Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour

REVIEW · PERTH

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour

  • 4.417 reviews
  • 1.8 hours
  • From $24
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Operated by Dark Stories Pty Ltd · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Perth has crimes hiding in plain sight. This Perth true crime guided walking tour follows historic crime locations on foot from the meeting point at Horseshoe Bridge, with an expert guide turning street-level details into real stories. You’ll spend 105 minutes walking through central Perth, where the calm look of the city runs into its darker record.

I love the storytelling most. Guides like Amy and Tess (based on what people highlighted) don’t just recite facts; they set the scene, link events, and keep you focused on what matters as you move. I also like the built-in chance for photo and sightseeing along the route, because you’re seeing the city in daylight with a new lens.

One consideration: it’s a walking tour built around serious subject matter. If you’re not into true crime themes or you’re sensitive to violent history, you’ll want to think it through before you go.

Key things I’d circle before you book

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Key things I’d circle before you book

  • Amy-style scene-setting: clear, engaging narration that keeps the walk moving
  • Tess-style street smarts: lots of context so locations feel connected, not random
  • A tight 105-minute route: long enough for multiple stops, short enough to stay fresh
  • Photo-friendly stops: the city’s architecture and streets become part of the story
  • English live guide: straightforward explanations throughout
  • Wheelchair accessible: designed so more people can do the walk

Where the Walk Starts: Horseshoe Bridge, Perth Railway Station, and Yagan Square

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Where the Walk Starts: Horseshoe Bridge, Perth Railway Station, and Yagan Square
The tour’s meeting point is right where it should be: Horseshoe Bridge, overlooking the Perth Railway Station train platforms, opposite Yagan Square. That’s a useful setup because it gives you something recognizable immediately, and you start the evening with central-city bearings instead of hunting for a “mystery spot.”

You’ll also start with the kind of viewpoint that makes the whole concept click. From here, Perth looks orderly and modern, and that contrast becomes the theme. One minute you’re near trains and public spaces; the next you’re being asked to look at ordinary streets as places where extraordinary events happened.

If you arrive early, take a moment to orient yourself around the bridge and station edges. It’s the kind of start that helps you settle in before the guide starts telling the stories that shaped the city’s reputation.

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Price and Logistics: $24 for 105 Minutes With a Live Guide

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Price and Logistics: $24 for 105 Minutes With a Live Guide
At $24 per person for a 105-minute walking tour, you’re paying for one thing: a focused guided walk led by a live English guide. There’s no food included and no hotel pickup, so the value comes from the route and the narration, not from added extras.

For a first-time visitor, that format can be a sweet spot. You get a structured way to see parts of Perth on foot without committing to a half-day tour. For locals or repeat visitors, it still works because you’re not just walking around—you’re learning how the city’s quiet corners tie back to its past.

Practical note: since hotel pickup and drop-off aren’t included, you’ll want to plan how you’ll reach Horseshoe Bridge on your own. And because food and drinks aren’t part of the tour, grab water (and a snack if you’re the kind of person who gets low-energy mid-walk).

The Human Part: Amy and Tess-Proof Storytelling

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - The Human Part: Amy and Tess-Proof Storytelling
The strongest praise in the reviews centers on the guide’s delivery. People specifically called out Amy for weaving historical significance into the walk scene-by-scene, and they highlighted Tess as a walking encyclopedia with real passion. That matters, because true crime tours rise or fall on narration quality.

When the guide is good, you don’t feel like you’re being dragged through a list of crimes. You feel like you’re following a line through the city—where each location adds meaning, and the details help you picture what happened. That’s exactly what the best reviews describe: the guide sets the scene, keeps you oriented to the context, and makes you feel present without turning it into sensational noise.

It’s also worth noting that the tour is run in English with a live guide, so you’re not stuck decoding an audio track. You can ask questions or follow the story naturally as you walk, which is a big deal for a 105-minute experience.

Following the Trail: Historic Crime Sites Around Perth on Foot

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Following the Trail: Historic Crime Sites Around Perth on Foot
What you’re doing here is simple: walk a trail of infamous crime scenes across Perth. The tour is built around historic crime locations, and it keeps the focus on places where the city’s everyday look meets its darker record.

Since the exact street-by-street list of sites isn’t laid out in the info you provided, I’d think of this as a guided circuit through central Perth crime-history locations rather than a museum-style route with named exhibits. The value is in how the guide connects what you see now with what those streets once held.

You’ll likely notice the same kind of contrast that people highlight in feedback: Perth can look peaceful, even pretty, while the stories attached to certain spots are violent and unsettling. The guide’s job is to make that contrast make sense. Not to shock you for fun—more like to show you how a city’s surface can hide its underside.

As you walk, keep an eye on corners, building edges, and the way streets funnel sightlines. Even when you’re not sure why a spot matters yet, the guide’s explanation usually makes those details click. It’s one of the reasons a guided format works better than reading about the sites alone.

