Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator

REVIEW · LOS ANGELES

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator

  • 5.05 reviews
  • From $55
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Operated by The Haunt Ghost Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 5.0 (5)Price from$55Operated byThe Haunt Ghost ToursBook viaGetYourGuide

Chinatown at night can feel different fast. This 1.5-hour ghost hunt pairs a paranormal investigator with real tools—so you’re not just standing around and listening. You start in Chinatown, then work your way through locations tied to documented hauntings, dark local lore, and a lot of street-level history.

I especially love the hands-on setup: you get an EMF meter, plus tools like Spirit Box radio sweeper and dowsing rods so you can take an active role in the investigation. I also like how the guide weaves in context, from the Chinatown Metro Station construction story to the tragedy tied to an old milling warehouse nearby.

One consideration: communication with spirits is an attempt, not a guarantee. If you need proof in a lab sense, you might feel frustrated by the nature of EMF readings and spirit-box interpretation.

Key Things You’ll Notice on This Chinatown Ghost Hunt

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Key Things You’ll Notice on This Chinatown Ghost Hunt

  • You’ll use actual investigation gear: each participant gets an EMF meter, and you’ll also use dowsing rods and a Spirit Box radio sweeper.
  • The guide ties paranormal claims to local stories like documented Chinatown hauntings and tragic incidents tied to older buildings.
  • You’ll focus on specific locations including the Chinatown Metro Station area and an old milling warehouse tied to a century-old tragedy.
  • You get a guided attempt to communicate, with the guide facilitating how you use the tools and what to do during checks.
  • You’ll learn about layers of the neighborhood, including Italian and French communities that predate the Central Plaza era.
  • You end near Central Plaza and General Lee’s, with built-in recommendations for what to eat and drink after.

Chinatown After Dark: What This Ghost Hunt Is Like in Real Life

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Chinatown After Dark: What This Ghost Hunt Is Like in Real Life
You’re coming to Chinatown after dark, and the vibe matters here. The point isn’t just fear—it’s attention. With the glow and hum of nearby neon fading into the background, you get a guided walk where the focus stays on old places and what people say happened there.

I like that the tour doesn’t treat the paranormal as a sideshow. Instead, you’re given tools and instructions, and you’re encouraged to treat each stop like a mini investigation. That hands-on approach turns it from a casual stroll into something more focused.

You’ll also get stories with real-world anchors. The tour references concrete sites—station construction history, nearby warehouse connections, and architectural details—so even when you’re skeptical, you still walk away with a sharper sense of place.

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Meeting Outside Broadway Cuisine and Getting Your Gear Fast

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Meeting Outside Broadway Cuisine and Getting Your Gear Fast
The tour meets in Chinatown outside of Broadway Cuisine. Your guide arrives about 10 minutes early, which helps you get oriented before the group starts moving. Since the experience is action-based, that early check-in matters—you’ll want time to get your gear squared away before you begin any tests.

What you receive is straightforward. Each participant gets an EMF meter, and the tour also includes dowsing rods and a Spirit Box radio sweeper. There’s also The Haunt Sticker, plus a post-tour email that includes recommendations.

Here’s the practical difference this makes: you’re not waiting for the guide to decide when something happens. You’re holding tools, using them when prompted, and listening to what the guide is telling you to watch for. That’s why this tour can feel more personal than classic “ghost story” walks.

If you tend to get bored on tours that are 100% talking, this one is built to keep you engaged. You’ll be moving through Chinatown, stopping at specific spots, and running through the same kinds of checks as a basic field investigation.

The Chinatown Metro Station Stop: Cemeteries and Construction Clues

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - The Chinatown Metro Station Stop: Cemeteries and Construction Clues
One of the first big anchors is the Chinatown Metro Station area. This is where the tour leans into history you can actually picture. As the metro was being constructed, cemeteries were discovered—turning a modern transit project into a direct connection with the past.

That matters because it sets the tone for what comes next. You’re not just hearing spooky lines; you’re being pointed toward how real development can disturb older layers of a neighborhood. When you’re standing near a site like this at night, it’s easier to understand why people associate specific locations with lingering presence.

The tour also uses this stop to build a pattern: site → story → why it might matter → what you’ll do with your tools. It helps keep the experience from feeling random.

The Old Milling Warehouse: The Tragedy Tied to Two Employees

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - The Old Milling Warehouse: The Tragedy Tied to Two Employees
Next up is an old milling warehouse nearby. This is one of the most emotionally charged parts of the tour. The story centers on two employees whose tragic deaths happened about 100 years ago, and the claim is that their spirits still linger in the area.

From a reader’s perspective, this is where the tour’s “true crime meets paranormal” vibe becomes clearest. Even if you don’t fully buy into hauntings, the tragedy narrative gives you something tangible to hold onto while you investigate. And because you’re using tools during the walk, the tour doesn’t treat the warehouse tale as pure folklore.

A useful mindset here is to treat it like an investigation guided by local accounts. You’re listening closely to the guide’s framing, then doing the EMF-style checks and communication attempts when prompted.

Using the EMF Meter and Attempting Communication

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Using the EMF Meter and Attempting Communication
This tour is built around one simple idea: you’ll try to detect and communicate, not just observe. After learning what to look for, you’ll use your EMF readers to locate the presence of a spirit, then investigate using additional provided paranormal tools.

You’ll also use a Spirit Box radio sweeper, often referred to as the S-Box during the experience. In at least one of the strongly positive experiences shared after the tour, the S-Box was described as responding in a way that felt directly connected to the group’s questions. That kind of moment is exactly why this tour can feel more intense than a traditional ghost tour.

There’s also dowsing involved. You might hold the rods while the guide leads the group through the process. In one standout account, participants noted being able to participate in the speaking-with-spirits part as the guide facilitated the attempt.

