Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting

REVIEW · CRAFT BEER

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting

  • 4.814 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $89
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Operated by Toonie Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Street art fans, this one’s for you. You get Mount Pleasant murals plus craft beer tastings on a route that goes beyond the obvious spots. It’s a simple formula: walk the art, then taste the beer, with a local guide keeping the story straight.

Two things I really like: you’re not just looking at wall art from afar—you also get access to The Beaumont Studios, and you’ll learn how artists and brewing culture connect in this neighborhood. The other big win is the beer side: you get multiple tastings (not just one token pour), and each stop has its own vibe.

One thing to keep in mind: the pace starts art-first. If your main goal is drinking as early as possible, you may wish the tastings arrived sooner.

Key Highlights Worth Your Feet

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Key Highlights Worth Your Feet

  • Exclusive access to The Beaumont Studios plus an arts and crafts market visit
  • Big mural energy and small hidden artworks across Mount Pleasant’s streets and alleys
  • Four beer tastings (4 oz each) plus an additional local craft beer
  • Brewery and local art storytelling that links Vancouver’s creative scene to craft beer culture
  • An efficient route designed to hit a strong spread of street art without wasted wandering

Mount Pleasant Meets Craft Beer, Without the Usual Tourist Script

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Mount Pleasant Meets Craft Beer, Without the Usual Tourist Script
Vancouver has a lot of street art, but Mount Pleasant is where it starts to feel personal. You’ll be moving through tree-lined streets and side areas where murals sit alongside quieter, more discreet pieces. The tour is built around that mix: not only the large, eye-catching works, but also the smaller details you’d miss if you were just walking on your own.

What makes this experience especially fun is the balance of art and flavor. The guide doesn’t treat the beer like the only reward. Instead, the tastings work like checkpoints. You catch a new mural, learn what’s behind it, then later you get a beer that matches the moment—something crisp, hoppy, or malty depending on what you’re served.

This is also a tour where you’re likely to leave with more than photos. You’ll walk away knowing how brewing culture grew in Vancouver and how local artists helped shape the city’s visual identity in the neighborhoods people actually live in.

You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Vancouver

Olympic Village Square Start: Get Your Bearings Fast

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Olympic Village Square Start: Get Your Bearings Fast
Your tour begins at Olympic Village Square, and you’ll meet your guide by the Giant Bird Statue. It’s a straightforward start point, easy to find once you know what you’re looking for. From there, the walking portion ramps up quickly, so it helps to have comfortable shoes on and to be ready to move.

This first stretch matters more than it sounds. It’s when the guide sets the tone and shows you how to look. Instead of treating every mural like background decoration, you’ll learn what to notice—style, location, and what the work is responding to in the neighborhood.

Also, even though this tour is laid-back, it’s still active. You’re on your feet for much of the 3 hours, with occasional breaks. If you’re the kind of person who likes to stop, stare, and read every piece up close, you’ll probably love the flow.

The Street Art Run: Murals, Hidden Pieces, and Studio Access

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - The Street Art Run: Murals, Hidden Pieces, and Studio Access
The heart of the experience is Mount Pleasant. You’ll walk through areas known for public murals and other street artwork, with the guide steering you to the strongest spots on the route.

What I like here is that it’s not just a greatest-hits tour of famous walls. The tour format encourages you to pay attention to scale and placement. Big murals are the headline, sure, but you’ll also see quieter works—pieces tucked into places that feel more like a secret you stumble on than a planned photo op.

One of the standout moments is the connection to artist workspaces. The tour includes access to artists’ environments at The Beaumont Studios, which adds a layer that a normal street walk can’t offer. Instead of treating art as a finished product only seen on walls, you get a chance to see the people and the process behind it.

And the guide makes a difference. Feedback highlights guides like Erika, Erica, Andrew, and Fran as friendly, personable, and fun—especially when they’re describing why specific murals exist and how they fit into Vancouver’s creative scene.

The Beaumont Studios Stop: Why This Place Feels Like a Real Secret

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - The Beaumont Studios Stop: Why This Place Feels Like a Real Secret
The Beaumont Studios is one of those locations that helps this tour stand out. You get exclusive access here, plus a visit that feels like an arts and crafts market stop rather than a quick glance from the sidewalk.

This is valuable because it turns street art from something you consume into something you understand. When you’re in a studio setting, the art looks different. You see textures, tools, and the working reality behind what later becomes a wall mural or neighborhood piece.

It also changes the tempo of the tour in a good way. After time outside moving from artwork to artwork, you get a more human pace—more talking, more looking, and more time to ask questions. If you enjoy creative spaces and meeting the makers behind them, this stop is the kind of thing you’ll remember long after the photos.

Electric Bicycle Brewing: Craft Beer with a Vancouver Angle

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Electric Bicycle Brewing: Craft Beer with a Vancouver Angle
After the art stops, the beer phase kicks in at Electric Bicycle Brewing. This is where the tour starts paying attention to flavor variety rather than just counting drinks.

