What started as a small pre-parade pub crawl has grown into a national events business built in Tampa, with Gasparilla now serving as its largest annual test of scale.
Thomas Neuert said his company, Downtown Crawlers, is projecting 14,000 to 15,000 attendees for its ninth annual Gasparilla Brunch, Bar Crawl and and Festival on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026.
The event is scheduled ahead of the Gasparilla parade, which returns to Tampa on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026.
“It’s by far our biggest event of the year,” Neuert said.

A simple idea that kept growing
Neuert said the original idea was straightforward.
Nine years ago, he and his brothers saw a gap in the hours leading up to the Gasparilla Day Parade.
People wanted to start early, eat and have a plan before heading to the parade route.
The first event drew about 150 people.
The crawl expanded gradually as more bars committed and attendance grew year over year.
Turning an event into a system
As crowds grew, Downtown Crawlers had to professionalize the event.
Neuert said the company now partners with more than 30 bars and restaurants across downtown Tampa, South Tampa and Ybor City.
Participating venues for the 2026 Gasparilla bar crawl span downtown Tampa, SoHo and Ybor City, with more than 30 bars and restaurants involved across the three districts.
Downtown venues include locations such as Yeoman’s Topgolf Swing Suite, District Tavern, Maloney’s Irish Pub, GenX Tavern, Yard House at Water Street and Wagamama, while SoHo and Ybor participation includes bars such as The Patio, Grove SoHo, Soho Saloon, Centro Lounge and Showbar Ybor, according to event materials.
Additional venues are expected to be announced as the event approaches.
Guests can start at different locations and move between areas, rather than funneling into a single spot.
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The Gasparilla event functions as a Tampa bar crawl at scale, spreading crowds across neighborhoods instead of concentrating them in one location.
To reduce congestion, the company relies heavily on early wristband pickup.
Neuert said about 70% of attendees pick up wristbands before the event through scheduled pickup windows at rotating bars during the week leading up to Gasparilla.
Pickup windows rotate nightly across Tampa bars, shifting the operational load away from parade morning.
“It’s our responsibility to bring you the people,” Neuert said. “After that, execution is on the bar.”
A bigger footprint for 2026
For 2026, Downtown Crawlers is adding infrastructure to support continued growth.
Neuert said the company has secured downtown parking lots that will be converted into Pirates Cove, a dedicated event hub for bar crawl attendees.
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Pirates Cove will be open before, during and after the Gasparilla parade, operating from the morning through midnight.
The space will include a VIP area, DJs and expanded check-in capacity, giving attendees a central place to gather throughout the day.
The goal, he said, is to give guests a clear starting point while easing pressure on surrounding bars during peak hours.
Tickets and pricing
Neuert said general admission tickets are currently priced at $34 and will increase as the event approaches.
A brunch add-on option is priced at $74 and includes a buffet-style brunch with bottomless mimosas from 9 a.m. to noon.
A VIP ticket tier is still being finalized and is expected to be priced above $100 once details are confirmed.
In addition to the daytime crawl, Downtown Crawlers will host after-parties and a rooftop party, extending the event well beyond the parade.
Giving back as the event grows
For the 2026 Gasparilla event, Downtown Crawlers will partner with the Humane Society of Tampa Bay.
Neuert said a portion of the proceeds will benefit the organization.
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The company typically selects a different local charity partner for each Gasparilla event.
A pivot that changed the business
Downtown Crawlers did not start as an events company.
Neuert said he and his brothers originally moved to Silicon Valley to develop a mobile app that connects people with locals. After a year, rising costs and limited traction forced a decision.
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By 2017, Neuert said the brothers had shut down the app and were fully committed to events.
They returned to Tampa and began hosting monthly themed events. They took off.
Expansion beyond Tampa
Today, Downtown Crawlers operates in about 28 cities, according to Neuert. The company hires local city managers to run events in each market.
The goal is to expand into 50 cities within the next 12 months, with Tampa’s Gasparilla weekend serving as the flagship event.
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Neuert said large holiday weekends like Gasparilla, St. Patrick’s Day, Cinco de Mayo and Halloween have proven to be repeatable growth opportunities across markets.
Built in Tampa, scaled outward
Neuert said none of the founders came from a traditional events background.
His experience was in hospitality. His older brother, Marcus, ran a video production company. His younger brother, Andreas, worked in radio and sports facility management.
Together, they built a repeatable model that turned a local Tampa tradition into a scalable business.
Gasparilla remains the proving ground, where a Tampa tradition doubles as a stress test for a company now exporting its model nationwide.
For more information about the Gasparilla bar crawl, click here.













