Walk Atlanta’s murals and street art with a guide, stories, and a hands-on design activity
2.5 hours
Guide, beverage, souvenir photo
Explore Atlanta’s public art on a 2.5-hour guided walking tour through Cabbagetown, Krog Street Tunnel, and the Atlanta Beltline. Hear the stories behind the art and artists, then wrap up with a creative design activity.
This is a mostly outdoor walking tour. Bring cash for gratuities if you’d like to tip.
Full refund or move reservation up to 24 hours before start if booked directly. No refunds for late arrivals, no-shows, or joining the wrong tour. Booked within 24 hours are not refundable. Operator may cancel for force majeure/weather or if 2-person minimum not met.
Plan to walk about 1.5 miles over roughly 2.5 hours.
Wear comfortable, weather-appropriate clothes and very comfortable shoes. Bring a bottle of water, and bring an umbrella on rainy days. Bring cash for gratuities if you’d like to tip.
Yes. This is a mostly outdoor walking tour.
Cabbagetown, Atlanta, GA
The Krog Street Tunnel is one of Atlanta's most unfiltered creative canvases, a graffiti-soaked passage connecting Inman Park to Cabbagetown where the city's street artists speak loudest. On this Atlanta art and mural walking tour, the Krog Street Tunnel anchors a journey through the neighborhoods that turned the BeltLine corridor into an open-air gallery. Layered with spray paint, paste-ups, flyers for warehouse shows, and political messages that change week to week, the tunnel captures the raw, democratic spirit of Atlanta street art in a way no curated museum can.
Walking through the Krog Street Tunnel with a guide changes how you see it. Instead of a quick photo stop, you learn which crews tag which walls, how pieces get layered and respected or buffed and replaced, and why this stretch of concrete became sacred ground for local writers. The echo of footsteps, the cool shade after the Atlanta sun, the smell of fresh paint near a still-drying piece, all of it makes the Krog Street Tunnel feel alive. The tour connects what you see here to the larger murals along the BeltLine and in Cabbagetown, so the bold commissioned works and the wild tunnel scrawls start to feel like one ongoing conversation about the city.
This stop is perfect for travelers who want Atlanta beyond the skyline shots, photographers chasing texture and color, art students, music fans, and anyone curious about how a city builds its own visual identity from the ground up. Families with older kids who love urban exploration will find plenty to point at, and first-time visitors leave with a much sharper read on Atlanta's neighborhoods. By the time you exit the Krog Street Tunnel and continue toward the next mural, you understand why locals treat this passage as the beating heart of the city's street art scene.
The guides here absolutely shine, with names like Glenn, Arielle, Delaney, Nic, and Kristen earning enthusiastic shoutouts for being knowledgeable, entertaining, and genuinely fun to spend time with. Tours range from the Municipal Market food experience with hands-on biscuit making to Grant Park culinary walks through Oakland Cemetery to street art explorations along the BeltLine. The food consistently impresses, with reviewers describing it as delicious, unique, and surprisingly filling. The historical insights run deep too—even Atlanta natives report learning fascinating details about their own city. These tours work beautifully for both visitors and locals, with groups booking them for team building events and friends choosing them for unique outings. The biscuit-making component is a crowd favorite that people are excited to recreate at home. One traveler noted their BeltLine tour guide made slightly too many personal political comments beyond what was needed to explain the artwork, and parking can be tricky at that tour's starting point. The walk itself covers about a mile and a half on uneven surfaces, so sturdy shoes matter. Thoughtful touches like personalized postcards and the option to stay for a full meal at the endpoint add memorable finishing notes.
Had a great time on the Historic Market and Biscuit Making Tour! The experience was fun from start to finish, with plenty of delicious food along the way. Making biscuits was definitely a highlight—hands-on, engaging, and surprisingly easy to enjoy regardless of skill level. Our tour guide, Courtney, truly made the experience stand out. She was fun, vibrant, and incredibly knowledgeable, sharing great insights about Atlanta and the market’s history throughout the tour. Overall, a fantastic experience that we’d absolutely do again. Highly recommend for anyone looking for a mix of food, history, and a good time!
Jean-Paul Laurenceau
March 28, 2026
Had a great time on the Historic Market and Biscuit Making Tour! The experience was fun from start to finish, with plenty of delicious food along the way. Making biscuits was definitely a highlight—hands-on, engaging, and surprisingly easy to enjoy regardless of skill level. Our tour guide, Courtney, truly made the experience stand out. She was fun, vibrant, and incredibly knowledgeable, sharing great insights about Atlanta and the market’s history throughout the tour. Overall, a fantastic experience that we’d absolutely do again. Highly recommend for anyone looking for a mix of food, history, and a good time!
Jean-Paul Laurenceau
March 28, 2026