REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague Ultimate e-Scooter City Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Segway Point Prague · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Prague on an e-scooter is a smart way to see more than you think you can. I like how the ride stitches together major sights and little detours like Lennon’s Wall, and you also get the fun of switching surfaces. One possible drawback: it’s still a 3-hour ride with hills and narrow historic streets, so you’ll want to feel comfortable sitting and steering for a bit.
The tour is built around a live English guide plus an included audio guide (Czech, German, Italian, French, Spanish), which helps you keep up even when you’re gliding fast. You’re also geared up like it’s a real outing: helmet, e-scooters, and even a practice run first. If you’re hoping for a quiet walking-only pace, this one won’t be that.
In This Review
- Key takeaways before you go
- Why a Prague e-scooter tour fits the city so well
- Starting behind Charles Bridge: get set up before you roll
- Lesser Town, Kampa Park, and Lennon’s Wall on the first sweep
- Charles Bridge to the Jewish Quarter: peeing statues and a real pause for stories
- Old Town Square, the heliocentric clock, and St Nicholas in one loop
- Vltava River ride and Letná Park beer-garden views
- Royal Gardens, Prague Castle changing of the guards, and the climb up
- What $78 buys you: value, pace, and ride variety
- Who this Prague e-scooter tour suits best
- Should you book this Prague Ultimate e-scooter city tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague Ultimate e-Scooter City Tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Is the tour guided?
- What language options are available for the audio guide?
- What’s included in the price?
- Do I need to bring rain gear?
- Are hotel pick-up and drop-off included?
- What surfaces does the tour ride on?
- What key places are covered during the 3-hour ride?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
- Can I reserve now and pay later?
Key takeaways before you go
- Practice run first: You test the scooter before the main loop starts.
- A full-center route: You hit Lesser Town, Charles Bridge area, Old Town Square, and the Jewish Quarter.
- Different terrain by design: Gravel, rocks, and narrow old streets make it feel like more than a flat city ride.
- Classic Prague plus oddball details: Peeing Statues, a small hidden beach, and the party district all show up.
- Castle views without the chaos: You ride up toward Prague Castle and see the changing of guards.
Why a Prague e-scooter tour fits the city so well

Prague’s center is packed. On foot, you can spend half your time walking between highlights, then miss the in-between corners that make the city feel real. This style of tour solves that by letting you cover ground fast, while still getting close to the streets, bridges, and viewpoints.
I also like that it isn’t just a checklist. The route includes scenic river time along the Vltava, then climbs toward the hills for big views over the “sea of towers.” Those hilltop moments are the kind of payoff that turns a normal sightseeing day into a memory.
And because it’s an e-scooter tour with a practice run, you get a smoother learning curve than you might expect from a first-time scooter experience. That matters when you’re sharing historic lanes and dealing with turns near landmarks.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Prague
Starting behind Charles Bridge: get set up before you roll

You start at the Tourist Information Center just behind Charles Bridge, on the Prague Castle side of the river. Ending back at the same meeting point keeps things simple, and you don’t have to plan a second journey.
Right away, you’ll be given the equipment you need: an e-scooter and a helmet. There’s also a practice run before the tour, which is key. You’re not thrown into the traffic-and-cobbles energy until you’ve had a minute to get the feel of the scooter.
The tour includes a free drink too, which is a small thing that helps when the day feels like a lot. You’ll be moving, stopping, and moving again, so it’s nice to have that built in rather than hunting for a café mid-route. If rain pops up, you may also get a raincoat (optional is listed), so it’s good to pack some flexibility in your day.
Lesser Town, Kampa Park, and Lennon’s Wall on the first sweep

The first part leans into the “romantic Prague” side, starting with Lesser Town. Then you roll through Kampa Park, which is the kind of spot that makes you slow down just because the setting feels calmer than the main streets.
After that, you pass Lennon’s Wall, with John Lennon-inspired graffiti and lyrics from Beatles songs. This is one of those locations where the sight itself is famous, but the tour makes it more meaningful by placing it in sequence—so you see how it fits into the surrounding neighborhood vibe, not as a random photo stop.
From here, the ride keeps gathering momentum toward the Charles Bridge area. You’ll get the sense that you’re not only visiting Prague landmarks, you’re moving through the city the way locals experience it: through pockets of art, gardens, and old streets in between the big monuments.
Watch for: The narrow lanes and turns during this early segment are where the scooter feels most different from walking. When you’re moving at scooter speed, you notice the street geometry faster—good if you like architecture and street corners.
Charles Bridge to the Jewish Quarter: peeing statues and a real pause for stories

