REVIEW · PRAGUE
Electric Trike Night Tour in Prague – Live Guided
Book on Viator →Operated by Speedy Tours Prague s.r.o · Bookable on Viator
Prague at night feels different on a trike. This electric trike tour strings together the city’s most famous sights with a live English guide, so you’re not just looking at maps—you’re actually moving through the highlights in one smooth ride. I like how the evening timing keeps things atmospheric, while the route still covers the major photo moments you came for.
Two things I really liked: the 10-minute supervised training before you head out, and how carefully the guide sets you up for confident riding in real streets. After that, you get stops at places like Letná Park, the Prague Metronome, and Charles Bridge, with enough time to pause and take it in without feeling rushed.
One drawback to note: Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral are only from outside on this tour, and most stops are short. It’s built for seeing a lot, not for doing long, inside visits or slow wandering at every stop.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Care About
- Getting Set Up at Štěpánská 55: Training That Actually Matters
- Wenceslas Square: Starting With a Real Prague Main Street
- Powder Tower to Summer Park: History While You’re Still Moving
- Letná Park: Riding at Height With the Best Photo Angles
- Prague Metronome: A Statue Story You Can’t Ignore
- Letná Viewpoint: Five Bridges in One Line
- Prague Castle From Outside: Big Views Without the Inside Rush
- Strahovský Klášter (Strahovsky Klaster): Views Plus Monastery Beer
- Lennon Wall to Charles Bridge: From Expression to Iconic River Views
- Kafka Museum, Rudolfinum, and Pariska Street: Big Names Without the Crowding
- Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock Zone
- Price and Value: Why This Tour Can Be a Bargain
- Who Should Book This Electric Trike Night Tour
- Practical Tips for a Smooth Night Ride
- Should You Book This Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Electric Trike Night Tour in Prague?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Do I need experience to drive the e-trike?
- What is the minimum age to drive the e-trike?
- Can children ride on this tour?
- What’s included in the price?
- Where is the meeting point?
Key Highlights You’ll Care About

- 10-minute training first: a supervised intro before you join traffic.
- Safety-first guidance from Prince’s team: you get the confidence you need for on-road riding.
- Letná Park and viewpoints: higher ground for wide-angle Prague photos, including views of multiple bridges.
- The Metronome + Joseph Stalin story: a quick history stop with context you won’t get from a casual glance.
- Monastery Beer stop at Strahov: a small break that turns sightseeing into a more lived-in moment.
- Charles Bridge to Old Town Square: iconic night scenes plus the Astronomical Clock area.
Getting Set Up at Štěpánská 55: Training That Actually Matters
The tour starts at Štěpánská 55, near public transport, and the meeting point is easy enough to reach with a rideshare or bus/metro. When you arrive, you’ll sign a disclaimer form first, then you’ll get a 10-minute supervised training on the e-trikes.
This is the part I appreciate most. If you’ve never ridden a guided electric vehicle through a busy city, your brain needs time to learn basic control—starting, stopping, turning, and how the trike behaves at night. The guide’s whole approach is confidence-building, not show-and-go. The reviews I saw consistently praise safety and reassurance, and you can feel why once you’ve done that training bit.
You also learn the key rules upfront. The minimum age to drive is 18+, and if you’re traveling with kids, ages 10–17 can ride in the rear seat with an adult. That means this isn’t set up as a kid drop-off tour, and it’s not for children under 10.
Finally, they provide water at the meeting point, plus raincoats if needed. In Prague nights, weather can change fast, so having the rain layer sorted is a real comfort.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Prague
Wenceslas Square: Starting With a Real Prague Main Street

After training, the first big “feel of Prague” stop is Wenceslas Square. It’s one of the city’s main attractions, and you get to see the National Museum building from outside as well as the shopping plaza atmosphere.
This is a smart early stop. It helps you get bearings fast—big, recognizable landmarks right at the start—so when the route turns more scenic and hilly, you’re not asking yourself where you are. It’s also short, which is fine here. The goal is to build momentum for the rest of the evening.
Powder Tower to Summer Park: History While You’re Still Moving

