French Quarter tickets & tours | Price comparison

French Quarter

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French Quarter (also known as Vieux Carré) is the atmospheric heart of New Orleans, where cast-iron balconies, street music, and old courtyards frame landmarks like Jackson Square and the French Market. Founded in 1718, this district still feels alive from early coffee runs to late-night brass-band corners.

Start with a guided walking tour first, because it gives you fast orientation in dense blocks and makes it easier to choose food, cocktail, or ghost add-ons afterward.
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Guided walking tours

Choose this first if you want a broad orientation through Jackson Square, Royal Street, and the core blocks of French Quarter.
New Orleans: French Quarter Sightseeing Carriage Ride
4.8(660)
 
getyourguide.com
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New Orleans: French Quarter, Voodoo and Cultural Experience
4.5(972)
 
getyourguide.com
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New Orleans City Tour: French Quarter, Garden District & Cemetery
4.7(2341)
 
viator.com
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French Quarter Historical Sights and Stories Walking Tour
4.9(2804)
 
viator.com
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Food and cocktail tours

Pick this section when your priority is tasting Creole and Cajun specialties while learning neighborhood stories between stops.
New Orleans: French Quarter Food, History & Culture Tour
4.8(268)
 
getyourguide.com
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New Orleans Food Walking Tour of the French Quarter with Small-Group Option
4.8(5591)
 
viator.com
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The Premier New Orleans Food Tour
4.7(410)
 
viator.com
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French Quarter Small-Group Cocktail and Foodie Crawl
4.8(472)
 
viator.com
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Ghost and night tours

Use this format for after-dark storytelling around haunted mansions and legend-heavy corners near Bourbon Street.
New Orleans: Cemetery Bus Tour At Dark with Exclusive Access
4.6(1680)
 
getyourguide.com
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Ghost and Vampire Walking Tour Of The French Quarter
4.7(2451)
 
viator.com
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Haunted French Quarter Walking Tour in New Orleans
4.3(43)
 
viator.com
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Audio guides and self-guided walks

Best for independent pacing if you want to explore Vieux Carré on your own schedule with audio narration.
French Quarter Highlights Self-Guided Walking Tour of New Orleans
4.5(2)
 
viator.com
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Beyond the French Quarter: New Orleans Off the Beaten Path Audio Tour
 
musement.com
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New Orleans culture and food audio tour of the French Quarter
 
musement.com
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New Orleans French Quarter self-guided walking audio tour
 
musement.com
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How to plan your French Quarter visit in New Orleans

In French Quarter, a good day comes from sequence, not speed. Choose one clear format, match it to the right time window, and keep your pairings realistic.

Pick your French Quarter format first

If this is your first visit, begin with a guided walking format through the core around Jackson Square and Royal Street. If you travel as a couple and want atmosphere, add a ghost-night option; if food is your main reason, switch to a dedicated tasting route. One clear first choice improves everything that follows. Book now.

Time your route by atmosphere

For architecture and photos, use morning and early afternoon blocks around Royal Street and nearby side streets. For nightlife energy, hold Bourbon Street for later and keep expectations aligned with louder evening flow. Families usually enjoy the daytime sequence more, while repeat visitors often prefer a later cultural pulse.

Use transit to protect your energy

Treat streetcars as entry and reset tools, then walk your priority blocks on purpose. The Canal Street and Riverfront contexts make quarter-edge access easier, and Le Pass keeps payment simple. At retrieval time (2026-03-03), NORTA lists $1.25 adult single rides and a $3 one-day Jazzy Pass.

Keep pairings simple and realistic

A common mistake is trying to squeeze every format into one quarter day. Instead, run one strong city-core sequence, then place out-of-core experiences on another half-day or day, such as Houmas House Plantation and Gardens. This avoids decision fatigue and gives each stop enough attention. Book now.

Why the Vieux Carré still defines New Orleans

French Quarter feels distinctive because several historical layers are still readable in the same walk. You see colonial planning, Spanish-era rebuilding, and later American influence in one compact district.

Why 1718 still matters on the street

The district's founding in 1718 is not just a date marker; it still frames how visitors read the city core today. In practical terms, your walk through French Quarter is a walk through the earliest urban layer of New Orleans, not a later reconstruction theme zone.

The 1722 grid you still walk today

The 1722 street grid by Adrien de Pauger is still the skeleton of movement through the quarter. That is why orientation works best as short connected loops between anchors like Jackson Square, the French Market, and nearby side streets, rather than scattered jumps.

Fire, rebuilding, and the Spanish imprint

Between 1788 and 1794, major fires forced rebuilding that changed the district's built character. The result is one reason Vieux Carré feels different from many U.S. downtown cores: the architecture carries layered French, Spanish, Creole, and American traces in a tight footprint.

After 1803: a layered city voice

After the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the quarter kept absorbing new influences without losing its earlier core. That is why one evening can move from St. Louis Cathedral to brass bands and then to neon on Bourbon Street without feeling culturally inconsistent. The mix is the point, and it is exactly what makes this district memorable.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you need an entry ticket for French Quarter?

No. French Quarter is a public neighborhood, so there is no general admission gate. You only pay for optional formats like guided tours, food routes, or ghost experiences.
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How much time should you plan for a first visit?

For a first visit, plan around 2 to 4 hours depending on your format. A quick overview walk can be shorter, while food or ghost add-ons can easily turn it into a longer half-day.
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Which tour format is usually best to start with?

For most first-timers, a guided walking format is the best start because it builds orientation fast in dense historic blocks. After that, choose one focused add-on such as food/cocktails or a night-legend route.
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Where is the most practical place to begin on the map?

A practical first anchor is the Jackson Square / Decatur Street area, where many routes naturally connect to the French Market. The federal visitor-center anchor is at 419 Decatur St.
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Which transit ticket is usually best for short stays?

If you expect only one ride, the adult single fare from NORTA is $1.25 (retrieved 2026-03-03). If you plan multiple rides in one day, the $3 1-day Jazzy Pass is usually the simpler value choice.
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Is French Quarter a good family stop?

Yes, especially in daytime around Jackson Square, French Market, and shorter guided walks. Evening plans around Bourbon Street can be louder, so families often prefer to shift those blocks earlier or skip them.
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Can you visit without a live guide?

Yes. Audio-guided and self-paced formats are available, and they work well if you already know your priority streets. They are especially useful for repeat visitors who want more control over pacing.
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What can you pair with the quarter if you have extra time?

Keep same-day plans compact inside French Quarter, then use an extra half-day or day for Houmas House Plantation and Gardens. This split avoids overload in one route and gives each experience more space.
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General information

address

French Quarter (Vieux Carré)
Roughly bounded by Canal Street, Rampart Street, Esplanade Avenue, and the Mississippi River
New Orleans, LA 70116
United States

how to get there

For most visitors, the easiest approach is streetcar plus short walking segments. The Canal Street and Riverfront contexts connect well to quarter-edge anchors like Decatur Street and the French Market. Current NORTA fares (retrieved 2026-03-03) are from $1.25 for an adult single ride and $3 for a 1-day Jazzy Pass, with mobile payment available in Le Pass.
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