AudaTours logoAudaTours
Tuscaloosa Audio Tours
United StatesTuscaloosa · United States

Tuscaloosa Audio Tours

Discover Tuscaloosa with self-guided audio walking tours

headphones
1 tours
pin_drop
20 landmarks
translate
50+ languages
Top landmarks

The Tuscaloosa everyone knows.

The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.

A few words on Tuscaloosa

Alabama's Druid City, where football is theology

Tuscaloosa sits on the Black Warrior River in west-central Alabama, a river named after the Choctaw-Creek chief Tuskaloosa, meaning Black Warrior, who resisted Hernando de Soto's Spanish expedition in 1540. The first permanent American settlement appeared at the falls here in 1816, and the town grew quickly enough that it served as Alabama's state capital from 1826 to 1846. When the capital moved to Montgomery, Tuscaloosa kept its University of Alabama, established in 1820 and opened to students in 1831, which turned out to be the more durable prize.

The University of Alabama and the Crimson Tide football program define contemporary Tuscaloosa so completely that it can be hard to find the other city underneath.

On game days in autumn, the Bryant-Denny Stadium fills with 100,000 people, making it one of the largest regularly attended events in the United States. The Walk of Champions leading from the stadium into campus, the Paul W. Bryant Museum covering the football program's history, and the reverence accorded to coach Nick Saban during his tenure here (2007 to 2023) are symptoms of an intensity that visitors from outside the SEC conference find either exhilarating or bewildering.

Tuscaloosa
Tuscaloosa

Tuscaloosa FAQ

Before you walk.

Tuscaloosa is about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham, roughly 1 hour by car on I-20. From Atlanta it is about 2.5 hours. There is no Amtrak service to Tuscaloosa; the nearest train stations are Birmingham and Anniston. The Tuscaloosa Regional Airport has limited commercial service.

The University of Alabama campus is open for self-guided walking tours year-round. The Moundville Archaeological Site, 14 miles south of campus, is a significant Mississippian culture mound complex managed by the university. On campus, the Gorgas House (1829) and the President's Mansion (1841) are the oldest surviving structures. The Alabama Museum of Natural History at Smith Hall has exhibits on state prehistory and the Sylacauga meteorite.

The Paul W. Bryant Museum on Paul W. Bryant Drive is dedicated to the history of Alabama Crimson Tide football, with particular focus on coach Bear Bryant's tenure (1958 to 1982). It covers all aspects of the program through exhibits, game film, trophies, and memorabilia. The museum is open daily and is free for most visitors.

Very. Alabama football is a civic religion that transcends the university. On home game days the city transforms: tailgates begin the night before, restaurants and hotels book out months in advance, and the population effectively doubles. The Crimson Tide has won more national championships than any other program in the modern era. Even visitors with no interest in football will find it impossible to miss.

The downtown area around Greensboro Avenue has a solid independent dining scene, particularly for Southern cooking, seafood, and casual barbecue. DePalma's Italian Cafe has been a local institution since 1990. The Strip on University Boulevard near campus caters primarily to students but has some worthwhile options. The Saturday farmers market downtown is one of the best in the region.

Every Tuscaloosa tour, in your language.

All 50+ languages, included with every booking.

🇬🇧 English🇫🇷 Français🇪🇸 Español🇩🇪 Deutsch🇮🇹 Italiano🇯🇵 日本語🇨🇳 中文🇰🇷 한국어+ 41 more
star AudaTours Unlimited

Visiting more than one city? Subscribe.

Unlock every Tuscaloosa tour — plus thousands more worldwide. Cancel any time.

$4.99/week · Cancel anytime
Unlimited
Loved by travellers

Thousands of tours started.
Plenty of opinions.

4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.

starstarstarstarstar
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Christoph
Christoph
Brighton Tour
starstarstarstarstar
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.
download Get the app

Pop your headphones in.
Step outside.

Free to download. Tours in every city. Start in 60 seconds — no account, no card.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
starstarstarstarstar_half
4.8
AudaTours app icon
headphones
~ 4 min until your first tour starts
public
1,000+ cities worldwide
all_inclusive
AudaTours
Unlimited

Every tour. Every city. One subscription.

3097 tours2273 cities138 countries50+ languages