Next up is the Powder Tower, where you get a brief pause for historical background and significance. Then you ride on your e-bikes through the city toward Summer Park / Letná area.
Why this works: it keeps the pacing. You’re not stuck in one spot long enough for your attention to drift. You also get a sense of how Prague’s different areas connect, which is hard to judge if you’re only walking between points.
At this stage, listen to the guide’s cues about what you’re seeing. Small details—what a tower represented, why a structure matters—land much better when they’re tied to the view you’re getting right now, not later when you’re back in your hotel.
Letná Park: Riding at Height With the Best Photo Angles

At Letná Park, you’ll ride in the park area and enjoy scenic views from higher ground. This stop runs about 15 minutes, and it’s one of the strongest “night Prague” sections because the views read clearly after dark.
Letná is all about perspective. You get open angles on the city and a feeling of scale that’s tough from street level. And since you’re on a trike rather than walking the whole way, you can actually spend that time looking out—not just negotiating steep paths.
If your priority is photos, this is the point where you’ll want to slow down your own habits. Don’t rush past the view because your next stop is famous. Letná is the moment when Prague looks like Prague all at once.
Prague Metronome: A Statue Story You Can’t Ignore

The tour then goes to the Prague Metronome. There’s a history explanation tied to the Joseph Stalin statue here and what happened to his statue—an unusual topic, but a memorable one.
This is the kind of stop that makes a guided tour worth it. Without context, the Metronome might look like just another odd landmark. With the story, it becomes a timeline you can picture.
This stop is also about time-management: you get about 15 minutes, which is enough for the explanation and a viewpoint moment. It’s not a lecture. It’s a quick, practical piece of context so you’ll recognize what you’re looking at later.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Prague
Letná Viewpoint: Five Bridges in One Line

At the Letná Viewpoint, you get panoramic views of Prague, including the chance to see five bridges together in one line. You’ll also spot the Office of the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic from the area.
This is where the ride pays off most. Standing in the right spot gives you a sweeping city picture, but on foot you’d lose time moving between viewpoints. On the trikes, you get the big view without turning it into a half-day hike.
If you want night photos, this is a good time to take your photos before you head into denser streets—because later you’ll be close to crowds and landmarks where it’s harder to set up your camera position.
Prague Castle From Outside: Big Views Without the Inside Rush

Next is Prague Castle. Important note: you only see it from outside, and the stop covers history plus a viewpoint moment. You’ll also see St. Vitus Cathedral from outside, not as an interior visit.
This kind of stop is ideal for a night tour. Inside tickets and long lines don’t fit the pacing of a 2.5-hour ride. Instead, you get the castle presence—its scale, its setting—and you learn what matters without spending your night in queues.
Plan for what this isn’t. It’s not a “go inside and take your time” experience. If you want the interiors, you’ll still do those separately. But as a visual capstone in an electric night ride, it hits the mark.
Strahovský Klášter (Strahovsky Klaster): Views Plus Monastery Beer

