Inside Wall Street: Led by a Financial Markets Specialist
Manhattan
About
Go beyond the clichés of Wall Street and discover how the financial world actually works—through the streets where it all began.
On this private tour, you’ll walk through the Financial District, stopping at landmarks like the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall, while breaking down key ideas—stocks, trading, and market crashes—into clear, engaging explanations.
What sets this experience apart is flexibility. Whether you’re new to finance or already in the industry, the tour adapts to your level—keeping things simple or going deeper into how markets function, from liquidity to crises.
Along the way, you’ll hear the real stories behind Wall Street—from early trading under a tree to fin...
Highlights
2 hours
Offered in Portuguese & 3 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours
Offered in Portuguese & 3 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Guided Tour
Meeting Points
Departure
1 Bowling Green
Meet in front of the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House on Broadway between Beaver and Stone Streets, just a few feet from the Charging Bull. Please arrive 5 minutes early.
Return
911 Angles
The tour ends at the World Trade Center
Important Information
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Wheelchair accessible
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Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
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Service animals allowed
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Public transportation options are available nearby
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Transportation options are wheelchair accessible
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All areas and surfaces are wheelchair accessible
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Suitable for all physical fitness levels
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
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Go beyond the clichés of Wall Street and discover how the financial world actually works—through the streets where it all began.
On this private tour, you’ll walk through the heart of the Financial District, stopping at landmarks like the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall, while breaking down key ideas—stocks, trading, and market crashes—into clear, engaging explanations.
What sets this experience apart is flexibility. Whether you’re new to finance or already in the industry, the tour adapts to your level. We can keep things simple and story-driven, or go deeper into how markets function—liquidity, crises, and the mechanics behind major events.
Along the way, you’ll hear the real stories behind Wall Street—from early trading under a tree to high-stakes financial panics—and see both iconic and overlooked locations where history was made.
This is not a scripted lecture. It’s a tailored, interactive experience built around your interests and questions.
20 minutes
2
Bowling Green
At Bowling Green, you’re standing in New York’s oldest public park—dating to the Dutch era, when this marked the edge of New Amsterdam. What began as open space near Fort Amsterdam became a political focal point.
During the American Revolution, this was a flashpoint. In 1776, crowds pulled down a statue of King George III after the Declaration of Independence was read aloud. The iron fence still shows damage—cut for musket balls.
Facing the park is the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, built on the site of earlier Dutch and British structures. It became the gateway of American trade, where tariffs funded much of the federal government.
Steps away, 26 Broadway was the headquarters of Standard Oil, built by John D. Rockefeller—later broken up under antitrust laws.
Nearby, the Cunard Building reflects New York’s role as a global port, linking it to Europe through transatlantic travel.
This small plaza ties together colonial power, revolution, trade, and corporate growth.
15 minutes
3
Charging Bull (Wall Street Bull)
At the Charging Bull, you’re looking at one of Wall Street’s most recognizable symbols—but it wasn’t officially commissioned. It was installed overnight in 1989 as a form of guerrilla art after the 1987 market crash.
The bull represents optimism and rising markets, but its placement here—outside the financial system rather than inside it—says just as much about public perception of Wall Street as the market itself.
10 minutes
4
Fraunces Tavern Museum
At the Fraunces Tavern, you’re stepping into one of the most important gathering places of colonial New York.
In the 18th century, taverns weren’t just for food and drink—they were business hubs. Before formal exchanges existed, merchants, ship owners, insurers, and early brokers met in places like this to negotiate deals, share information, and arrange trades. In many ways, taverns functioned as the earliest “trading floors,” where prices, news, and credit circulated informally.
Fraunces Tavern also played a key political role. It’s where George Washington famously bid farewell to his officers in 1783 at the end of the Revolutionary War, marking the transition from war to a new economic and political system.
This stop connects two worlds—finance and politics—showing how early markets weren’t built in institutions, but in rooms like this, where relationships, trust, and information drove everything.
10 minutes
5
Stone Street Historic District
At Stone Street, you’re walking along one of the oldest streets in New York, dating back to the Dutch period when this was already a center of trade and commerce.
