timed for a night walk.
Second, the group stays small (up to 20), which matters on a dark street—there’s more chance to stay close, hear the guide, and follow the route without getting lost.
One thing to consider: the experience is story-driven, and if your guide’s pacing wanders, you might end up wishing for more straight-up ghosts sooner. Since some people mention sound and focus issues during a bigger group moment, dress for cold and be ready to lean in early.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll care about
- Night-Walk Setup in Greenwich Village (Start 8:00 pm)
- Stop 1: Washington Square Park Audio Tour in 10 Minutes
- Stop 2: Greenwich Village Stories for 40 Minutes
- Stop 3: The Final Stop at New York Ghost Tours (10 Minutes)
- What This Tour Includes (and What You’ll Pay For Yourself)
- The Most Praised Part: Guides Who Keep the Night Moving
- The Main Watch-Out: When Ghost Stories Drift
- How to Dress and Stand on a Night Walk
- Group Size and Pace: What “1 Hour” Feels Like
- Value Check: Why This Tour Can Be Worth It
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and who should skip)
- Should You Book the Greenwich Village Ghost Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Greenwich Village ghost tour?
- What time does the tour start?
- Where does the tour start?
- How do I get the tickets?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- Is there food included?
- Do I need to arrange hotel pickup?
- How big is the group?
- Is the tour near public transportation?
- Is it okay if I have a service animal?
Key highlights you’ll care about

- Washington Square Park audio moment that sets the tone quickly
- Waverly Place burial-area stories tied to local history
- Small group size (max 20) for a smoother night walk
- Several stops in about an hour, so you get variety without a long slog
- Guides often bring humor alongside the spooky tales (names like Marcus, Robert, John, and Trevor show up repeatedly)
- Back to the meeting point at the end, so you’re not stuck figuring out a late-night exit
Night-Walk Setup in Greenwich Village (Start 8:00 pm)

This tour runs in the evening, starting at 8:00 pm, and it finishes back where you began. The meeting point is Washington Square North at Washington Square N, New York, NY, and the ending is the same spot.
Why this matters: you can plan a simple evening. You’re not commuting across the city after dark, and you’re not trying to navigate a multi-stop route alone. Since it’s near public transportation, you can also build it around other plans in Manhattan.
The route is light-to-moderate walking with a moderate physical fitness expectation. It’s listed as a walking experience rather than a “museum-style” tour, so wear shoes you can handle on pavement, especially if the night is windy or damp.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in New York City
Stop 1: Washington Square Park Audio Tour in 10 Minutes

Your first stop is built to grab your attention fast: Washington Square Park, with a short audio tour segment. It’s only about 10 minutes, and the payoff is the tone shift—this is where the tour frames what you’re about to hear.
What you’ll get here:
- You’ll listen to your guides to locate the theme of the night, including where bodies are buried.
- You’ll get a quick orientation for the neighborhood feel, so later stories land better when you’re actually standing in the Village.
A real-world note from guide style: people praise certain hosts for clarity and pacing, while a minority mention that some guides can go heavy on non-ghost digressions. That’s why I like that this first stop is short. Even if your guide’s style changes later, you’re not trapped in a long preamble before the spooky angle shows up.
Stop 2: Greenwich Village Stories for 40 Minutes
This is the heart of the tour—about 40 minutes in the Greenwich Village area. This is where you’ll see a neighborhood known for notable residents, and it’s where the haunting claims become part of the local storytelling.
What makes this segment special:
- You’re walking past places tied to the Village’s past, not just reading about it.
- The stories connect the neighborhood’s texture—homes, streets, and landmarks—to the darker “why this place feels haunted” thread.
- You’ll hear about Waverly Place, including the burial-area angle referenced by the tour.
Why you’ll probably enjoy it: Greenwich Village is already atmospheric. On a night walk with a good guide, those brick-lined streets and small blocks start to feel like scenes from a movie. When the guide also uses humor—people specifically call out Marcus, Robert, and others for being lively—that balance can keep the night fun rather than grim.
Possible drawback: the tour is capped at 20 people, but “how you hear” still matters. If you’re at the edge of the group, sound can get tricky in wind. I’d rather you stand where you can clearly hear the guide early, because the tour relies on your attention for the story chain to make sense.
Stop 3: The Final Stop at New York Ghost Tours (10 Minutes)

Your last stop is listed as New York Ghost Tours and runs about 10 minutes. This part is shorter, so think of it like a closing scene—your guide wraps themes up and sends you off with lingering images of the Village at night.
What to expect:
- More spooky atmosphere and story closure.
- A final “shift” in how you look at the neighborhood after dark.
If you’re the type who likes to keep momentum, this final stop helps. If you’re sensitive to cold weather fatigue, you’ll appreciate that it doesn’t drag on. Either way, the tour ending back at Washington Square North means you’re not stuck with an awkward last stretch.
What This Tour Includes (and What You’ll Pay For Yourself)

This experience is clearly built around one main thing: a professional guide plus the story route. All taxes, fees, and handling charges are included, and the tour offers a mobile ticket.
Admission-style costs are not the focus here. Stops are marked as ticket-free (so you’re not paying extra to enter specific places during the walk). For most people, the real “value” is the guide’s pacing and the connections they make between the Village’s past and the spooky legends tied to it.
Not included is simple:
- No food or drinks
- No hotel pickup or drop-off
Practical tip: plan a snack and water before you meet. It’s a night walk, and you don’t want to be thinking about hunger while you’re trying to follow the story.
The Most Praised Part: Guides Who Keep the Night Moving

