REVIEW · PRAGUE
Live-Guided 180 min Glorious e-Scooter and eBike tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Prague On Segway · Bookable on Viator
Prague clicks into place on two wheels. This 180-minute live-guided ride mixes e-scooters and e-bikes with quick stops at the city’s best photo points, including the Castle area, bridges, and walls that define Prague.
I like two things most: the amount of ground you cover without turning the day into a long slog, and the way the guide keeps the experience practical and fun. Guides such as Vladimir, Rasho, Sebastian, Andre, and Rush are repeatedly described as friendly, upbeat, and ready to adjust the pace.
One thing to consider: the stop times are short (many are around 5 minutes), so if you want slow museum-style visits, you’ll need to plan extra time later.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll feel right away
- What you’re buying: a guided e-scooter/e-bike tour that covers Prague fast
- Meeting at Maltezské náměstí and the 5–10 minute safety test-drive
- Rolling out: getting your bearings at the start point and first viewpoints
- Letná Park and the Metronome: the view and the story beat
- Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral: the big landmark, the quick taste
- Strahov Monastery Brewery and the 12th-century monastery-to-views run
- Kampa Park and the John Lennon Wall: iconic and easy to remember
- Charles Bridge and Vltava Beach: photos in motion on Prague’s best-known river moments
- Kafka peeing statues, the Jewish Quarter, and Old Town Square: quick stops that help you plan the rest
- Rudolfinum and finishing strong: a calmer close after big landmarks
- Who this tour suits best (and who should think twice)
- Should you book this Glorious e-Scooter and eBike tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the tour?
- Where do I meet and where does the tour end?
- How much does it cost?
- Do I need a driver’s license?
- Do I need a helmet?
- What’s the minimum age?
- What happens if it rains?
- Is food included?
- Is there a photo option?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key highlights you’ll feel right away

- A fast orientation route through major Prague sights without a full walking tour pace
- A 5–10 minute safety training and supervised test-drive before you roll out
- No license required for e-scooters in the bicycle transport category
- Photo service included if you ask the guide to take your picture
- Small group size (max 16) so you’re not lost in a crowd
- Coffee/tea/water in the office keeps you comfortable before you start
What you’re buying: a guided e-scooter/e-bike tour that covers Prague fast
For $119.21 per person, you’re not just paying for a ride—you’re paying for a guided, stop-and-go route that strings together Prague’s most recognizable viewpoints in about three hours. That’s the core value here. Many Prague “highlights” tours either move too slowly (lots of walking) or move too quickly (you barely get bearings). This format aims for the sweet spot: you see a lot, you pause enough to take photos, and the guide handles the flow.
The tour also bundles a few practical perks that add up: headgears are provided (and they help you match a helmet size), you can ask for a photo service before you depart, and there’s unlimited tea/water/coffee in the office. You’ll also get a mobile ticket and English guiding, with confirmation coming at booking.
The tradeoff is time. Most stops are brief by design, usually around 5 minutes (with a couple longer breaks like the Castle area and Strahov Monastery Brewery). If you’re the type who wants to linger inside places, this tour works best as a first-day orientation or as a way to build a shortlist for later.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Prague
Meeting at Maltezské náměstí and the 5–10 minute safety test-drive

You’ll start and end back at the meeting point at Prague On Segway & Prague On e-Scooter on Maltezské náměstí (Prague 1). This tour begins from the office directly—no complicated pickup maze. It’s also listed as near public transportation, which matters because the best way to enjoy Prague is to keep your day flexible.
Before riding, there’s a safety training plus a supervised test-drive that takes about 5–10 minutes—and that time is not counted inside the tour duration. Headgears are recommended, and helmets are mandatory for younger riders (the rules state under 16 mandatory; the operator also flags stricter requirements for minors in general). Good news: they provide helmet sizes.
The tour is set up so you don’t need a driver’s license. E-scooters in the Czech Republic are treated in the bicycle transport category, which is exactly what this tour leans on.
One small but important realism check: you can’t ride if you’re under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or strong medicine. And if you’re traveling with kids, the minimum age is 7 years old. In light rain, raincoats are provided free, and the tour runs as planned. In extreme weather, it can be rescheduled or canceled with a full refund for safety.
Rolling out: getting your bearings at the start point and first viewpoints

