Downtown LA tastes better on foot. This 3.5-hour Six Taste walk mixes iconic sights with full-meal tastings from local spots, so you’re not guessing where to eat. I also like that the route includes admission tickets at major stops, not just a stroll and snacks. One drawback: this tour depends on good weather, so bring a backup plan for gloomy days.
I like the human energy here. The guides I’d want with me on a first visit to Downtown LA include Sally, her daughter Madeline, and Heyte, and their job is part history talk, part food lead.
It’s also built for real exploration. With a maximum group size of 16, you get to move at a comfortable pace while still covering enough ground to feel like Downtown LA makes sense.
In This Review
- Key things that make Six Taste work on a first Downtown LA visit
- Downtown LA on Foot: why this Six Taste route clicks
- Starting at 324 S Hill St at 11:00 am: group size, pace, and what you’ll likely feel
- Angels Flight Railway: the 15-minute start with included entry
- Grand Central Market for about 2 hours: your real food engine
- Bradbury Building: 1893 architecture stop with included admission
- The Last Bookstore: tunnels, flying books, then tacos and dessert
- What $110 really buys: meal-level tastings plus admissions
- Food tastings that feel like real portions (not a sample parade)
- Water, alcohol, and walking comfort: the practical stuff that makes or breaks it
- Guide style: how Sally, Madeline, and Heyte shape the day
- Who should book this Downtown LA walking food tour
- Build the rest of your LA plan around this tour
- Should you book Six Taste? My straight answer
- FAQ
- How long is the Los Angeles Walking Food Tour with Six Taste?
- What time does the tour start?
- Where is the meeting point?
- How many people are in each tour group?
- What major stops are included?
- Are admission tickets included for the stops?
- Is bottled water included?
- What if the weather is poor or the minimum number of travelers isn’t met?
Key things that make Six Taste work on a first Downtown LA visit

- Full-meal tastings, not tiny samples, with enough food to replace a proper meal
- Landmark stops with admissions included, so you get more than just street-side photos
- Family-run, LA-native guiding style, with stories tied to the food
- Grand Central Market as the hub, where you’ll snack and then keep walking to more local stops
- Stops that add personality, from Angels Flight to the Bradbury Building to The Last Bookstore
- Small group size (max 16), which helps the pace feel friendly instead of rushed
Downtown LA on Foot: why this Six Taste route clicks
If you’re new to Los Angeles, Downtown can feel like a grab bag: some blocks feel cinematic, other blocks feel confusing, and it’s easy to waste time looking for the right place to eat. This tour solves that. You walk a planned route, you eat as you go, and the landmark stops keep you oriented.
The biggest reason I recommend it is the food volume. The tastings are described as equivalent to a full meal. That matters because most food tours turn into a few bites and a polite “good luck finding dinner afterward.” Here, you’re fed in a way that actually changes your day.
The second reason is the mix of sights and eating. You’re not just following someone to restaurants; you’re stepping into Downtown LA locations that have a story. And since admissions are included at multiple stops, you spend your time seeing and tasting, not standing in line wondering if you paid for entry.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Los Angeles
Starting at 324 S Hill St at 11:00 am: group size, pace, and what you’ll likely feel

The tour meets at 324 S Hill St in Downtown LA, starting at 11:00 am. It ends back at the same meeting point. Since it’s about 3 hours 30 minutes total, you should plan for a morning-to-early-afternoon block where you can stay flexible.
With a max group size of 16, the walk doesn’t feel like a packed cattle car. That small size also helps when the guide wants to explain what you’re looking at and keep the group together.
You’ll want to dress for walking and for possible weather swings. The tour requires good weather, and while the itinerary doesn’t change on you mid-day, rain or poor conditions can mean your date gets swapped or refunded.
Angels Flight Railway: the 15-minute start with included entry

Your tour begins with Angels Flight Railway. The pitch is simple: take a photo in front of the famous funicular in Los Angeles. You also get an admission ticket included for this stop.
Why this works as a start: it gives you a quick Downtown LA anchor right away. Even if you barely understand the city layout, you can point to this landmark and say, okay, I get where I am.
It’s also a nice mental warm-up. After that, your brain is ready for the rest of the day: market food, historic architecture, and a bookstore detour that feels like a movie set.
Grand Central Market for about 2 hours: your real food engine
Grand Central Market is the heart of the experience. The tour includes time here for a visit to LA’s oldest public open-air market, with food tastings from favorite stalls, and then continued exploration through Downtown LA along the walk.
Two hours is a good length. It’s long enough to sample with intention, not just grab-and-go, and short enough that you don’t feel stuck in one spot forever. You get that key combination: tasting food at the market, then moving on while the guide keeps connecting what you’re eating to where you are.
Practical note: open-air means you should watch the sky. If it’s hot, take advantage of the tasting pace and keep moving. If it’s chilly, layering beats wishing you brought a jacket after you’re already out the door.
Bradbury Building: 1893 architecture stop with included admission
Next up is the Bradbury Building, one of the most gorgeous buildings in the world, dating back to 1893. You step inside for about 15 minutes, and admission is included.
This stop does two jobs. First, it breaks up the day visually with something you can’t easily replicate with photos alone. Second, it gives the guide room to share the building’s details in a way that sticks because you’re actually standing there.
If you like architecture and old-world Los Angeles energy, this is a strong payoff stop. Even if you don’t, the building’s interior is the kind of scene that makes you stop walking for a minute and just look.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Los Angeles
The Last Bookstore: tunnels, flying books, then tacos and dessert