Right next to it, the India House (Hanover Bank Building) reflects how this area evolved into a financial hub. But the story starts with something simple: cotton.
Firms like Lehman Brothers began as commodity traders in the 19th century, dealing in cotton before transitioning into finance. That shift—from physical goods to financial products—is the foundation of modern markets.
From here, we connect the dots: commodities to securities, and eventually to complex instruments like mortgage-backed securities. This is where we begin to understand the 2008–2009 financial crisis—not as a sudden collapse, but as the result of that long evolution.
15 minutes
6
55 Wall St
On Wall Street, you’re standing on the street that gave its name to the global financial system—and still represents its center today.
At the site of the old Merchants’ Exchange, traders once handled shipping, insurance, and trade—early coordination before formal exchanges.
Nearby, Bank of New York Mellon, founded in 1784 by Alexander Hamilton, is the oldest bank in the United States and a direct link to the country’s earliest financial system.
You’ll also see the former Deutsche Bank headquarters, reflecting Wall Street’s evolution into a global financial center.
Towering above is 40 Wall Street, originally the Bank of Manhattan—founded by Aaron Burr, Hamilton’s rival, as a workaround to create a bank.
This stretch shows how trade evolved into structured banking, shaped by politics, rivalry, and opportunity.
10 minutes
7
Federal Hall
At Federal Hall, you’re standing where the United States first put its financial system into motion.
This is where George Washington was inaugurated in 1789, and where the first Congress met to establish the country’s foundations—including the financial framework designed by Alexander Hamilton.
Here, the federal government assumed state debts, created a national credit system, and laid the groundwork for capital markets—turning U.S. debt into a tradable asset and helping position New York at the center of American finance.
Just outside, New York became the busiest port in the country. More gold and customs revenue passed through here than anywhere else in the United States, tying global trade directly to the financial system.
Across the street stands 23 Wall Street, once the office of the most powerful banker in American history.
Steps away from where traders later gathered under the Buttonwood tree, this site connects government policy to the birth of Wall Street.
15 minutes
8
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
At the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, you’re at the operational core of the U.S. financial system. This is the most powerful of the Federal Reserve banks—executing monetary policy, managing reserves, and overseeing financial markets.
Beneath your feet sits one of the largest gold vaults in the world, storing billions in gold for governments and institutions. It’s a reminder that even in a digital system, physical reserves still play a role in global finance.
Just steps away is the former Chase Manhattan Plaza, developed by David Rockefeller as a modern financial campus. This space reflects the postwar transformation of Wall Street—larger institutions, global banking, and the shift toward corporate finance.
Together, these two sites show the evolution from private banking power to centralized monetary authority—how control of the system moved from individuals to institutions.
15 minutes
9
World Trade Center's Liberty Park
We’ll end at the World Trade Center, where finance, global trade, and memory come together.
From the early days of merchants and open-air trading to today’s interconnected global markets, everything we’ve seen leads here—a place that reflects both the scale of modern finance and the resilience of the city.
Inside Wall Street: Led by a Financial Markets Specialist
Manhattan
Select Date & Travelers
From
$188
$169.50
Price varies by group size
About
Go beyond the clichés of Wall Street and discover how the financial world actually works—through the streets where it all began.
On this private tour, you’ll walk through the Financial District, stopping at landmarks like the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall, while breaking down key ideas—stocks, trading, and market crashes—into clear, engaging explanations.
What sets this experience apart is flexibility. Whether you’re new to finance or already in the industry, the tour adapts to your level—keeping things simple or going deeper into how markets function, from liquidity to crises.
Along the way, you’ll hear the real stories behind Wall Street—from early trading under a tree to fin...
Highlights
2 hours
Offered in Portuguese & 3 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
2 hours
Offered in Portuguese & 3 Others
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Guided Tour
Meeting Points
Departure
1 Bowling Green
Meet in front of the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House on Broadway between Beaver and Stone Streets, just a few feet from the Charging Bull. Please arrive 5 minutes early.
Return
911 Angles
The tour ends at the World Trade Center
Items | Inside Wall Street: Led by a Financial Markets Specialist