REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague: Tour by Electric Scooter or Cruiser eBike
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by ❤️Euro Segway Prague❤️ · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Prague rolls fast on an e-scooter. This 2-hour guided ride in central Prague mixes major sights with quick nature-and-view breaks, and I especially love the stop at John Lennon Wall and the panoramic payoff from Petřín Hill. You’re not stuck in a line, and the electric bike or scooter helps you cover ground efficiently while still stopping often enough to actually see what matters.
One consideration: the route is active. You’ll be riding through historic lanes and viewpoints, and it’s not suitable for pregnant women or anyone with pre-existing medical conditions. There are also clear limits like a 7+ minimum age and a 290 lb (145 kg) maximum weight, plus you’ll need to skip high-heeled shoes.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth planning for
- Why an electric scooter or eBike works so well in Prague
- Meeting at Euro Segway Prague (next to the Embassy of Japan) and getting set up
- The supervised test-drive: how they keep the ride smooth
- John Lennon Wall: the personal stop you’ll remember
- Kampa Island, Charles Bridge, and Prague’s “tight-turn” magic
- Franz Kafka Museum and the early culture hit
- Parks and river-adjacent pauses: Park Cihelna and Rudolfinum
- Old Town Square, St. Nicholas Church, and the feel of the center
- Pařížská Street and Letná Park: a change in viewpoint
- Prague Castle complex: cruising the largest one on earth
- Strahov Monastery panoramas from Petřín Park and Petřín Hill
- Ending back at the office and getting smart local recommendations
- 2 hours vs 3 hours: what the longer tour adds
- Price and value: is $76 a good deal for Prague?
- Who this tour suits best (and who should skip it)
- Should you book this Prague electric scooter or eBike tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the tour?
- What does the tour cost?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What’s included with the tour?
- What language is the guide?
- Do I need experience riding an electric scooter or eBike?
- Are there any age or weight limits?
- Is food included?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key highlights worth planning for

- John Lennon Wall signature stop: a guided moment where you can sign your name and make the trip feel personal
- Petřín Hill and Letná viewpoints: fast access to Prague’s big skyline views without turning it into an all-day trek
- Prague Castle complex circuit: you get the feel of the largest castle area in the world from the road, then transition to major viewpoints
- Charles Bridge and Old Town icons: classic sights like Old Town Square and St. Nicholas Church are built into the ride
- Strahov Monastery area panoramas: the tour doesn’t just point at views, it routes you to them
Why an electric scooter or eBike works so well in Prague

Prague’s charm is also its challenge: cobblestones, tight streets, and hills that add up fast. An electric scooter or cruiser eBike solves that problem in a practical way. You keep moving under your own control, but you’re not doing the whole city on foot.
I like that this kind of tour targets the “see it, then move on” rhythm. You get guided context at key stops, then you roll to the next area while the group stays together. With a small group capped at 15 people, you don’t feel like you’re being herded down a corridor.
Also, Prague’s top sights are spread out more than they look on a map. This tour’s route does the heavy lifting for you, tying together bridges, parks, and castle areas in one flow.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Prague
Meeting at Euro Segway Prague (next to the Embassy of Japan) and getting set up

The meeting point is next door to the Embassy of Japan, at Euro Segway Prague tours. That’s a helpful landmark because it’s easy to find and you’re starting in a central area, not at the edge of town.
Before you head out, you’ll get a safety briefing. You also get all the gear that matters for comfort and confidence:
- Helmets in all sizes
- Raincoats if needed
- Gloves throughout the winter season
- Unlimited water and coffee at the meeting point
It’s a small detail, but it changes how the first 20 minutes feel. Instead of scrambling for a drink or getting cold halfway through, you start prepared and stay in the game.
The supervised test-drive: how they keep the ride smooth

One thing I respect is the supervised test-drive and supervised training. It means you’re not thrown onto steep streets or crowded spots right away. You learn the basics—starting, stopping, turning—with an instructor watching.
This matters because Prague’s historic areas can be tricky on any wheels. Even if you’re already comfortable, a brief warm-up with the guide’s rules helps everyone stay calm and predictable.
It also makes the tour more welcoming for people who are trying something new, as long as they meet the basic limits and restrictions. The tour isn’t a casual “hop on and forget it” experience; it’s structured to keep riders safe.
John Lennon Wall: the personal stop you’ll remember

