REVIEW · MONTREAL
Explore the Underground City with a local comedian
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Cold Montreal mornings have a clever solution. This Montreal Underground City tour, guided by comedian-style local Goofy Welldone, turns a maze of tunnels into an easy first day—while you stay warm and even catch surprises like a piece of the Berlin Wall.
I like two things most. First, you start at major transit landmarks—Square-Victoria and the Central Station area—and build confidence fast with a high viewpoint over the city. Second, you leave with practical guidance for where to eat and shop, not just facts. One thing to consider: this isn’t a museum-grade history tour, and some parts can feel more like connected malls and offices than classic sightseeing.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Why This Underground City Tour Works on a First Trip
- Meeting at Square-Victoria and Getting Oriented Fast
- Central Station (1918) and the Surprise Value of the Big View
- From Tunnels to Time Out Market and Cours Mont-Royal
- The Berlin Wall Moment and Other Detours Worth Noticing
- What Goofy Welldone Adds: Humor, Stories, and Real Tips
- Price and Value: Is $52.54 Worth It?
- Walking, Stairs, and the End Point That Changes the Day Plan
- When the Route Feels Mall-Heavy (and How to Avoid a Letdown)
- Who Should Book This Tour—and Who Should Skip It
- Should You Book This Montreal Underground City Comedy Walk?
- FAQ
- How long is the Underground City tour?
- What is the price per person?
- Where do we meet, and where does the tour end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
- How big are the groups?
- Can I ask to change the tour time?
- Are service animals allowed?
- Do I get confirmation after booking?
- Can I get a refund if I cancel?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Warm winter routing: You’ll spend most of the time moving through indoor connections, so cold air is not the main event.
- A guide who adds personality: Goofy Welldone mixes local stories with comedy energy, and he’s also big on sending follow-up recommendations.
- Landmarks plus underground links: The walk ties in major transit spots and key downtown destinations, so you learn the city, not just the tunnels.
- Food and shopping stops: You’ll visit places like Time Out Market and the Cours Mont-Royal area with real shopping browsing time.
- A few unexpected sights: You may see a Berlin Wall section and other odd, memorable stops along the route.
- Group size stays manageable: Max group size is 25, and the tour lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.
Why This Underground City Tour Works on a First Trip
If Montreal is your first stop on a trip, this tour gives you something you can’t easily buy later: a sense of how the city connects under your feet. The Underground City can feel endless when you’re on your own. With a guide, those corridors become routes with a purpose—where to go, how long it takes, and what’s worth your time.
It’s also a smart choice when the weather is not on your side. Winter and rainy days in Montreal can turn a simple walk into a cold endurance test. Here, you’re mostly protected while still moving around to key areas. That means you can see the city without spending your whole trip in layers of damp misery.
Finally, it’s built for practical travel. The best kind of tour for a first day isn’t just about landmarks. It’s about leaving with plans: where to eat, where to shop, and how to move around without second-guessing every turn.
Other RESO Underground City tours in Montreal
Meeting at Square-Victoria and Getting Oriented Fast

You meet near the World Trade Center area by metro Square-Victoria (747 Rue du Square-Victoria). It’s a good starting point because it’s central and well connected. You’ll start with that Montreal “sense of place” right away—then you head toward major transport and downtown link-ups.
From the beginning, the tour is designed to teach you the logic of the Underground City. You’re not just following a path. You’re learning which connections matter and which ones are mainly there to move people between offices, stations, and shopping areas.
A nice detail: the tour ends downtown near the subway Peel, not back at the exact start. That can be a win if you’re heading toward shopping or dinner. Just plan for a short extra walk at the end if your hotel is closer to Square-Victoria.
Central Station (1918) and the Surprise Value of the Big View

One of the tour’s strengths is how it mixes “under” with “up.” You’ll move through connected areas and then climb to a top floor viewpoint—described as the highest building in the city—so you get an actual skyline look. That matters, because Montreal is not just a weatherproof network of tunnels. It has drama above ground too.
Before the underground stretches, you’ll also pass through Central Station, which dates from 1918. Even if you’re not a transit nerd, it’s the kind of landmark that helps you orient yourself visually. You start connecting streets and neighborhoods to what’s above them, instead of feeling like you’re trapped underground.
This combo—major indoor transit + skyline view—also helps you pace the experience. The walking stays interesting because you’re constantly switching between enclosed passages and larger spaces.
From Tunnels to Time Out Market and Cours Mont-Royal

Downtown is where your underground learning turns into real vacation time. You’ll head toward Time Out Market and the Cours Mont-Royal area, which blends residences with higher-end shopping. Even when you’re indoors, this part of the route gives you a taste of how people actually live and hang out in Montreal.
Time Out Market is the kind of stop that helps you right away, because it’s a food-focused place you can return to later. A guide’s restaurant picks can be hit-or-miss when they’re generic, but this tour is built around local suggestions. In past tours, that guidance has included specific restaurant recommendations tied to Haitian chef Paul Touissant, and dinner ideas that are easy to act on the same day.
If shopping is your thing, Cours Mont-Royal adds variety. You’re not only moving through malls. You’re seeing a more polished, downtown shopping stretch that feels connected to neighborhoods—not just corridors.
The Berlin Wall Moment and Other Detours Worth Noticing

