REVIEW · PRAGUE
1.5h Prague E-Scooter Panoramic Tour small-group with PragueWay
Book on Viator →Operated by PragueWay Tours · Bookable on Viator
Scooting through Prague feels like cheating. This 1h 40m small-group ride lines up major sights fast, with guide talk that helps you understand what you’re seeing, from Lennonova zeď to the Prague Castle area. I also love the practical extras at the start, like helmet + scooter included, plus coffee and water to steady your nerves. One thing to consider: you do need solid bike balance because scooter riding skill is required, even though they teach you at the beginning.
What makes it work in real life is the pace and group size. With a max of 9 riders, it stays calm, and guides such as Lucy, Alex, and David are praised for being patient when people feel rusty. If the weather turns, you can request rain ponchos, and winter gloves are provided, so you’re not stuck waiting around in bad conditions.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Feel Right Away
- Price and What Makes This One Worth $62.89
- Where the Tour Starts: Mostecká and a Quick Setup
- The Riding Reality: Training, Pace, and Balance
- Lennonova zeď (John Lennon Wall) and Kampa: Street Art With a Message
- Charles Bridge Without Getting Trampled: Old Stone, Baroque Statues, Big Legends
- Kampa Island Between Two Worlds: Čertovka and the Park Side
- Strahov Monastery and Strahov Library: Monks, Books, and a Second-Oldest Brewery
- Petřín Park and the Hill That Built Prague
- Petřín Lookout Tower: Eiffel-Style, Two Platforms, and a Real View
- Prague Castle: One View That Explains a Thousand Years
- Letná Park and the Stalin Monument: Views With a Political Past
- Franz Kafka Stop and the Hradčany Ride-Through
- What’s Included vs Not Included: Plan Like a Local
- Who Should Book This E-Scooter Tour (and Who Should Skip)
- Should You Book PragueWay’s Panoramic E-Scooter Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague E-Scooter Panoramic Tour?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Do I need prior experience riding an e-scooter?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What happens if it rains?
- Who can participate?
- Where do I meet and where does it end?
Key Highlights You’ll Feel Right Away

- Helmet and e-scooter rental included in the price
- Small group limit of 9 so the route feels controlled, not chaotic
- English guide commentary, plus audio guides in German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Russian
- Coffee, water, and training at the meeting point to start you off strong
- Weather support: rain ponchos on request and gloves in winter season
- A panoramic best-of route linking Kampa, Charles Bridge, Strahov, Petřín, Castle District, and Letná
Price and What Makes This One Worth $62.89

At $62.89 per person, the big question is what you’re really buying: time, ease, and guidance. You’re not just renting a scooter. The price includes the scooter, a helmet, training time at the start, and unlimited water at the meeting point. On top of that, you get coffee and water, and they plan for rain with ponchos on request.
For a short 1 hour 40 minutes, this is a value play. Instead of doing a long day of walking between separate viewpoints, you get a guided route that hits major Prague icons plus a few “story stops” that add meaning. The trade-off is that you must be comfortable riding—no lingering too long at every corner—because you’re moving as a group.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
Where the Tour Starts: Mostecká and a Quick Setup

You meet at Mostecká 53/4 in Malá Strana, and the tour ends back at the same place. It’s set up so you can arrive using public transportation, and you’ll use a mobile ticket. Bring an ID or passport, just in case they ask.
At the meeting point, you’ll get the stuff that makes the ride smooth: the e-scooter, the helmet, and the early-stage training. This matters because Prague streets can be busy and uneven in spots, so you’re learning the scooter rhythm before you’re anywhere near the busiest photo areas. You’re also handed unlimited water, plus coffee, which is a small thing that makes the first 20 minutes a lot easier.
The Riding Reality: Training, Pace, and Balance

Here’s the honest part. The tour data says bike riding skill is absolutely necessary. That’s not marketing fluff; it’s the practical requirement that keeps the ride safe and the group from slowing down.
The good news is that they teach at the beginning and go slowly at first. Reviews also highlight guides who made first-timers feel safe and relaxed, including Lucy and Jakub. So if you’re nervous, you’re not alone. Just come ready to listen, keep your speed controlled, and follow the guide’s signals.
Also note the limits: children must be at least 150 cm tall (usually around 14 years old) to ride. People over 120 kg, pregnant women, and anyone under the influence of alcohol or drugs can’t participate on the scooter.
Lennonova zeď (John Lennon Wall) and Kampa: Street Art With a Message

