REVIEW · MIAMI
Wynwood Walls Miami Food and Street Art Walking Tour
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Wynwood is the easiest kind of chaos. This 3-hour walk mixes Wynwood Walls street art with a proper lunch lineup, including entry to the Wynwood Walls Museum and an art-first, food-forward route that feels like Miami from street level. I love how the stops are planned so you’re eating your way through the neighborhood, not just looking at it.
I also love the fact that you get a guided context for what you’re seeing, with guides who bring the murals and artists into focus, such as Miriam, Maryam, Marion, Noel, and Alan. One possible drawback: at 7 food stops, it’s a lot of eating in a short time, so come hungry and don’t plan a heavy dinner right after.
In This Review
- Quick take
- Entering Wynwood Walls: why the art has a story
- Coyo Taco start: birria that sets the tone for the walk
- The guided museum visit inside Wynwood Walls
- La Sandwicherie Wynwood: a refreshing reset between murals
- Wynwood Marketplace pass: a quick hit of neighborhood life
- Chocolate, pizza, Peruvian bites, and a guava cookie finish
- The walk itself: short route, frequent breaks, easy pace
- What the tour includes (and why it’s good value at $79)
- Who should book this Wynwood walk
- Small choices that can help: what to tell your guide
- Should you book the Wynwood Walls food and street art tour?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the Wynwood Walls food and street art walking tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What food is included on the tour?
- Is alcohol included?
- How much walking will we do?
- Is the tour suitable for kids and families?
- Can I bring a stroller or service animal?
- What dietary needs can the tour accommodate?
Quick take
- Included Wynwood Walls Museum entry with a certified-style guide walkthrough
- Coyo Taco birria plus a mix of international bites that keep you full
- 7 tastings in ~3 hours on a short, walkable route (about 1.2 miles)
- Guides who connect murals to meaning, not just pointing and walking
- Mostly weather-proof since the tour runs rain or shine
Entering Wynwood Walls: why the art has a story

Wynwood can look like one big outdoor gallery at first glance. But the point of this tour is that you don’t just admire the paint. You get a guided explanation for how the neighborhood went from industrial area to a global street art magnet, and why specific murals matter.
The centerpiece is the Wynwood Walls Museum stop, where entry is included and you’ll have time to look closely. This is your chance to slow down, read the vibe, and understand what makes certain pieces hit harder than others. If you’ve ever taken photos and then wondered what you were actually photographing, this is the fix.
The best part for me is the way the guide’s story connects the dots between the past and the present. You’ll walk away with more than images stuck on your camera roll. You’ll have a framework for seeing the neighborhood.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Miami
Coyo Taco start: birria that sets the tone for the walk

Your tour begins at Coyo Taco (2320 NW 2nd Ave) at 11:30 am. This first stop matters because it’s not a random snack. You’re starting with a full-flavored birria taco made with slow-cooked, tender meat, wrapped in a freshly made tortilla.
It’s the kind of bite that gives you momentum. You’ll feel ready for the next few hours of walking, photos, and more food. Also, the location is practical: you’re meeting where the group can get together without a confusing scavenger-hunt setup.
A small tip: birria is rich. If you tend to get full fast, take a few sips of water between bites. Your future self will thank you at the cookie stop.
The guided museum visit inside Wynwood Walls
After the first taco, you move into the Wynwood Walls Museum area for about 45 minutes with included entry and a guided walkthrough. This is where you’ll learn the evolution of graffiti and street art, and how artists helped redefine a once-industrial district into a world-known open-air display.
You’ll also get a clearer sense of the culture behind the murals, including the ideas artists are communicating through style, color, and placement. That’s the difference between seeing street art as decoration versus seeing it as social commentary.
One practical bonus: your museum time builds in a breather. The tour is walkable, but you still want moments where you can stand still, look closely, and read what’s in front of you instead of rushing for the next photo.
La Sandwicherie Wynwood: a refreshing reset between murals

Next comes La Sandwicherie Wynwood, where you’ll taste the Tropical signature sandwich. Expect creamy avocado, fresh mozzarella, crisp lettuce, juicy tomatoes, cool cucumbers, and a tropical fruit mix with papaya, mango, and pineapple, all between toasted artisan bread.
This stop is smart pacing. After rich flavors like birria and before heavier treats later, this sandwich gives you a cleaner, brighter bite. The fruit and fresh ingredients keep things from feeling like one long parade of meat and cheese.
If you have food preferences, this is also a helpful checkpoint. The tour’s set menu means you’re not ordering from scratch while you’re trying to enjoy art. You’ll just show up, eat, and keep moving.
Wynwood Marketplace pass: a quick hit of neighborhood life

As you keep going, your guide will lead you past the Wynwood Marketplace area. You won’t be stuck inside a building here. You’ll get a snapshot of local vendors, color on the walls, and that street-level energy that makes Wynwood feel like a living neighborhood, not a theme park.
This part is useful because it reminds you that the art isn’t floating in a vacuum. It’s woven into commerce, community, and daily foot traffic.
You might use this moment to orient yourself visually. Even if you plan to come back later, you’ll have a mental map of where the action clusters.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Miami
Chocolate, pizza, Peruvian bites, and a guava cookie finish