Your first stop is essentially the kickoff: Prague On Segway & Prague On e-Scooter at Maltezské náměstí. This is where you learn the basics before Prague’s hills and tight streets take over. One practical detail from rider feedback: the scooters move when you press with your thumb, which many people found relaxing because it feels more controlled than “always-on” motion.
From there, the tour immediately shifts into sightseeing mode with quick hits that help you orient fast. This matters because Prague can feel like a puzzle the first day—rivers, hills, bridges, and the Castle looming in the distance. The route is built to show you the city’s structure early, so later when you walk, you’ll understand where you are.
Stop by stop, the pace stays readable: you arrive, you park the scooter/e-bike safely, you get a short guided moment, then you roll again.
Letná Park and the Metronome: the view and the story beat
Letná Park is one of those Prague stops that makes you instantly understand why visitors keep coming back. The itinerary frames it as the best view, and the timing is quick—around 5 minutes—so think of it as a viewpoint snapshot, not a long picnic. Still, getting this perspective early sets the stage for everything else.
Then comes the Metronome, described here as the former Stalin monument. The guide uses this kind of stop to help you read the city like a timeline: what was built, what was repurposed, and how public spaces change meaning over time. Again, it’s a short 5-minute moment, so you’ll want to listen and look at once rather than trying to do a deep photo session on the first pass.
If you’re traveling with teenagers or first-time scooter riders, this section is a good confidence builder: scenic payoffs without turning the ride into a marathon.
Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral: the big landmark, the quick taste
Next you’ll reach the Prague Castle area with a longer 20-minute stop. Prague Castle is described as the largest castle in the world, and regardless of how you personally measure that kind of claim, the point is the same: you’re standing near Prague’s biggest visual magnet. The time here is generous compared with other stops, so use it for both photos and orientation.
Right after that, the tour includes St. Vitus Cathedral with about 5 minutes. The value of a short cathedral stop on wheels is simple: you get the exterior presence and the guide’s context without burning half a day waiting in lines or losing your group in a building. The drawback is equally simple: you won’t have time for a slow, detailed interior visit. Plan to return on your own if you want that.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Prague
Strahov Monastery Brewery and the 12th-century monastery-to-views run
Then the route turns to Strahovsky Klaster, a monastery from the 12th century, with roughly 5 minutes. This is one of the charms of the tour format: you don’t just chase famous monuments—you get contrast. Prague isn’t only about postcard squares; it also has quiet, older corners that make the city feel lived-in.
After that, you’ll spend about 15 minutes at the Strahov Monastery Brewery (described as dating to the 15th century). This is one of the longer breaks, so it’s the stop where you’ll most feel the “tour” part rather than only the “ride” part. If you want a breather, this is where it happens.
Then the focus shifts to Petrin and the Petrin tower (about 5 minutes) followed by Petrin Park with several viewpoints (another 5 minutes). The combo makes sense: tower landmark first, then viewpoints to widen your angle. The short timing means you’ll need to accept a quick look rather than a long wander, but it’s still a strong use of time because these are natural places to stop for photos and take a breath mid-ride.
Kampa Park and the John Lennon Wall: iconic and easy to remember

At Kampa Park (Kampa Island) you get another quick 5-minute pause. Kampa is the kind of place where the walk from scooter to viewpoint feels like a tiny reset—enough time to frame river-and-city scenes and then get back on the route.
Then you reach the John Lennon Wall, with 10 minutes. This longer stop is the right choice. It gives you time to read the message vibe and sign your own name if you want, without rushing so hard that it feels like check-in trivia. If you’re trying to bring home something beyond photos, this is the place.
A plus here: you can handle the emotional tone of a street like this without trying to “tour” it like a museum. It’s personal, expressive, and quick to engage with even on a tight schedule.
Charles Bridge and Vltava Beach: photos in motion on Prague’s best-known river moments