Your first stop is Lennonova zeď in Kampa, close to Charles Bridge. It’s that long, colorful wall covered with layered graffiti, but it carries a real story about protest and symbolism.
The Lennon Wall began as a kind of fictitious tomb site for John Lennon after he was murdered. People then added symbols on an adjacent wall connected to his life and especially The Beatles. Today, the wall changes day to day with new texts and pictures, because the property owners are lenient about people adding their own message. Most messages still lean toward themes like love and peace.
Why this works on an e-scooter tour: you get the emotional context without needing to plan extra walking time. It’s quick, visual, and it sets the tone for Prague’s mix of art, politics, and everyday life.
Charles Bridge Without Getting Trampled: Old Stone, Baroque Statues, Big Legends

Next up is Charles Bridge, the oldest preserved bridge over the Vltava River in Prague and the second oldest preserved bridge in the Czech Republic. It was built in 1357, and there’s a legend about the foundation stone being laid on 9 July at 5:31 a.m., using the repeating number sequence 1-3-5-7-9-7-5-3-1.
What makes it feel special is the detail you might miss if you just hurry across. The bridge has 16 arches and a slight convex shape upstream. Over time, 30 baroque statues and sculptures were placed along the span, including the famous statue of Saint John of Nepomuk. It also used to be called just Stone Bridge or Prague Bridge.
The practical upside for you: you get to see the bridge’s scale and the statue rhythm while still moving through the city. The downside is simple—this is one of Prague’s busiest areas, so expect crowds and keep your focus on your scooter handling and where the group is headed.
Kampa Island Between Two Worlds: Čertovka and the Park Side

Kampa is an island in the Lesser Quarter, separated by the Čertovka mill drain. The northern part is built up, while the southern part is shaped more like a park.
The name Kampa shows up in the second half of the 18th century, and one likely theory connects it to the Latin word campus, meaning field—suggesting that flooding kept the island from being heavily built earlier. Kampa also became more defined when the terrain and the Čertovka streambed were adjusted.
Why include Kampa as part of this scooter route? Because it’s a change of texture. You get bridge energy and city density, then you’re close to a calmer river island setting. It helps you break up the day and not just “check boxes.”
Strahov Monastery and Strahov Library: Monks, Books, and a Second-Oldest Brewery

Strahov Monastery (Royal Canonry of Premonstratensians at Strahov) is one of the most important architectural sights in the Czech Republic. It was established in 1143, and it was restored after 1990.
Inside, you’ll find the Museum of National Literature, the Strahov Library, and the Strahov Gallery. The standout for book lovers is the Strahov Library: it keeps more than 200,000 books, including over 3,000 manuscripts and about 1,500 originals in a special depository. The library is organized into two halls—theological and philosophical—linked by a corridor.
There’s also a brewery story tied to the monastery complex: it’s described as the second oldest documented brewery in the region. Whether you’re a literature person or not, that adds a human twist. This wasn’t just a quiet intellectual bubble.
In a scooter tour, this stop is short, so you’ll want to use the time to focus on the most eye-catching areas and let the guide put the rest in context. The payoff is that you leave with more than photos—you understand why Strahov matters.
Petřín Park and the Hill That Built Prague

