
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the glossy veneer of Auckland’s skyline lie echoes of colonial rebellions and whispered scandals that refuse to fade. Concrete streets hide decades of political intrigue and forgotten tragedies waiting for a witness. Experience this self guided audio tour to uncover the city’s true pulse. Move beyond the tourist map and find the raw history hidden in plain sight. Did a frantic midnight gathering inside the Town Hall actually alter the course of local government forever? What nameless figures once paced the darkened pews of St Matthew in the City seeking sanctuary from a past they could not outrun? How did a single forgotten brick at St Patrick’s Cathedral become the centerpiece of a bitter sectarian feud? Trace these ghostly threads as you navigate the beating heart of Auckland. Transform your walk into a cinematic journey of drama and discovery. Press play and wake the city’s ghosts.

A single tower pierces Auckland’s skyline, but beneath its gaze lie stories far more towering—of revolt, reinvention, and restless ambition. This self-guided audio tour unlocks the secrets of Auckland Central, guiding you down vibrant Queen Street, through the rhythm of Aotea Square, and to vantage points where history shifts in the shadows. Uncover hidden chapters most visitors miss as city legends, scandals, and struggles come alive around every corner. What turned a soaring icon into a symbol of protest overnight? Why did an entire city freeze in silence under Queen Street’s neon glare one unforgettable evening? And who painted a secret on Aotea Square that not even security could spot? Trace rebellious footsteps and wild dreams as each step sends you tumbling through time. The beating heart of Auckland is ready to reveal its untold layers. Start walking—one secret awaits around every corner.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Auckland sits on the narrowest point of New Zealand's North Island, with the Waitemata Harbour on the east opening to the Pacific and the Manukau Harbour on the west opening to the Tasman Sea. The isthmus between them is only about two kilometers wide at its narrowest, which means Auckland is a city where you can theoretically walk from one ocean to another. It is also built on the Auckland volcanic field, a collection of 53 extinct volcanoes in various states of cone, crater, and lake. Mount Eden, twelve minutes' walk from the city center, is a perfect volcanic cone with a 50-metre deep crater and a 360-degree panorama across both harbours that makes the scale of the city immediately comprehensible.
Auckland has more registered boats per capita than almost any city on earth, which is where the 'City of Sails' nickname comes from, and the America's Cup yachting infrastructure along the waterfront near Viaduct Harbour has changed the downtown waterfront from a working port into one of the most pleasant urban waterfronts in the Pacific.
The Maori call the region Tamaki-makau-rau, meaning 'the isthmus fought over by a hundred lovers,' which refers to the centuries of Polynesian intertribal warfare over this strip of land. Maori culture is not a backdrop in Auckland: it is present in public art, in language on road signs, and in the governance of the city at the Auckland Council level.

Before you walk.
The central city (CBD) and Ponsonby are easily walkable. The Auckland Harbour ferry runs to Devonport on the North Shore (a lovely 12-minute crossing) and to Waiheke Island. The AT HOP card loads transit credit for buses, ferries, and trains. Rideshare is widely available.
Auckland is one of the safer cities in the Asia-Pacific region. The CBD, Ponsonby, Parnell, and the waterfront areas are safe for day and evening walking. Standard urban awareness applies in the Karangahape Road area late at night. The main areas of interest are generally well-lit and populated.
Auckland has excellent 4G and 5G coverage throughout the central city. Downloading your tour content on WiFi before heading out gives you the most reliable experience. Prepaid SIM cards from Spark or One NZ are cheap and available at the airport and supermarkets.
Absolutely and you should. Mount Eden (Maungawhau) is the closest to the city center and takes about 20 minutes to walk up from the nearest bus stop. One Tree Hill (Maungakiekie) is larger and offers broader views. Both are grassed public parks free to enter at any time, and both offer views across both harbours.
All 50+ languages, included with every booking.
Unlock every Auckland tour — plus thousands more worldwide. Cancel any time.

4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
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.
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.