Then you reach Strahovsky Klaster. You’ll see a beautiful church and a panoramic view point from height. And there’s a fun added element: Monastery Beer is offered at this stop.
That beer moment changes the vibe. It’s not just another photo stop—it becomes a pause where you slow down and feel like you’re part of the evening, not racing through it. If you’re the type who enjoys small local touches, this is one of the better “included” add-ons on the route.
The stop is about 10 minutes, so don’t expect a full tasting flight. But it’s enough time to enjoy a sip and reset before the next ride segment.
Lennon Wall to Charles Bridge: From Expression to Iconic River Views
From Strahov, you head to Lennonova zed (Lennon Wall) from outside, known as the Wall of Expression. It’s a quick stop, about 10 minutes, but it’s a striking scene—especially at night when the surface feels like a living message rather than a daytime tourist postcard.
Then comes Charles Bridge, one of the most iconic places in Prague. You’ll see beautiful views and ride along the river side, with the guide explaining the history and importance of the bridge. This stop is about 10 minutes.
A trike ride here is practical. Walking Charles Bridge at busy hours can be slow and crowded, and it can drain your energy. The guided ride helps you experience the area while still keeping things moving. And because the guide adds context, you’re not just staring at statues—you understand why they mattered and how the bridge fits into Prague’s story.
Kafka Museum, Rudolfinum, and Pariska Street: Big Names Without the Crowding
After Charles Bridge, the tour continues past Franz Kafka Muzeum from outside, including mention of the pissing sculptures and Franz Kafka. Next is Rudolfinum, again from outside, with an explanation of the building’s importance.
Then you drive on Pařížská Street, which is described as Prague’s most expensive street. You’ll see premium brand names like ROLEX from outside.
These segments work well on a night trike tour because you get the “what is this place?” education without losing time trying to fit museum visits into a tight schedule. Also, driving past areas like this helps you get a sense of how neighborhoods and social vibes shift across the city.
Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock Zone
Finally, you reach Stare Mesto (Old Town), with a stop at Old Town Square. This is where you’ll see the area around the Astronomical Clock, and you’ll get historical background during the short pause.
This is a good capstone because Old Town is the mental image most people carry before arriving. Even if you don’t spend hours inside every corner, having the guide explain what you’re looking at makes the square feel more meaningful than just a photo backdrop.
The tour loops back to Štěpánská 55 to end. If you want to continue exploring on your own, it’s also a convenient base.
Price and Value: Why This Tour Can Be a Bargain
At $3.56 per person, this price looks almost unreal compared with what you typically pay for guided night tours in Europe. The big reason it can make sense is that you’re getting several “value levers” at once: electric trike use, a guide, a 10-minute supervised training, water, and raincoats if needed.
You are also covering a wide swath of Prague’s highlights in about 2 hours 30 minutes, with multiple viewpoint moments. For short stays, that’s often the difference between seeing Prague’s top landmarks and spending the whole night figuring out transport between them.
What’s not included is also clear: there’s no food and no drinks beyond what’s offered at the monastery beer stop. If you’re building your own night plan, budget for personal snacks and drinks outside of that.
Who Should Book This Electric Trike Night Tour
This is best for you if:
- you want to see Prague highlights in a single evening
- you’re new to the city and want a guide to handle the “where should I go next?” problem
- you prefer getting viewpoints with less walking
- you want the safety comfort of a short training before riding
It’s less ideal if:
- you want deep inside visits at every stop
- you’re traveling with very young kids (this tour isn’t for children under 10)
- you’re strongly focused on spending long stretches in one area
The maximum group size is 10 travelers, which is a big plus. Small groups make it easier to get help, follow instructions, and keep the ride feeling controlled.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Night Ride
Dress for a cool Prague night and expect you’ll be outside for a while. Closed-toe shoes help with general comfort, and layers make it easier to handle temperature changes.
Also, pay attention during training and follow the guide’s pace. On electric trikes, smooth control matters more than speed. Your best experience comes when you treat the ride like a guided “moving viewpoint”—look up, take the stops seriously, and don’t rush to the next turn.
If you’re sensitive to crowds, the ride format still won’t make Old Town and Charles Bridge empty, but it helps you experience them without spending all your time stalled in foot traffic.
Should You Book This Tour?
I’d book this Electric Trike Night Tour if you want a high-value evening in Prague with a real sense of safety and a guided route through the city’s biggest sights. The combo of training, knowledgeable context from the guide (including Prince’s safety-focused approach), and the viewpoint stops at Letná makes it a strong fit for first-timers.
If you’re hoping for lots of inside museum time or long stops at each landmark, plan other activities for daytime and treat this as your night highlight run. For most people, that balance is exactly the right way to do Prague.
FAQ
How long is the Electric Trike Night Tour in Prague?
The tour runs about 2 hours 30 minutes.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
Do I need experience to drive the e-trike?
No driving experience is required. You start with a supervised 10-minute training session on the e-trikes.
What is the minimum age to drive the e-trike?
The minimum age to drive is 18+ years.
Can children ride on this tour?
Yes. Children ages 10–17 can sit on the rear seat with an adult. The tour is not applicable for children below 10 years of age.
What’s included in the price?
Included items are comfortable trikes, raincoats (if needed), 10 minutes of training, a tour guide, and water at the meeting point.
Where is the meeting point?
You’ll meet at Štěpánská 55, 110 00 Praha 1-Nové Město, Czechia, and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.

