Important practical note: tools like EMF meters and spirit boxes can be influenced by environment, electronics, and the limits of interpretation. So while the experience can feel striking, it’s still wise to keep expectations grounded. Think of it as a guided attempt at contact, with the emotional payoff coming from participation and attention.

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Trying the Spirit Box (S-Box) Without Losing Your Mind

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Trying the Spirit Box (S-Box) Without Losing Your Mind
The Spirit Box radio sweeper is the star tool here. You’ll use it as part of the communication attempt, and the guide provides guidance so the process feels structured instead of chaotic.

What I like about this approach is that it gives you a role. You’re not stuck behind the group, passively watching. You’re part of the noise, the questions, the listening. That’s one reason the tour can feel like a real event rather than a slideshow.

One strongly praised moment described a belief that the group connected with a little boy who may have died nearby. Whether you interpret that as a true connection or a compelling story told through electronics, it shows how the tour’s pacing works: the guide nudges you into listening for specific patterns at the times they feel most relevant.

If you’re the type who hates “maybe” moments, the Spirit Box portion could frustrate you. But if you enjoy the process—questioning, watching the readings, reacting to sounds—this is likely the most memorable part of the night.

Architecture and Chinatown Layers: Italian and French Before Central Plaza

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Architecture and Chinatown Layers: Italian and French Before Central Plaza
Not every stop is about tool use. You’ll also get a guided look at the neighborhood itself: stunning architecture and the sense of how Chinatown changed over time.

The tour includes a helpful detail that many people miss when they only see Chinatown as it exists today: communities like Italian and French were here before the area became Chinatown’s Central Plaza shopping mall. That kind of context matters because it stops the story from being one-note.

Instead of treating Chinatown as frozen in time, the tour frames it as layered. Buildings carry multiple eras. Streets hold different communities. And when you’re investigating at night, those layers feel like a map of why people would attach stories to specific corners.

This is also where the experience stays value-forward. Even if you decide you don’t care about paranormal claims, you still learn something. You leave with a better read on the street—what used to be there, what changed, and why the “haunted” reputation makes sense to locals.

The Ending Near Central Plaza and General Lee’s

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - The Ending Near Central Plaza and General Lee’s
The tour wraps up outside Chinatown’s Central Plaza, close to General Lee’s cocktail bar. Coming in from the middle of the investigation, this ending location helps because it’s a recognizable landmark area where you can reset quickly.

The tour also includes a practical bonus: you get a post-tour email with recommendations. Since food and drinks aren’t included during the 1.5-hour walk, those suggestions can be a nice way to turn the night into something you’ll remember beyond the investigation.

It’s worth planning for that gap. If you’re hungry after the walk, bring your own plan—this experience is focused on the ghost-hunting portion, not meals.

Price and Value: Is $55 Worth 1.5 Hours?

Los Angeles: Ghost Hunt Tour with a Paranormal Investigator - Price and Value: Is $55 Worth 1.5 Hours?
At $55 per person for about 1.5 hours, you’re paying for three things: guided access to specific Chinatown locations, hands-on investigation tools, and the focus on communication attempts rather than just storytelling. That’s the key value point. You’re not paying for a passive tour where you only listen.

The included EMF meter per participant is a tangible part of the value. Plus, you’re also using dowsing rods and the Spirit Box, which are central to how the tour operates. Add in the guide’s role in facilitating the tool use and the communication attempts, and the price starts to make sense as an activity fee, not just a history lecture.

One more thing: the night-walk format makes it easier to fit into a Los Angeles day. 1.5 hours is long enough to feel like an event, short enough to still pivot afterward.

If you’re shopping on price alone, you might find cheaper ghost tours. But if you want participation—holding tools, running checks, trying the S-Box approach—this one is built for that.

Who Should Book This Ghost Hunt (and Who Might Skip It)

This tour is a strong fit if you want a Los Angeles experience with two ingredients: Chinatown storytelling plus hands-on paranormal investigating. I’d also point out that it’s wheelchair accessible, so it’s designed with at least some mobility needs in mind.

You’ll likely enjoy it if:

  • you’re curious about true-crime style local hauntings
  • you like being active on tours
  • you’re drawn to Chinatown’s layered history, not just generic spooky vibes

You might choose something else if:

  • you want guaranteed scientific proof
  • you dislike electronic gadget-style interpretation
  • you prefer daytime walks and museums over night street experiences

The Bottom Line: Should You Book The Haunt Ghost Tours?

If you’re picking one paranormal-style activity in LA that focuses on participation, I think this is a solid choice. The included EMF meter, Spirit Box (S-Box), and dowsing rods turn it into an interactive night investigation rather than a talk-only ghost tour.

Book it if you want a Chinatown night with real landmarks, guided tool use, and stories anchored to places like the Metro Station area and an old milling warehouse tied to deaths from roughly a century ago. Skip it only if you need hard certainty or you know you won’t enjoy the interpretive side of EMF and spirit-box attempts.

FAQ

Where does the tour start?

The tour starts in Chinatown outside Broadway Cuisine.

How long is the ghost hunt tour?

It lasts about 1.5 hours.

How much does it cost?

The price is $55 per person.

What paranormal equipment is included?

Each participant gets an EMF meter, plus dowsing rods and a Spirit Box radio sweeper.

Is there a guide, and is the tour in English?

Yes, there is a live tour guide, and the tour is in English.

Where does the tour end?

The tour ends back at the meeting point, and the experience also finishes outside Chinatown’s Central Plaza near General Lee’s cocktail bar.

Does the tour include food or drinks?

No, food and drinks are not included.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is wheelchair accessible.

Is cancellation allowed, and what’s the cutoff?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

What do I get after the tour?

You get a post-tour email with recommendations.

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