The tour’s early highlight is the John Lennon Wall. You’ll have a guided moment there, and you can sign your name on the wall.
That might sound like a fun extra, but it’s actually a good anchor for the whole tour. The Lennon Wall isn’t just a photo stop. It’s a place where people leave something behind, and the guided context helps you see why it’s more than street art.
After that, you roll toward the river and classic center-city sights. The mood shifts quickly from the creative energy of the wall to Prague’s old-world edges—bridges, historic streets, and riverside views.
Kampa Island, Charles Bridge, and Prague’s “tight-turn” magic

The route passes through Kampa Island and includes Charles Bridge with guided sightseeing. This is the heart of Prague’s postcard geography, and doing it by scooter or eBike makes it feel less rushed.
Kampa Island is where you start to notice how Prague mixes water, walkways, and old buildings in tight spaces. Charles Bridge is the obvious headline, but what I like is that you’re not just standing still for long stretches. You’re guided to the right places, then you move on before the area gets too repetitive.
There’s also a stop for Prague’s narrowest alley. That’s the kind of sight that’s easy to miss when you’re walking the city on your own. On wheels, you notice the micro-changes—how the city squeezes between buildings—and your guide points out what to look for.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
Franz Kafka Museum and the early culture hit

You’ll be riding past the Franz Kafka Museum, and it’s woven into the experience rather than treated like a separate ticketed attraction. I like this approach because it gives you a cultural thread without bogging the ride down.
Kafka matters in Prague for a reason people quickly understand once someone explains the connection clearly. Even if you don’t know the details, the guide’s framing helps it click with the city you’re seeing around you.
Then the tour keeps stacking culture and city texture: you move from the bridge-and-alley style scenes into areas where Prague’s public buildings and streets begin to feel more formal.
Parks and river-adjacent pauses: Park Cihelna and Rudolfinum

A standout of this tour is that it doesn’t treat everything as stone monuments. You get Park Cihelna as part of the guided stops, which gives your body a breather and lets your eyes reset.
Right after that, the route includes Rudolfinum, a major public building. Whether you’re into architecture or just like seeing what makes a city feel official, this kind of stop adds variety. You get a break from the “walk, look, snap photos” rhythm and return to the flow of riding.
This is where the small group size helps again. With only up to 15 participants, you’re more likely to experience the guide pacing things rather than racing through.
Old Town Square, St. Nicholas Church, and the feel of the center

The tour brings you through the Old Town, with guided sightseeing that includes Old Town Square and St. Nicholas Church.
Old Town Square is one of those places where scale hits you fast. From your scooter or eBike, you’ll see the square as an area rather than a single building. That matters because it helps you understand how the historic center works as a whole.
The guided approach is also helpful here. The “icons” of Prague aren’t just decorative. When your guide points out what you’re looking at, you start noticing the small relationships between streets, churches, and the square itself.
On the longer version (3-hour tour), you also get extra time that can include major Old Town landmarks such as the Astronomical Clock and the Church of Saint Nicholas. If you’re the type who wants more of the center’s greatest hits, that extension can be worth it.
Pařížská Street and Letná Park: a change in viewpoint