One memorable payoff: you’ll see part of the Berlin Wall during the walk. That’s the sort of detail that makes an indoor tour feel less like a chore and more like a scavenger hunt with a map in your head.
This isn’t presented like a “war history” lecture, but the effect is the same: it gives you a story you can retell, and it anchors your route with something visual and unexpected. The Underground City can otherwise blend together fast. That Berlin Wall stop breaks the monotony.
You might also notice the tour includes a mix of transit spaces—like subway and station areas—plus connections between office buildings and retail. If you’re expecting only iconic photo spots, you’ll still get them, but the Underground City is the main stage. Think of the “detours” as the reward for paying attention.
Other city tours we've reviewed in Montreal
What Goofy Welldone Adds: Humor, Stories, and Real Tips

The experience is billed as exploring the Underground City with a local comedian, and Goofy Welldone is the name most people associate with the tour. His style shows up in how he communicates: he’s friendly, energetic, and willing to share personal stories tied to Montreal places.
You’ll also get help that’s useful after the tour ends. Several people report receiving follow-up recommendations by text, which can be a big deal when you don’t want to spend your evening scrolling and guessing. In at least one case, a food-and-drink stop like Les Enfants Terribles came up as a highlight, and that same day the guide reportedly performed at a local comedy night downtown—so the “comedy” part can bleed into your plans if you’re interested.
One fair consideration: a couple of people found the comedy element to be lighter than expected or said it leaned more informational than strictly stand-up. If your main goal is historical depth, don’t book expecting a scholarly lecture. Book it for orientation, route confidence, and an amusing local viewpoint.
Price and Value: Is $52.54 Worth It?

The price is $52.54 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes. That’s not a budget street-price activity, but it can be good value when you consider what you’re paying for: a guide who helps you navigate a complex transit-and-shopping network efficiently.
Here’s the practical math: if you’re going to spend your first day in Montreal constantly stopping to check maps, backtrack, and figure out which entrances connect where, you’ll burn time. A guided route compresses that learning curve. You also get restaurant and shopping recommendations you can use right away—so the tour can save you effort for the rest of your trip, not just during the walk.
The tour listing also indicates admission is free for the experience, which suggests you’re primarily paying for the guide-led component rather than paid entries into attractions. And group size stays capped at 25, which helps keep the pace from feeling like cattle herding.
Walking, Stairs, and the End Point That Changes the Day Plan

The route involves a fair amount of walking and some stairs. People describe it as a labyrinth under Montreal—flat walking here, stairs there, plus the natural stops of a guided route. It’s not a brutal trek, but you should wear comfortable shoes. Even if you expect it to be “mostly tunnels,” you’ll still be moving.
Another logistics detail that affects your day: the tour ends downtown near subway Peel, not back at the starting point by Square-Victoria. If your hotel is closer to Peel, that’s great. If not, plan a quick follow-up walk or transit ride to get back comfortably.
Also, time matters. It’s about 1.5 hours, so you’re getting a compact version of the Underground City. That’s a plus for first-timers, but it means you won’t cover everything. The goal is direction and highlights, not checking every corridor.
When the Route Feels Mall-Heavy (and How to Avoid a Letdown)
A couple of reviews point to a common issue with Underground City tours: the connections often run through malls and office buildings. That’s not a scam—it’s the Underground City’s real structure. But it can feel less like classic sightseeing if you expected more open-air viewpoints.
There’s also a second variable: shop hours. One caution is that if you book on a day when stores are closed, you can lose some of the browsing experience you hoped for. Your best defense is to treat this tour like an orientation and idea-generating walk. You’re learning where things are, and you can return later when open hours fit your schedule.
Finally, if you want heavy history, set expectations accordingly. This experience is more about navigation, local context, and storytelling than about being a strict history tour.
Who Should Book This Tour—and Who Should Skip It
This is a strong fit for:
- First-time Montreal visitors who want orientation fast
- Travelers who prefer indoor walking options during cold or wet weather
- People who enjoy comedy energy plus practical local tips
- Solo travelers who want help finding food and routes without stress
You might skip it if:
- Your main goal is museum-level history and formal storytelling
- You dislike tours that include malls, office corridors, and transit spaces as major parts of the route
- You’re only visiting for a very short time and would rather spend every minute on outdoor sights
One smart move: book early. The tour averages 18 days in advance, which suggests it can fill up depending on season and availability.
Should You Book This Montreal Underground City Comedy Walk?
If you want an easy first-day plan that keeps you warm and helps you learn how Montreal connects underground, this is a high-likelihood winner. The combination of major landmarks, practical food and shopping ideas, and the guide-led approach makes it a useful use of time—especially in winter.
I’d book it if you’re open to a route that mixes tunnels, transit spaces, and downtown stops. I wouldn’t book it if you’re hunting for only outdoor sights or deep historical facts. For most visitors, it hits the sweet spot: orientation + humor + useful recommendations.
FAQ
How long is the Underground City tour?
The tour runs about 1 hour 30 minutes (approx.).
What is the price per person?
The price is $52.54 per person.
Where do we meet, and where does the tour end?
You meet at 747 Rue du Square-Victoria, Montréal, QC H2Y 3Y9 near metro Square-Victoria. The experience ends downtown near the subway Peel (near 1455 Rue Peel, Montréal, QC H3A 1T5).
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes. It’s offered in English.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes, the experience includes a mobile ticket.
How big are the groups?
The maximum group size is 25 travelers.
Can I ask to change the tour time?
You can message the guide and ask about potentially arranging different times.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
Do I get confirmation after booking?
Yes, you’ll receive confirmation at the time of booking.
Can I get a refund if I cancel?
Yes. There’s free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel within 24 hours of the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.
