Then the route climbs into Petřín Hill and Petřín Park, right in the center of Prague. Petřín is 327 meters high, and at the top you find the lookout tower plus other buildings.
Even the name matters. “Petřín” is tied to stone (the Latin root for stone/marlstone), and stones mined there were used for major Prague constructions, including parts associated with Prague Castle and early bridges over the Vltava. Chronicler Kosmas described Petřín as very rocky, and you’ll also hear that Petřín mines were referenced in earlier writings.
This is a good stop for you because it shifts the experience from city-level sights to viewpoint-level thinking. It also gives you a psychological reset: you start seeing the city as a connected whole, not as separate monuments.
Petřín Lookout Tower: Eiffel-Style, Two Platforms, and a Real View
Petřín Lookout Tower was built for the 1891 Anniversary Exhibition as a free copy of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. It’s 63.5 meters tall, with foundations 11 meters deep, and it weighs about 175 tonnes.
The structure is an octagonal tube with a lift inside, plus two spiral staircases of 299 steps each—one for going up and one for going down. There are two lookout platforms: one at about 20 meters and another at about 55 meters.
On a clear day, the view can stretch far across Bohemia, with Říp Mountain and the Central Bohemian Uplands to the north, plus the Giant Mountains massif to the north-east. The south-east view can be limited by the Brdy Hills.
The key value here: this tower stop gives you scale. You see Prague Castle and the city core in one frame, which makes the earlier sights click. The possible drawback is weather. Prague views depend on visibility, so aim for the best weather you can on your tour day.
Prague Castle: One View That Explains a Thousand Years
Prague Castle is the kind of sight that makes you stop talking for a minute. It’s one of the largest castle compounds in the world, with palaces, churches, gardens, and winding corners. It has symbolized Czech state identity for more than a thousand years.
The complex dates back to the 9th century and served as a seat of Czech kings and later presidents. It includes St. Vitus Cathedral, a place of coronation and burial for Czech kings. It’s also listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the largest ancient castle in the world.
On this tour, you’ll get the panoramic view approach without the all-day grind. You don’t need to plan a separate “Castle day” to get the feeling of what makes Prague’s history feel so large.
One consideration: the castle district is a major walking zone even when you arrive by scooter. Keep your eyes on where the group is heading, because you’re in an area where getting lost costs time fast.
Letná Park and the Stalin Monument: Views With a Political Past
Letná Park is Prague’s second-largest park and a big open green space with a view over the Vltava River and the city. Its name is linked to Leteň, meaning Sunny Hill.
Letná has served as a gathering place for armies and ceremonies over time, including coronations. In the 1950s, it became known for the monument often called the queue for meat, dedicated to dictator J. V. Stalin. The monument is 65 meters tall, described as the second-largest of its kind in Europe.
What I like about placing Letná later in the route: you’ve already built up the “old Prague” story with Charles Bridge and Castle. Now you get a different angle—an open viewpoint where you can see how the city’s politics also shaped its physical spaces.
Franz Kafka Stop and the Hradčany Ride-Through
The tour also includes a stop that ties into Franz Kafka, a German-writing Bohemian Jewish novelist who is closely connected to Prague. He was born in the Old Town and studied law, then worked for an insurance company. He never married and, in the biography shared, he’s described as a non-smoker, abstinent, and vegetarian. He also became ill with tuberculosis.
His native house called U věže (By the Tower) stood at today’s Maiselova and U radnice streets, but it later burned down. The square next to it carries his name.
From there, the route rides through Prague’s UNESCO castle district, Hradčany. This matters because UNESCO areas can feel like a museum label until you travel through them. You’ll feel the district’s scale and how the streets connect the viewpoints.
What’s Included vs Not Included: Plan Like a Local
Included:
- English-speaking guide
- Training and a helmet
- Audio guides in German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Russian
- Rain poncho on request at the meeting point
- Gloves in winter season
- Unlimited water at the meeting point
- Coffee and water at the departure point
Not included:
- Food and drinks during the tour
- Hotel pick-up/drop-off (available on request at extra cost)
So bring a simple plan: eat before you meet, and if you need snacks, pack them. You’ll have unlimited water and coffee to keep you going, but you shouldn’t count on a meal being part of the 1h 40m format.
Who Should Book This E-Scooter Tour (and Who Should Skip)
This is a great fit if:
- You want Prague’s top hits in a short window
- You like guided explanations while you’re moving
- You’re okay with a scooter ride and basic balancing
- You want lots of viewpoints without a long walking day
It’s probably not for you if:
- You’re not confident riding a bike or balancing on wheels
- You need long stops where you can wander off alone
- You fall outside the participation limits (height, weight, pregnancy)
If you’re a nervous first-timer, don’t auto-reject it. The tour’s setup includes slow teaching at the beginning, and multiple guides have a track record of making people feel safe and relaxed.
Should You Book PragueWay’s Panoramic E-Scooter Tour?
Yes, if your goal is efficiency with meaning. This ride is priced like an organized experience, not a raw scooter rental, and the inclusions add up: helmet, scooter, training, unlimited water, coffee, and weather gear. The itinerary also avoids the common problem of seeing Prague as disconnected photos. You get the emotional context at Lennonova zeď, the scale at Charles Bridge, the literature and monastery atmosphere at Strahov, and the viewpoint logic at Petřín and Prague Castle.
I’d say book it especially if you want a fun, guided day that’s active but not exhausting. The one real decision point is your riding comfort. If you can follow instructions and keep your balance, you’ll have a lot of fun while learning why each stop matters.
FAQ
How long is the Prague E-Scooter Panoramic Tour?
It’s about 1 hour 40 minutes.
What’s included in the tour price?
The price includes the English-speaking guide, e-scooter rental, a helmet, training, unlimited water at the meeting point, and coffee and water at departure. Rain ponchos are available on request at the meeting point, and gloves are provided in winter season. Audio guides are available in German, Spanish, French, Italian, and Russian.
Do I need prior experience riding an e-scooter?
You do need basic bike riding skill. The team teaches you at the beginning and goes slowly to get you started, but the requirement is still there.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes. The guide provides commentary in English, and audio guides are also available in several other languages.
What happens if it rains?
Light rain is not a reason to cancel. If heavy rain is expected, you’ll be offered a full refund or a reschedule.
Who can participate?
Children must be at least 150 cm tall (about 14 years old). Pregnant women, people over 120 kg, and people under the influence of alcohol or drugs are not allowed to ride.
Where do I meet and where does it end?
You start at Mostecká 53/4, Malá Strana, 118 00 Prague, and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.






