You’ll have time to taste beer in a way that feels guided, with a set of tastings designed to show off different styles. Since the tour includes 4 x 4oz beer tasters, you get enough variety to notice differences in hop character, malt sweetness, and overall balance.

This part also helps you understand the brewing legacy in Vancouver. The guide weaves the story of how brewing developed here alongside what you saw on the street. That connection can be surprisingly meaningful. Beer becomes another form of local craft—just in liquid form.

If you’re worried about pace, this stop is a good checkpoint. You’re not rushing from one thing to the next without a breath. You get a block of time that allows you to taste, talk, and reset.

The Break and Photo Stop: Realistic Timing, Not a Marathon

Tours like this can feel like a constant push—walk, look, walk, look, repeat. This one builds in breathing room. There’s a break time and photo stop segment, plus another guided segment that includes beer again.

This matters because you’ll enjoy the art more if your feet aren’t on fire. It also helps if you’re traveling with someone who likes beer and murals but wants the day to stay relaxed. The structure gives you chances to regroup and take pictures without the guide constantly herding the group along.

One small note based on how the tour balances art versus beer: some people found the ending tasting felt like the reward after a lot of walking. If you love beer, it might help to mentally accept that the tour is art-led first, beer-forward second. Once you’re in that mindset, the pacing makes more sense.

Finishing at BREWHALL: Where the Neighborhood’s Two Worlds Meet

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Finishing at BREWHALL: Where the Neighborhood’s Two Worlds Meet
You wrap up at BREWHALL. This is a fitting finish because the tour has spent the whole 3 hours moving between creative street scenes and actual brewing spaces.

By the end, you should feel like you’ve seen Mount Pleasant as more than a backdrop. It’s a working neighborhood with culture happening in public and in dedicated creative spaces. The final stop ties it together. Beer tastes better when you connect it to context—where it comes from, who’s making it, and how it matches the place you’ve been exploring.

This is also the moment where you can decide what kind of after-taste plan you want. The guide shares local recommendations for dining or more drinking spots, based on what you’re in the mood for. That part is underrated value. You’re not left guessing what’s worth your time in the area after the tour ends.

Price and Value: What You Get for $89

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Price and Value: What You Get for $89
At $89 per person for 3 hours, this tour isn’t a budget snack. But it also isn’t just a walk with a few sips thrown in.

Here’s what justifies the price:

  • Multiple tastings: 4 x 4oz beer tasters plus an additional local craft beer included.
  • Special access: exclusive time at The Beaumont Studios, not a typical pass-through stop.
  • A structured route: the tour is planned to hit strong street art without wasting hours wandering randomly.
  • Guide storytelling: you’re getting narratives about Vancouver’s brewing legacy and the artists influencing the neighborhood’s cultural scene.

So the real value question becomes this: do you want art context and studio access, or do you mainly want beer with less emphasis on visuals? If you’re into both, $89 starts to feel fair. If your top priority is drinking fast, you may feel the walking-first approach makes the tour less aligned with your goals.

Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Want Another Option)

Vancouver: Street Art & Craft Beer Walking Tour with Tasting - Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Want Another Option)
This tour fits best if you’re:

  • A street art fan who also likes learning about creative process and local culture
  • Someone who wants craft beer tastings with variety, not a one-note pub crawl
  • Visiting Vancouver and short on time, but still craving an experience that feels local and specific to a neighborhood

It may not be the best match if you:

  • Care more about beer than art and want tastings early
  • Prefer tours with minimal walking or very frequent sitting breaks
  • Want a strictly history-heavy beer seminar with little focus on street artwork (this isn’t that)

The sweet spot is the traveler who enjoys art with a side of flavor, and who’s happy to let the neighborhood guide the experience.

Final Call: Should You Book It?

If you want a Vancouver tour that feels grounded in a real neighborhood—Mount Pleasant—and not like a generic city checklist, I’d book this. The best parts are the combination: street art you can see up close, plus studio access at The Beaumont Studios, plus real craft beer tastings that actually let you compare styles.

Book it when you can dress for rain or shine, wear good shoes, and show up ready to look as much as you taste.

If your only goal is beer and you’d rather skip art time, consider adjusting expectations or choosing a beer-focused tour. But if you like creativity in more than one form, this one is a strong bet.

FAQ

Where is the tour meeting point?

The tour begins at Olympic Village Square. Meet your guide by the Giant Bird Statue.

How long is the street art and craft beer walking tour?

It lasts 3 hours.

How much does the tour cost?

The price is $89 per person.

What language is the live tour guide?

The tour guide is available in English.

Does the tour run in bad weather?

The tour operates rain or shine, so dress appropriately.

What beer is included in the tasting?

You get 4 x 4oz beer tasters, plus 1 local craft beer.

Which venues are part of the experience?

You visit The Beaumont Studios with exclusive access and you stop at Electric Bicycle Brewing. The tour finishes at BREWHALL.

What should I bring with me?

Bring a passport or ID card, comfortable shoes and clothes, and cash.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is wheelchair accessible.

Can I get a refund if my plans change?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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