Solved and Unsolved Threads: Why the Walk Feels Like a Case File

A big part of the tour’s appeal is that it doesn’t treat everything as fully wrapped up. The description points to a mix of solved and unsolved crimes, plus the era feeling of scandal and devious alibis.

That mix is what gives the walk momentum. Solved cases feel like they have a destination—you’re walking toward an explanation. Unsolved threads keep you scanning the surroundings differently, because the story has questions still living in it. Either way, the guide is supposed to help you track the logic, not just the drama.

If you like true crime stories that stay grounded in context, this is where the guide skill becomes essential. With good storytelling, you don’t lose the thread when the subject matter gets heavy. You understand what’s known, what’s suspected, and why the location matters to the broader narrative of what went down.

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Photo and Sightseeing Opportunities: Dark Context, Better Pictures

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Photo and Sightseeing Opportunities: Dark Context, Better Pictures
One of the tour highlights is that you’ll have great photo opportunities along the way. That’s not just “stand and snap.” The idea is that you’re photographing Perth while the guide adds meaning to what you see.

This is where the route’s design likely helps you. Even if you’re not a professional photographer, having an organized walking plan gives you chances to stop and look. You can frame buildings and streets with the knowledge that something darker happened there, and the photo becomes a memory with extra layers.

Also, because the tour is in a city area with landmarks around the meeting point, you’ll get plenty of visual material without needing long detours. It’s a practical approach: you’re seeing Perth, and you’re also being taught where to look so the city photographs differently.

If you plan to take photos, wear comfortable shoes first. Then bring your phone camera habits second—think about stability, not just angles. A lot of the best shots will come from standing still while you listen.

How the Tour Makes Perth’s Past Feel Personal

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - How the Tour Makes Perth’s Past Feel Personal
The tour info leans into the idea of Perth’s peaceful facade contrasted with a violent criminal past. It also frames Perth as an especially isolated capital, and uses black swans as a theme for major events driven by notorious criminals.

Even if you don’t take every poetic metaphor literally, the effect is practical. You start to see how a city’s environment shapes the stories people tell about it. When the guide connects locations to wider context, the walk stops feeling like random stop-and-start history. It becomes more like a guided lens on why Perth’s reputation formed the way it did.

That’s also why this tour can work for both newcomers and people who think they already know the basics. Newcomers get a fast sense of the city’s layout and its narrative landmarks. Returning visitors may get a second layer: the same street, different meaning.

Pace, Comfort, and What to Bring for a 105-Minute Walk

Perth: True Crime Guided Walking Tour - Pace, Comfort, and What to Bring for a 105-Minute Walk
This is 105 minutes on foot. That’s not a short stroll, and it’s not an all-day hike either. It sits in that useful middle zone where you should dress for comfort and weather.

You’ll also want to plan around what’s not included. Since food and drinks aren’t part of the tour, you may want to eat beforehand if you’re the type who gets hungry. And since pickup/drop-off isn’t included, make sure you’re at the meeting point on time with a plan to return afterward.

Good shoes matter. The tour is described as wheelchair accessible, which suggests the route is designed to be manageable for more mobility needs. Still, sidewalks and street crossings are part of every city walk, so wear footwear that won’t punish you over 1 hour 45 minutes.

Who Should Book This Perth True Crime Walking Tour

I think this tour fits best if you want a guided walk that mixes city sightseeing with true crime storytelling. It’s ideal if you like:

  • walking and learning at the same time
  • true crime with context, not just shock value
  • an evening activity that’s short enough to still feel social

It’s also a strong pick for people who want to get oriented quickly. One review specifically noted that it helped someone new in town get their bearings fast. If that’s your goal, starting from Horseshoe Bridge and staying in central areas is a logical approach.

If you’re traveling with someone who only wants cheerful sightseeing, you might find the subject matter a mismatch. In that case, choose the right time and set expectations—this tour isn’t pretending the past was nice.

Should You Book the Perth True Crime Guided Walking Tour?

Here’s my take: if you like true crime stories told well, this is good value at $24 for 105 minutes. The strongest selling point is the guide quality. With guides like Amy and Tess highlighted for scene-setting and deep local storytelling, you’re buying a guided experience, not just a ticket to walk by buildings.

If you’re fine with dark themes and you’re comfortable doing a structured city walk, it’s a fun and memorable way to see Perth differently. If you’d rather keep your trip light, or if violent crime stories aren’t your thing, look for something more upbeat.

FAQ

Where is the meeting point for the Perth True Crime Guided Walking Tour?

Meet your guide on the Horseshoe Bridge overlooking the Perth Railway Station train platforms, opposite Yagan Square.

How long is the tour?

The tour duration is 105 minutes.

What does it cost?

The price is $24 per person.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the tour is listed as wheelchair accessible.

What is included in the price?

The included items are the guide and the walking tour.

Can I cancel for a refund?

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

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