By the time you hit the second half of the tour, you’re basically eating your way through mini world tours, all while still staying in Wynwood’s story zone.
Here’s what to expect from the lineup:
- Ben B Coco Chocolate Factory: small-batch, hand-crafted chocolates made with fine ingredients. You’ll taste cacao-forward flavors plus creative combinations that feel more “artisan tasting” than “random candy bar.”
- Joe’s Pizza NYC: a New York-style slice, with a thin crust, crispy edges, melty cheese, and classic tomato sauce. This stop is comfort food that keeps the group energized.
- Manta Wynwood: Peruvian bites with bold flavors. If you like citrus and spice, this is the part that tends to click fast, especially with ceviche-style options and Nikkei-inspired flavors (Peru-Japan fusion).
- Night Owl Cookies: the signature Ave Maria cookie. It’s a sweet finish with white chocolate chips and guava chunks, topped with crunchy cookie pieces. It’s the kind of dessert that makes you pause mid-walk and actually pay attention.
Is it a lot? Yes. But it’s also why the tour works. Each stop changes flavor direction so your palate doesn’t get stuck in one lane.
If you’re the type who can’t stop at one sweet, keep a little self-control here. The cookie is good enough to want a second bite, but you still have a museum area and walking time after.
The walk itself: short route, frequent breaks, easy pace

This isn’t a long hike. The tour covers about 1.2 miles total with 6–8 stops mixed along the way, which naturally adds breaks. Most of the walking is in Wynwood itself, so you’re not switching neighborhoods or cross-town sprinting.
That matters on a street art tour. If you spend the whole time walking fast, you miss details in the murals. Here, the timing supports both eating and looking. You’ll be able to stop, frame photos, and listen.
Also, the tour runs in all weather conditions. Bring comfortable shoes and dress for Miami sun and sudden showers. Water helps too, because by the time you’re on chocolate and pizza, dehydration is the sneaky enemy.
What the tour includes (and why it’s good value at $79)

At $79 per person for roughly 3 hours, the value isn’t just the food. It’s the combination: meal-style tastings plus included entry to the Wynwood Walls Museum and a guided explanation of the art. You’re paying for convenience and context at the same time.
This tour includes:
- A lunch-style set of tastings: birria tacos, Peruvian bites, the tropical sandwich, NYC pizza slice, and an Ave Maria cookie
- Chocolate as part of the food progression
- Wynwood Walls Museum entry and the guided walkthrough
- Local guides who are art-focused and food-focused (not two separate experiences stitched together)
There’s also an optional VIP drink upgrade: one margarita for $9.99 per person extra for ages 21+. If you want that, it’s clearly an add-on rather than built into the base price.
One more reason the pricing feels fair: the tour caps group size at 15 travelers, which helps keep your guide from turning into a megaphone at each stop. Smaller groups usually mean more back-and-forth.
Who should book this Wynwood walk

This tour is a great fit if you want Miami in two styles at once: street art you can actually understand and food you don’t have to hunt for.
It’s especially good for:
- First-timers who want to see the neighborhood without building a self-guided plan from scratch
- Art lovers who care about why murals exist, not just how they look
- Food people who want a structured tasting menu across multiple cuisines
- Families who want something kid-friendly (street art is a big draw, and kids can handle the food stops)
It’s also friendly for different mobility levels. The tour is described as suitable for all ages and any fitness level, and it covers a short distance. You can bring a stroller, and service animals are allowed. Pets aren’t allowed.
Small choices that can help: what to tell your guide
The tour can accommodate several dietary needs, but details matter. Vegetarian and vegan options are supported with modified choices. People who don’t eat beef or pork can be accommodated. Gluten-free options are extremely limited, and it can’t be guaranteed.
If you have restrictions, add them in the special requirements box during booking. Don’t assume gluten-free will be handled smoothly at each stop. For anything beyond the basics, I’d be direct about what you need.
Should you book the Wynwood Walls food and street art tour?
For me, this is a strong yes if you want one plan that covers Wynwood’s best-known street art and a real meal of tastings. It’s walkable, timed well, and the included museum entry turns it from a “photo and snacks” outing into a neighborhood story.
I’d skip it only if you hate eating on a schedule or you’re the type who wants long independent time in galleries without group timing. Also consider the amount of food: with birria, sandwich, chocolate, pizza, Peruvian bites, and cookies, you’ll want your stomach prepared.
If you book, come hungry, wear comfy shoes, and expect to learn how the murals got their meaning. Then stay near Wynwood Walls after the tour if you want extra time with the art, because that area is the real reason you’re there.
FAQ
What is the duration of the Wynwood Walls food and street art walking tour?
It runs for about 3 hours.
Where does the tour start and end?
The tour starts at Coyo Taco, 2320 NW 2nd Ave, Miami, FL 33127, and it ends at Wynwood Walls, 2516 NW 2nd Ave, Miami, FL 33127.
What food is included on the tour?
Included tastings cover birria tacos from Coyo Taco, a tropical signature sandwich from La Sandwicherie Wynwood, chocolate from Ben B Coco, a New York-style pizza slice from Joe’s Pizza NYC, Peruvian bites from Manta Wynwood, and a signature Ave Maria cookie from Night Owl Cookies. A margarita is available only if you choose the VIP adult beverage upgrade.
Is alcohol included?
Alcohol is not included in the base price. A VIP upgrade for one margarita is available for ages 21+.
How much walking will we do?
You’ll cover approximately 1.2 miles, with 6–8 stops along the route that provide breaks.
Is the tour suitable for kids and families?
Yes. The tour may include a stop at a craft brewery, but minors are allowed since food is served. Most kids enjoy the street art and neighborhood walk.
Can I bring a stroller or service animal?
Yes for strollers. Service animals are allowed. Pets are not allowed.
What dietary needs can the tour accommodate?
Vegetarian, vegan (with modified options), and guests who don’t eat beef or pork can be accommodated. Gluten-free options are extremely limited, so you should list your needs during booking.

