Next comes the Charles Bridge stretch, then you’re pointed toward a very Prague detail: the Peeing Statues outside the Franz Kafka Museum. Even if you’ve seen photos before, seeing them in context is fun. They’re not just the joke statue version. They’re placed in a very specific tourist-and-local traffic flow that feels like Prague’s sense of humor in stone.
Then you cross toward a small hidden Prague beach. That’s one of those details that makes an organized ride feel worth it. On your own, you might not know where to look. With a guide, the surprise becomes a destination rather than a lucky accident.
Crossing the river via the Mánes Bridge gets you to the Jewish Quarter area. This is where the tour turns from “cool streets” to “important places.” The Old-New Synagogue is included, and it’s described as the oldest preserved synagogue in Europe. That fact gives the stop extra weight, because it’s not simply sightseeing—it’s a chance to stand somewhere with deep historical continuity.
Old Town Square, the heliocentric clock, and St Nicholas in one loop

Once you’re in the heart of Old Town, the tour focuses on Old Town Square. This is the place where Prague’s layers show up at once: public space, religious architecture, and civic landmarks all packed into one view.
You’ll see monuments including a rare example of a heliocentric astronomical clock. Most clocks people encounter are either decorative or mechanical curiosities. A heliocentric clock connects Prague to a scientific story you can actually point to while you’re standing there.
The Baroque Church of St Nicholas is another must-see on this portion of the tour. It’s the kind of stop where the exterior is impressive, but the value here is the timing: you arrive on a route that already warmed you up with river views and neighborhood texture. So you’re not just snapping pictures at a random building—you’re absorbing how the square changes the feel of the day.
Then comes a different side of Old Town: party district streets and music club energy. You’ll be shown the party district area and given tips on where to go dance or drink later. That’s helpful because Prague nightlife is spread out, and a local guide can steer you toward what fits your night rather than leaving you stuck with only major attractions.
Small practical tip: If you want nightlife options to make sense, pay attention during these sections. The tour is moving, but it’s the best time to ask where the vibe is right for your taste.
A few more Prague tours and experiences worth a look
Vltava River ride and Letná Park beer-garden views

After Old Town, you ride alongside the Vltava River. This segment matters because it breaks up the dense historic walking-feeling with open sightlines. On a scooter, the river approach also gives you a steadier, calmer pace to look around.
Then you visit Beer Gardens on top of Letná Park. This is one of those Prague moments that feels like you’re looking at the city from the outside in a good way—wide angles, towers in the distance, and that classic “old city” panorama.
The Prague Metronome is included as well. It might look like a simple landmark at first glance, but when you see it as part of a longer climb-and-view arc, it makes the route feel designed rather than accidental. You get a sequence of perspective changes.
Expect breathtaking views of the hundreds of towers of the old city. That phrase may sound like marketing copy, but the practical point is real: this is where Prague photographs best, and it’s hard to recreate on your own without timing and route planning.
Royal Gardens, Prague Castle changing of the guards, and the climb up
From Letná, you pass around the Royal Gardens and journey up toward Prague Castle. You’ll see the changing of guards. That’s the kind of moment that turns the hilltop effort into something concrete, not just a scenic pause.
Once you’re near the Castle area, the tour shifts again into winding old streets dating back to the Middle Ages. That’s where an e-scooter can feel like the sweet spot. You can keep moving without losing the street atmosphere that makes Prague so photogenic.
Strahov Monastery is on the itinerary too. Monastery stops are often either “architectural photo” or “quiet interior” depending on what you can access. Even without focusing on interiors, the approach and setting help you understand why people describe Prague as layered and old.
Finally, you venture through winding paths of Petřín Hill. This is another viewpoint-driven section, and it’s where the ride feels like its own attraction. Petřín’s paths give you a sense of being above the city, while still moving through the textured streets rather than looking at Prague from behind a fence.
What $78 buys you: value, pace, and ride variety