The tour hits Charles Bridge next (about 5 minutes), described as the oldest bridge of Prague. That time is short, which means your strategy should be simple: go for one memorable shot, then listen for the guide’s quick context. If you want a long walk across the bridge, save that for later.
After Charles Bridge, you’ll enjoy Vltava Beach with a short drive near the riverfront. The description calls out views of Charles Bridge plus photo time with the swans and nutrias. This is exactly the kind of stop that makes a scooter tour feel like more than just landmarks. You’re not stuck indoors, and the riverfront wildlife moment is the kind of detail you remember after the crowds fade.
This section is brief by design—about 5 minutes—so don’t expect a long stop. Do expect quick scenery and a satisfying change of rhythm right after the bridge.
Kafka peeing statues, the Jewish Quarter, and Old Town Square: quick stops that help you plan the rest
Your route then includes Franz Kafka Muzeum, specifically called out for the peeing statues, with about 2 minutes. Two minutes is basically a taste, not a full visit. Treat it like a photo-and-facts stop. If you want more time, you’ll know it after you see it.
Then the tour moves to the Prague Jewish Quarter, including the Jewish cemetery and the oldest synagogue of Europe, with about 5 minutes. This stop is sensitive in theme, and the value of a short guided pause is that you get enough context to orient yourself respectfully—without turning it into a fast, shallow pass. Still, it’s not long enough to “do” the area on your own schedule. Use the tour as a prompt to return later with more time.
Next is Old Town Hall with the Astronomical Clock Tower (about 5 minutes) followed by Old Town Square with Týn Church and the Jan Hus Monument (about 5 minutes). These are the Prague classics that define the skyline and the story. The short stop times can feel intense, but they’re also practical: you see what you’ll likely want to revisit once you understand where everything sits in relation to the rest of the city.
If you’re doing this tour early in your trip, this part helps you decide where to focus for the next day. If you’re doing it late, it still helps you connect dots you might have missed.
Rudolfinum and finishing strong: a calmer close after big landmarks
To wrap up, you’ll stop at Rudolfinum, described as the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra building. The timing is short—about 5 minutes—but it works as a finishing note because it shifts you from heavy sightseeing landmarks to a cultural landmark that signals modern Prague life.
By the time you head back to Maltezské náměstí, you’ll likely feel two things at once: you’ve seen a lot, and you still have questions you want to follow up. That’s a good sign. This tour doesn’t try to replace walking—its job is to help you understand the city’s layout and pick your next steps.
Who this tour suits best (and who should think twice)
This is a great fit if you want:
- A fast, guided overview of Prague that you can use to plan the rest of your trip
- A ride you can manage as a beginner, thanks to safety training and a short test-drive
- A day that mixes major landmarks with quick perspective breaks, including Kampa and the riverfront
It might be less ideal if you:
- Want to spend lots of time inside major sites rather than doing brief guided exterior passes
- Are traveling with someone who can’t comfortably ride for the full route duration
- Prefer slow museum pacing over a “see, stop, photo, move” rhythm
One small comfort tip: wear a bit of weather-ready clothing, even if the forecast looks okay. Prague can change mood quickly, and the tour is designed to keep going unless weather becomes extreme.
Should you book this Glorious e-Scooter and eBike tour?
If you’re deciding between a walking highlights tour and a scooter tour, I’d book this one as your first-day orientation—especially if you want Prague to click into place fast. The combination of short guided stops, real viewpoint payoff, and practical extras like helmets provided and tea/water/coffee in the office makes it good value for a limited time window.
I’d only hesitate if your dream day is slow and in-depth at a few places. This tour is about breadth and momentum. If that sounds like you, it’s a smart, efficient way to experience Prague without turning your trip into a workout.
FAQ
How long is the tour?
The tour duration is listed as about 3 hours. There is also a safety training and supervised test-drive that takes about 5–10 minutes, and that training time is not included in the tour duration.
Where do I meet and where does the tour end?
You meet at the Prague On Segway & Prague On e-Scooter location on Maltezské náměstí (Prague 1). The tour ends back at the same meeting point.
How much does it cost?
The price is $119.21 per person.
Do I need a driver’s license?
No. The tour notes that e-scooters in Czech Republic are in the bicycle transport category, so a driver’s license is not required.
Do I need a helmet?
Headgears are recommended. For minors, helmets are mandatory (the rules say under 16, and there is also a general note indicating stricter helmet rules for younger riders). Helmet sizes are provided.
What’s the minimum age?
The minimum age is 7 years old.
What happens if it rains?
In light rain, proper raincoats are provided free of charge and the tour runs as planned. In extreme weather, the tour may be rescheduled or canceled with a full refund for safety.
Is food included?
No. Food and drinks are not included, though they are optional.
Is there a photo option?
Yes. There is a photo service where you can ask the guide to take a camera before departure.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount paid is not refunded.




