The reviews lean strongly toward a specific kind of guide performance. The most mentioned strengths are:
- Lively storytelling with humor
- Strong focus on the spooky angle plus Village context
- Depth of knowledge that connects architecture and local landmarks to the tales
You’ll see names pop up again and again—Marcus, Robert, John, Trevor, Marlina, Ethan, Matt, Sarah, Dominic, and Katie. The common theme isn’t just “knows lots of facts.” It’s that they hold the group’s attention and keep questions flowing as you walk.
One more praise pattern: guides who make the experience feel considerate of the people around them. That shows up in comments about being mindful outside of residences. For a night tour, that social awareness matters. It helps the walk stay respectful instead of turning into a noisy spectacle.
The Main Watch-Out: When Ghost Stories Drift

A small slice of feedback flags problems that can happen with any story-heavy walking tour:
- A guide who spends too long on personal digressions
- A night where the spooky content feels late or uneven
- Audio issues in a larger group moment
How to protect yourself:
- Get to the meeting point early so you can find your place in the group.
- If you notice the guide veering into unrelated conversation, don’t wait. Adjust your position so you can hear the next “ghost” beat clearly.
- Expect the tour to be chilly. A focused guide can still lose people when wind and cold make everyone’s attention drift.
Also, bring a little patience. This is not a one-note jump-scare show. It’s a walk where local history and ghost lore blend—sometimes that blend is exactly what you want, and sometimes it’s not.
How to Dress and Stand on a Night Walk

This tour is at 8:00 pm, in an outdoor neighborhood, and it’s designed for walking. Even if you’re comfortable in the city, wind can turn New York nights into a different planet.
My advice:
- Wear warm layers. If you run cold, add a hat or something that covers your ears.
- Bring gloves or something thin you can still hold your phone with.
- Choose shoes with grip, especially if the pavement is slick.
And for meeting your guide: some people mention it can be hard to spot the host if the guide isn’t obvious at first glance. So give it a couple minutes at the start point and look for a clear identifier like a lantern-style prop (this detail shows up in feedback).
Group Size and Pace: What “1 Hour” Feels Like
The tour lasts about 1 hour and has a cap of 20 travelers. That’s a good size for a neighborhood walk: big enough to feel social, small enough to keep the story line moving.
Pace breakdown based on the tour format:
- 10 minutes: Washington Square Park audio framing
- 40 minutes: Greenwich Village walking and storytelling
- 10 minutes: New York Ghost Tours final stop
So you’re not bouncing around constantly. You’re moving, stopping, listening, then moving again. If you like structured chaos, you’ll be fine. If you want a long, slow “stay at each location and get a lot of lore” style, you might find the total time feels quick.
Value Check: Why This Tour Can Be Worth It
I’d judge this tour by two things: story quality and how easy it is to do at night.
Value points you can bank on:
- You’re paying for a guide, not multiple museum admissions.
- Ticket-free stops mean fewer surprise costs mid-walk.
- The route is tight: you get the Village atmosphere without spending hours in transit.
- It’s back to the meeting point, which lowers the stress factor.
The main variable is guide performance. The best versions of this tour sound like a mash-up of ghost stories and Village context told with humor. If your host is less focused, you’ll still likely enjoy the scenery of Greenwich Village itself—but you may feel the ghost content wasn’t heavy enough.
If you’re a fan of true local lore and enjoy listening while walking, this format is a good match.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and who should skip)
This is a strong pick for:
- People who want a spooky but history-connected night walk
- Anyone excited to see Greenwich Village with fresh eyes after dark
- Groups and families who prefer a simple 1-hour plan that doesn’t require reservations at multiple venues
- Solo travelers who like guided storytelling and short, manageable routes
It’s not the best fit if:
- You want a nonstop “jump scare” show with constant ghost events every minute
- You hate cold outdoor walking and can’t do short night layers
- You get frustrated when a guide talks too long without returning to the ghost theme
Should You Book the Greenwich Village Ghost Tour?
If you like ghost stories that come with real neighborhood context, yes, this is worth booking. The big wins are the Washington Square Park start, the focused Village storytelling hour, and guides who repeatedly get praised for humor and keeping people engaged. Names like Marcus, Robert, John, Trevor, and Marlina show up for a reason: they know how to keep the night moving.
Book it with one mindset adjustment: this is not a silent reenactment. It’s a guided walk where your experience depends on the host’s focus and pacing. If you want the spookiness front and center from the first minute, arrive early, get a good listening spot, and be ready to adjust if your guide drifts.
FAQ
How long is the Greenwich Village ghost tour?
It runs for about 1 hour.
What time does the tour start?
The start time listed is 8:00 pm.
Where does the tour start?
The meeting point is Washington Square North at Washington Square N, New York, NY, USA.
How do I get the tickets?
You get a mobile ticket.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
Is there food included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
Do I need to arrange hotel pickup?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
How big is the group?
The maximum group size is 20 travelers.
Is the tour near public transportation?
Yes, it’s near public transportation.
Is it okay if I have a service animal?
Service animals are allowed.
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If you want, tell me your travel month and whether you tend to run cold. I’ll suggest how to time this with dinner and what to wear so the night stays fun instead of miserable.


