At $78 per person for about 3 hours, the value comes from three things: coverage, guided context, and the scooter experience itself.
Coverage is the big one. You’re not just hitting a single neighborhood. You’re moving through Lesser Town, the Charles Bridge area, the Jewish Quarter, Old Town Square, river views, Letná, Prague Castle, and then into Strahov and Petřín. That’s a lot for one afternoon.
Guided context is the second. The tour includes an English live guide, plus an audio guide in five languages (Czech, German, Italian, French, Spanish). So if you want the story without relying only on the live guide’s immediate explanations, you have backup.
Ride variety is the third. The route explicitly includes different kinds of surfaces—gravel, rocks, and narrow old streets. That means it feels like a “Prague route” rather than a smooth path that never changes. You get more sensory variety, which makes the time feel shorter in a good way.
You’re also not paying extra for key basics: helmet, scooter, and a free drink. A practice run helps you get comfortable before the main tour begins, and that reduces stress during the first big landmarks. Optional raincoat availability is also a thoughtful touch when you’re visiting a city where weather can shift.
Where the value might not fit: If you prefer long stops, slow walking, or you want a purely museum-heavy schedule, you might feel the pace is brisk. This tour is designed to move and show you many places, not to linger for long indoor sessions.
Who this Prague e-scooter tour suits best

This tour is a great match if you want a first-time orientation to Prague’s historic core. You’ll see major sights like Charles Bridge and Old Town Square, but you’ll also get the extra flavor: Lennon’s Wall, the Peeing Statues near Kafka’s museum, the small hidden beach, and the party district tips.
It also fits if you like active sightseeing. You’re outdoors a lot, you’re riding, and you’re switching between viewpoints. The hills toward Prague Castle and Petřín are part of the payoff.
If you’re sensitive to crowds, it’s still a city-center experience, but the scooter format can help you navigate more efficiently than walking long distances.
If you’re bringing a group decision, this is also a good “team” tour: one guide keeps everyone oriented, and the audio options support different learning styles while you’re moving.
Should you book this Prague Ultimate e-scooter city tour?

Book it if you want a 3-hour hit that combines big sights, Prague quirks, and hilltop views without making your day a marathon of walking. The included practice run, helmet, live English guide, and audio guide make it feel well set up. The route also looks built for real variety, with river time, old streets, and viewpoint climbs.
Skip it if you’re looking for a slow, quiet day or if you want lots of long indoor time. Also consider whether the mix of surfaces and narrow streets is something you’ll enjoy rather than stress over.
One more vote for booking: the tour is led by a live English guide, and names like MacKenzie have been highlighted for being friendly and able to answer questions with confidence. That kind of guide energy matters when you’re covering a lot—because it turns “I saw it” into “I understood it.”
If your goal is the maximum Prague feel in one afternoon, this is a strong bet.
FAQ
How long is the Prague Ultimate e-Scooter City Tour?
It lasts about 3 hours.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at the Tourist Information Center just behind Charles Bridge on the Prague Castle side of the river, and it ends back at the same meeting point.
Is the tour guided?
Yes. It has a live English guide.
What language options are available for the audio guide?
The audio guide is included in Czech, German, Italian, French, and Spanish.
What’s included in the price?
The tour includes an e-scooter, a helmet, a professional guide, an optional raincoat, a free drink, and an audio guide. A practice run is also included.
Do I need to bring rain gear?
A raincoat is optional and is available as part of the tour setup.
Are hotel pick-up and drop-off included?
No. Hotel pick-up and drop-off are not included.
What surfaces does the tour ride on?
You’ll ride on a mix of surfaces, including gravel, rocks, and narrow old streets.
What key places are covered during the 3-hour ride?
You’ll see highlights such as Lesser Town, Kampa Park, Lennon’s Wall, the Charles Bridge area, the Jewish Quarter including the Old-New Synagogue, Old Town Square, Letná Park with beer gardens, Prague Metronome, Prague Castle (including changing of guards), Strahov Monastery, and Petřín Hill.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Can I reserve now and pay later?
Yes. You can reserve your spot and pay later.





