One hour is set aside for The Last Bookstore. The marketing hook here is fun: you walk through a tunnel of books and you see flying books. It’s an independent bookstore tucked inside a historic bank, which gives it that playful, unexpected feel.
Then comes the food part after the bookstore. The tour heads out for tacos and dessert, so your day ends with familiar crowd-pleasers rather than a random assortment of small bites.
Why I like this order: you get a quirky visual stop first, then you cash out on comfort food. It’s also a good way to finish if you’re the type who gets “toured out.” You end with something you can taste immediately, not just take pictures of and remember later.
What $110 really buys: meal-level tastings plus admissions

At $110 per person, this tour is priced like a full experience, not like a casual snack walk. The value comes from stacking what’s included:
- Food tastings at multiple local eateries, described as equivalent to a full meal
- Admission tickets at major stops along the route
- The Six Taste experience itself, plus a free reusable tote bag
- Historic and sightseeing walking built into the route
When you tally it up, you’re paying for an organized day: someone plans the route, handles the key entries, and feeds you enough that you’re unlikely to need a separate meal right after.
Is it cheaper than DIY market-and-landmark hopping? Sometimes, but you’d be on your own for timing and ticket logistics. This is built to remove guesswork and keep the day smooth.
Food tastings that feel like real portions (not a sample parade)

The tour’s biggest promise is food quantity. The tastings are positioned as replacing a full meal, which is exactly how it should feel for $110.
In a lot of walking food tours, you end up with several token bites and a light stomach. Here, the intent is different: you should leave satisfied. That also means you can plan a lighter late-afternoon snack instead of scrambling for dinner.
Also, the tour is designed to support independent, locally owned eateries. That matters because Downtown LA food can go two ways: either you chase big names or you miss the places that locals actually make part of their routines. This route pushes you toward the second option.
Water, alcohol, and walking comfort: the practical stuff that makes or breaks it
A few practical points keep your day comfortable:
- Bottled water isn’t included. Bring your own if you can, especially if it’s warm.
- Alcohol can be purchased separately for people age 21+ only. The tour doesn’t include it in the base offering.
- You should be ready to walk between stops, so comfortable shoes are non-negotiable.
One more money-minded note: gratuity isn’t included. The recommendation is 15–20% of the ticket price. If you like what you get, plan to tip. This is a guide-led experience with real pacing and real coordination.
Guide style: how Sally, Madeline, and Heyte shape the day
The difference between a good tour and a great tour is the guide’s ability to connect the dots. In this case, the guiding style is part story, part food lead, and part Downtown LA orientation.
Sally and her daughter Madeline are described as making Downtown LA feel like a culinary playground, with history lessons woven into what you’re eating. Heyte is described as punctual, articulate, and great to be with, with a pace that feels just right for seniors too.
That mix matters for you even if you don’t care about history facts. It helps the stops make sense. You walk in, you eat, and you understand why that place exists and why people remember it.
Who should book this Downtown LA walking food tour
This is a great fit if you want:
- A first visit to Downtown LA that gives you food + landmarks in one morning-to-afternoon block
- A plan that removes guesswork about where to eat
- Enough food that you don’t need to find another meal immediately afterward
- A small group experience with a maximum of 16 people
It’s also described as doable for most people, and it welcomes service animals. Children under 5 can join and share tastings with no charge, which is useful if you’re traveling with little ones and don’t want to sit out the fun.
If you hate walking, or if your schedule doesn’t allow you to adjust for weather, you may want a more flexible option. Good shoes and a weather-aware mindset make the biggest difference.
Build the rest of your LA plan around this tour
One underrated benefit of a tour like this is how it sets you up for the rest of your trip. After a route like this, you’re not just fed; you’re oriented. You’ve seen key Downtown landmarks and you’ve tasted a spread of local food styles.
That makes it easier to choose what to do later. You’ll know what parts of Downtown feel right for you, and you’ll be more confident finding a follow-up meal nearby without relying on luck or last-minute Googling.
And if you enjoyed the mix of food and history, it’s a sign you’d likely like more neighborhood-style tours from the same company. They focus on different areas around LA, so your second tour can be a continuation rather than a restart.
Should you book Six Taste? My straight answer
Book it if you want a smart, walkable introduction to Downtown LA where the food is treated like the main event, not a side dish. The full-meal tastings, the included admissions, and the small group size add up to strong value for a 3.5-hour plan.
Skip it (or be ready to reschedule) if you’re traveling during a weather window that’s unreliable. Since the tour requires good weather, you don’t want to plan it as your only single-day activity unless you’ve got flexibility.
If you like structure, great walking comfort, and eating your way through iconic Downtown LA stops, this one is an easy yes.
FAQ
How long is the Los Angeles Walking Food Tour with Six Taste?
It runs for approximately 3 hours 30 minutes.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 11:00 am.
Where is the meeting point?
The meeting point is 324 S Hill St, Los Angeles, CA 90013, USA.
How many people are in each tour group?
The tour has a maximum of 16 travelers.
What major stops are included?
The tour includes Angels Flight Railway, Grand Central Market, the Bradbury Building, and The Last Bookstore.
Are admission tickets included for the stops?
Yes. Admission tickets are included for Angels Flight Railway and for the stops at Grand Central Market, the Bradbury Building, and The Last Bookstore.
Is bottled water included?
No. Bottled water is not included, and you’re recommended to bring your own.
What if the weather is poor or the minimum number of travelers isn’t met?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. If it’s canceled because the minimum number of travelers isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.




























