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Discover Dallas A Guided Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is €7 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 8h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Dallas-Fort Worth's Texan swagger with our self-guided tour app, allowing you to explore one of the 2026 FIFA World Cup host cities at your own pace. Begin in Dealey Plaza where the Kennedy assassination happened, now marked by the Sixth Floor Museum documenting that pivotal moment with 45,000 archival items. Ride the lift up Reunion Tower and the I.M. Pei-designed brutalist City Hall. Wander through the Deep Ellum street art district where blocks of murals, live music venues, and craft breweries preserve the 1920s blues heritage that launched Robert Johnson. Stroll Bishop Arts District's independent boutiques and farm-to-table restaurants in Oak Cliff, then take in the 68-acre Dallas Arts District with the Dallas Museum of Art, Nasher Sculpture Centre, and Meyerson Symphony Centre. Continue west to Fort Worth's Sundance Square and visit the Kimbell Art Museum where Louis Kahn's 1972 building houses masterpieces by Caravaggio and Michelangelo.

Activity location

  • Dealey Plaza National Historic Landmark District
    • 500 Main St
    • 75202-3521, Dallas, Texas, United States

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Dealey Plaza
    • 400 Main Street
    • 75202, Dallas, Texas, United States

Check availability

Discover Dallas A Guided Tour
  • Activity duration is 8 hours and 30 minutes8h 30m
    8h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
€6.99 x 1 Adult€6.99
Total
Price is €6.99

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 50+ Dallas attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Digital Map.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • In accordance with EU regulations about consumer rights, activities services are not subject to the right of withdrawal. Supplier cancellation policy will apply.

Activity itinerary

Dealey Plaza National Historic Landmark District

  • 1h
The plaza where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963 has become one of America's most visited historic sites, preserved exactly as it appeared that Friday afternoon. The Sixth Floor Museum inside the former Texas School Book Depository documents the events through 45,000 archival items, 2,500 photographs, 900 historic films, and the sniper's nest reconstructed at the southeast corner window. The grassy knoll, the triple underpass, and the white pergola where Abraham Zapruder filmed his famous 26-second film remain unchanged, drawing 600,000 visitors annually.

AT&T Stadium (Pass by)

The $1.3 billion Jerry Jones masterpiece in Arlington will host nine 2026 FIFA World Cup matches including the semifinal, making Dallas-Fort Worth the largest host market of the tournament. The 80,000-seat retractable-roof venue opened in 2009 features the world's largest high-definition video board at 160 feet long and two 180-foot glass doors weighing 1.2 million pounds each. Cowboys Stadium Tours include access to the field, locker rooms, press box, and $40 million art collection, while match days will see 100,000 fans with standing room added for the tournament.

Reunion Tower (Pass by)

The 470-foot geodesic sphere completed in 1978 offers 360-degree panoramic views from the GeO-Deck at 470 feet above city centre Dallas, where interactive digital telescopes identify landmarks up to 20 miles away. The revolving Five Sixty restaurant by Wolfgang Puck rotates 360 degrees every 55 minutes on the 49th floor. The tower's iconic LED lighting system features 259 lights illuminating the sphere with colour-coordinated displays celebrating holidays, Cowboys victories, and special events visible across the Dallas skyline.

Dallas Arts District

  • 1h
The 68-acre Dallas Arts District is the largest urban arts district in America, home to the Dallas Museum of Art (24,000-piece collection), Nasher Sculpture Centre (Renzo Piano designed, with Rodin, Calder, and Moore), Winspear Opera House, and Meyerson Symphony Centre. The district hosts over 2 million annual visitors and features the free first-Sunday admission at the Dallas Museum of Art plus the Crow Collection of Asian Art. Klyde Warren Park, built over the Woodall Rodgers Motorway in 2012, connects the district to Uptown with food trucks, concerts, and a 5.2-acre green space.

Deep Ellum

  • 30m
Deep Ellum's colourful mural district spans over 40 blocks where blues legends like Robert Johnson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, and Leadbelly performed in 1920s speakeasies that invented electric blues. Today, the area features over 100 street art installations, historic live music venues including Trees, The Bomb Factory (opened 1913 as a Model T factory), and the Granada Theatre, alongside craft breweries like Deep Ellum Brewing Company founded in 2011. The Dallas 42 Mural and the painted water tower are among the most photographed sites in North Texas.

Bishop Arts District

  • 1h
The Bishop Arts District in Oak Cliff, south of the Trinity River, concentrates 60+ independent boutiques, 25+ restaurants, and the historic Kessler Theatre (1942) into a charming pedestrian-friendly area. The district's farm-to-table restaurants include Emporium Pies, Hattie's New American Southern cuisine, and Lockhart Smokehouse's central Texas-style BBQ. Bishop Arts emerged from 1980s revitalisation led by arts advocates who restored 1920s shopfronts, now attracting both local weekend crowds and international visitors seeking authentic Dallas character beyond the corporate city centre.

Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District

  • 1h
The twice-daily Fort Worth Cattle Drive along Exchange Avenue at 11:30am and 4pm features longhorn cattle driven by authentic Texas cowboys through the brick-paved streets of the 98-acre National Historic District. The Stockyards preserve the 1889 Livestock Exchange, Cowtown Coliseum (world's first indoor rodeo venue from 1908), Billy Bob's Texas (the world's largest honky-tonk at 100,000 square feet with 40 bars), and the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame. Weekly Friday and Saturday night rodeos continue the traditions that earned Fort Worth the nickname Cowtown.

Kimbell Art Museum (Pass by)

Louis Kahn's 1972 building in Fort Worth's Cultural District is considered among the most important museum architecture of the 20th century, with cycloid vaulted ceilings that diffuse natural light throughout sixteen galleries. The collection spans Caravaggio's The Cardsharps (1595), Michelangelo's The Torment of Saint Anthony (1487-1488, his earliest known painting), works by Bernini, Rembrandt, Fragonard, Picasso, and Mondrian. Admission to the permanent collection is free. The 2013 Renzo Piano Pavilion added temporary exhibition space in a dialogue with Kahn's original masterpiece.

Klyde Warren Park

  • 1h
The 5.2-acre Klyde Warren Park opened in 2012 as a deck park built over the recessed Woodall Rodgers Motorway, connecting the Arts District to Uptown with food trucks, concerts, a children's playground, and a performance pavilion. Over 1 million annual visitors come for events including free yoga, film nights, and the Wednesday Food Lorry Festival featuring Dallas's vibrant mobile cuisine scene. Uptown's adjacent dining district offers Nick & Sam's steakhouse, Kenichi sushi, and The Old Monk's extensive beer selection.

Globe Life Field (Pass by)

Just across the car park from AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field opened in 2020 as the Texas Rangers' new home with retractable roof and 40,300-seat capacity where the 2020 World Series was held. Six Flags Over Texas opened in 1961 as America's first Six Flags theme park, featuring the Titan coaster reaching 85 mph and the iconic Texas Giant wooden coaster. Together with AT&T Stadium, these form Arlington's Entertainment District where World Cup visitors can build multi-day experiences between matches with baseball, roller coasters, and regional Tex-Mex BBQ joints.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Dealey Plaza National Historic Landmark District
    • 500 Main St
    • 75202-3521, Dallas, Texas, United States

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Dealey Plaza
    • 400 Main Street
    • 75202, Dallas, Texas, United States

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