Beyond the Tour · Couples Travel
The Perfect 3-Day Savannah Itinerary for Couples
Candlelit taverns, moss-draped avenues, a cocktail you can carry through moonlit squares, and an evening of spirits and scoundrels — Savannah may be the most romantic city in America precisely because of its shadows. Here's three days made for two.
Savannah doesn't do manufactured romance. It does gas lamps flickering on 19th-century brick, oak canopies that turn streets into cathedrals, basement taverns with live piano, and a famous law that lets you stroll the squares hand in hand, drink in hand. Add the most beautifully haunted history in America, and you have a city built for couples who like a little darkness with their candlelight.
This itinerary covers three days: the classics, an art-and-indulgence day capped by the city's best night out, and a final day of moss, marsh, and one last rooftop. Every stop includes the address and phone number so you can reserve right from this page — and in Savannah, reservations are the whole game.
The Classics, Done Right
Morning — Brunch & the Prettiest Walk in America
Ease in with brunch at The Collins Quarter — lavender mochas, smashed avocado, and an Australian café hum that makes lingering feel mandatory. Then walk south down Bull Street, the spine of the Historic District, drifting square to square until you detour onto Jones Street, often called the most beautiful street in America. End at Forsyth Park for the obligatory fountain photo — go ahead, nobody resists it.
Afternoon — Curiosities & Chocolate
Spend the afternoon browsing the most atmospheric shops in the city. The Paris Market & Brocante on Broughton is two floors of French curiosities with a café up front for a macaron pause. A few blocks west, Chocolat by Adam Turoni displays handmade bonbons like jewelry — buy a box for later tonight. Then make the pilgrimage every couple should: Alex Raskin Antiques, four floors of treasures inside a gloriously unrestored mansion on Monterey Square. Wandering its creaking halls together feels like trespassing through time.
Chocolat by Adam Turoni 323 W. Broughton Street · (912) 335-2914
Alex Raskin Antiques 441 Bull Street · (912) 232-8205
Golden Hour — Sunset Over the River
As the light goes gold, ride the elevator to Rocks on the Roof atop the Bohemian Hotel. Snag a spot by the fire pits, order something cold, and watch enormous cargo ships slide past at eye level while the sun drops behind the Talmadge Bridge. It's the best sunset seat in Savannah.
Evening — Dinner in a 1771 Mansion, Nightcap by Candlelight
Tonight is The Olde Pink House — thirteen candlelit rooms in a blush-pink 1771 Georgian mansion on Reynolds Square, serving the crispy scored flounder and she-crab soup that made it Savannah's most iconic dining room. Book well before your trip. Afterward, descend the stairs to Planters Tavern in the mansion's brick basement: twin fireplaces, live piano, and an excellent bourbon list. It's walk-ins only and worth any wait — one of the most romantic rooms in the South.
Art, Indulgence & the Best Night Out in Savannah
Morning — A Slow Brunch & a Little Culture
Sleep in — you earned it, and tonight runs late. Brunch at Common Restaurant on Broughton, an elevated Lowcountry kitchen with a four-time Wine Spectator award and views of the historic Marshall House. Then wander to the Jepson Center, Telfair Museums' striking contemporary glass building on Telfair Square — world-class rotating exhibitions in a space as photogenic as the art. (Closed Mondays.)
Jepson Center · Telfair Museums 207 W. York Street · (912) 790-8800 · Closed Mondays
Afternoon — A Mead Flight for Two
Here's a date-afternoon secret hiding in plain sight on Broughton: the back of Savannah Bee Company houses a mead tasting bar, where the two of you can sip a flight of honey wines surrounded by walls of tupelo and sourwood. Sweet, inexpensive, and unreasonably charming. Then head back to the hotel for a rest — trust us.
Evening — The Splurge Dinner
Make tonight's dinner the one you'll still be talking about: The Grey, Chef Mashama Bailey's James Beard Award-winning restaurant in a restored 1938 Greyhound terminal — the most acclaimed table in Savannah, booking months out. Can't land a reservation? Elizabeth on 37th delivers coastal elegance in a gorgeous mansion with a 10,000-bottle cellar. Tonight's tour doesn't depart until 10pm, so a 7:00 or 7:30 reservation gives you a long, lingering dinner with time to spare — no rushing the dessert course.
Elizabeth on 37th 105 E. 37th Street · (912) 236-5547
The Main Event
The Spirits & Scoundrels Ghost Tour
This is the date night Savannah was built for. The Spirits & Scoundrels Ghost Tour from Destination Ghost Tours departs at 10pm — when the crowds have thinned, the gas lamps have the squares to themselves, and the city is at its quietest and spookiest. It's Savannah's haunted history with the gloves off: a late-night walk telling the true, documented stories of the city's rogues, rakes, villains, and the restless spirits they left behind. Led by real local historians and paranormal investigators, it's equal parts chilling and wickedly funny — and thanks to Savannah's famous open container law, you're welcome to bring a to-go cocktail along for the stroll. Spirits in hand, spirits all around.
One insider tip: when you book, your confirmation email includes a link to the Tour Companion — your route map, your guide's photo, GPS to every stop, and bonus photos and documents for each location. Open it when you arrive. Evening departures sell out fast, especially on weekends and in October, so reserve before your trip.
After Midnight — One Last Round (If You Dare)
The tour wraps around midnight — the perfect hour for Savannah's best-hidden bar. Alley Cat Lounge, the subterranean den in the lane below Broughton, pours late into the night from a drink menu printed like a newspaper (closed Sundays). Not ready for another room full of people? Ask for one more to-go cup and take the long way home through the empty squares — at this hour, you'll have the gas lamps, the moss, and whoever else is still lingering out there all to yourselves.
Moss, Marsh & One Last Rooftop
Morning — Bonaventure Cemetery
Save the most hauntingly beautiful place in Savannah for your final morning. Bonaventure Cemetery spreads across a bluff above the Wilmington River — Victorian monuments, camellias, and oak alleys hung with moss, with songwriter Johnny Mercer and little Gracie Watson among its famous residents. Go early when the light slants low through the Spanish moss; it's the most photographed romance in Georgia, and somehow the photos still undersell it.
Midday — The Avenue of Oaks
Fifteen minutes south, Wormsloe State Historic Site opens with the single most breathtaking driveway in the South: a mile and a half of arching live oaks planted along the avenue to Georgia's oldest colonial estate. Walk it hand in hand, then explore the tabby ruins and marsh trails. Bring bug spray in summer.
Afternoon — Starland Slow Hours
Head back via the Starland District, Savannah's artsy quarter south of Forsyth. Split a kolache and lattes in the secret-garden courtyard at Foxy Loxy, browse the murals and indie shops along Bull Street's 40s blocks, and let the afternoon idle.
Evening — Farewell Dinner & a Treetop Goodbye
For the last supper, choose your mood: Saint Bibiana at Hotel Bardo serves coastal Italian — handmade pasta and local seafood — in one of the prettiest dining rooms in the city, across from Forsyth Park. Or keep it neighborhood-elegant at Local 11ten, the locals' celebration spot in a restored 1950s bank. Either way, end the trip one flight up at The Perch, the treetop rooftop above Local 11ten — warm lamps, canopy views, and one last toast to the most beautifully haunted city in America.
Local 11ten & The Perch 1110 Bull Street · (912) 790-9000