2025 Bucket List

Sample What’s New (and Never Changing) in Savannah

This grande dame has some spring in her step
A stately brick building in a tree-covered street

Photo: Courtesy of Hotel Bardo

Outside Hotel Bardo.
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Where: Savannah, Georgia
When: year-round
If you like: urban escapes, history, dining and drinks

Why you should go: Savannah is fresh off a thirtieth birthday of sorts: The year 1994 had been a momentous one, with John Berendt revealing the city’s seductive underbelly with the publication of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil and Tom Hanks doling out life lessons from a picturesque downtown bench in Forrest Gump. Tourists descended like ants on a praline, and Savannah has been stretching to accommodate them ever since. In the past five years, two gleaming new mixed-use districts have reshaped the historic riverfront, while the restaurant-rich Starland District has lured visitors south. Between those two hubs, the Hotel Bardo opened last year on Forsyth Park and transformed a Southern Gothic mansion into a stunning oasis with Amalfi Coast vibes. And later this spring, the team behind the Death & Co. cocktail empire will debut its first hotel, the Municipal Grand, in the heart of the historic district; fittingly, the lobby’s Municipal Bar will be the centerpiece. “If you’re walking down Broughton Street, you will see what will look like a big, bustling bar and restaurant, and that’s very intentional, whereas on the other side, on Abercorn, you’ll see more clearly that this is a hotel,” says Alex Day, cofounder of Midnight Auteur, the group’s hospitality brand. 

With a Ritz-Carlton on the horizon for 2026, Savannah’s sheen doesn’t look to be dulling—which makes it all the more inviting to enjoy a peaceful picnic (martini optional) in Bonaventure Cemetery, as Berendt did, or warm a bench in an oak-shaded square like Gump.

G&G tip: The Grey, the restaurant many credit for launching Savannah’s grown-up food scene, recently marked its tenth anniversary and remains as vital as ever, a homeplace for moments of both celebration and contemplation. Note the neon art installation in the ceiling rafters, which lights up every hour for two minutes and twenty-three seconds to mark the date of the 2020 murder of Ahmaud Arbery in nearby Brunswick.


Elizabeth Florio is digital editor at Garden & Gun. She joined the staff in 2022 after nine years at Atlanta magazine, and she still calls the Peach State home. When she’s not working with words, she’s watching her kids play sports or dreaming up what to plant next in the garden.


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