Then comes Pařížská Street, another big change from the older lanes. This part of the route gives you a sense of Prague beyond the most famous “must-visit” areas. It’s a quick but meaningful shift in atmosphere.
After that, you roll into Letná Park and the Letná Hill panoramic view, with Prague Giant Metronome as another key stop. I like this segment because it reframes the city. Instead of looking at buildings up close, you get the sense of Prague’s layout—rivers, hills, and how neighborhoods stack.
The Giant Metronome area is especially good for a group ride because it’s a natural place to pause, regroup, and take in the city without turning the day into a long hike. Your guide helps you see what’s where as you look out.
Prague Castle complex: cruising the largest one on earth
One of the biggest headline moments is riding around the largest castle complex in the world. Even if you already know Prague Castle is a top attraction, the “drive-and-see” approach helps. You get the overall scale and how the complex dominates the area.
The tour includes Prague Castle with guided sightseeing, plus Castle District as part of the route. This works well for two reasons:
- You see the complex from the city side first, which helps you understand why everything funnels toward it.
- You don’t just arrive, you transition into it through the surrounding streets.
If you’ve ever done Prague Castle with only walking routes, you know how quickly time slips away on stairs and changing viewpoints. This tour gives you a different angle: movement + guidance + planned stops.
Strahov Monastery panoramas from Petřín Park and Petřín Hill
After the castle area, you head toward viewpoints around Petřín Park and Petřín Hill, with Strahov Monastery included for guided sightseeing.
This is where the tour feels like it understands Prague’s geography. Instead of trying to cram every viewpoint into the same straight line, it guides you through a sequence that builds toward bigger views.
Strahov Monastery’s viewpoint area is a strong finale because it gives your eyes a wide horizon. It’s also a helpful contrast to the tighter lanes you saw earlier—by the end, you’re looking out over a city that feels layered and spread out.
I also like that this ending doesn’t just mean standing still. The tour keeps the rhythm moving, then lets you pause at the moments that matter.
Ending back at the office and getting smart local recommendations
When you wrap up, you return to the meeting area at Euro Segway Prague tours. You’ll also receive a list of recommendations for interesting local places to visit.
That last bit matters more than you might think. Prague has too many options, and a tailored list helps you choose what fits your interests and your remaining time—especially if you’re only in town for a few days.
You also end with a small keepsake: a gift postcard for your collection.
2 hours vs 3 hours: what the longer tour adds
The standard experience is 2 hours. If you choose the 3-hour tour, you get extra sightseeing time and a few higher-impact additions:
- a stop for the Lookout Tower, with the option to climb for a panoramic view of 200 km around Prague (on a private tour, climbing is mentioned)
- extra routing that can include National Theater and Wenceslas Square before going back through Old Town
- additional Old Town icons such as the Astronomical Clock and Church of Saint Nicholas
If you love skyline views and want one big “wow” moment where the horizon feels huge, the Lookout Tower extension is the reason to go longer. If you mainly want Old Town highlights with less moving between them, the added theater-and-square segment gives you that.
Price and value: is $76 a good deal for Prague?
At $76 per person for a 2-hour small-group ride, the value is mostly about time and efficiency. You’re paying for:
- live English guiding
- safety training and a supervised test-drive
- a guided route that strings together far-apart sights in one session
- gear like helmets, raincoats (when needed), and winter gloves
- unlimited water and coffee at the start
- a postcard and post-tour recommendations
If you tried to do the same mix of bridges, parks, and castle-area viewpoints by yourself, you’d likely burn more time just traveling, figuring out best stops, and walking between the big zones. Here, the route is planned so you’re spending your limited time looking out, not tracing lines on a map.
It’s also good value because it’s a small group capped at 15. More space, more attention, less chaos.
The only “cost” to weigh is that the tour is active and structured. If you want a slow, linger-all-day style of sightseeing, you may find the pace too tight.
Who this tour suits best (and who should skip it)
This tour is a strong fit if you want:
- a guided Prague highlights route without spending hours walking between neighborhoods
- big viewpoint moments like Letná, Petřín, and the Strahov Monastery area
- classic center sights like Charles Bridge, Old Town Square, and St. Nicholas Church
- an experience that includes both culture stops and city panoramas
It’s not a fit if:
- you’re pregnant
- you have pre-existing medical conditions
- you can’t safely participate in the supervised, active riding format
- you don’t meet the minimum age or maximum weight limits
- you plan to wear high-heeled shoes (they aren’t allowed)
One more practical tip: if weather is turning rainy, count on the provided raincoats, and dress for cool, damp Prague walking even if you’ll be on wheels.
Should you book this Prague electric scooter or eBike tour?
Book it if you want a smart, guided way to see Prague’s key districts in a short window. The combination of John Lennon Wall, Charles Bridge, Prague Castle complex, and viewpoint stops like Petřín and Strahov Monastery makes it feel like you’re checking the right boxes without turning it into a marathon.
Skip it if you need a slow pace, or if you know you won’t feel comfortable riding through historic streets and viewpoints—even with helmets and training.
If you’re balancing “I want to see a lot” with “I still want great moments,” this is a great match. I’d especially choose it early in your trip so the guide’s route helps you navigate the rest of Prague with confidence.
FAQ
How long is the tour?
The main option is 2 hours. There is also a 3-hour tour option with additional stops like the Lookout Tower and extra sights around National Theater and Wenceslas Square.
What does the tour cost?
The price is $76 per person.
Where is the meeting point?
The meeting point is next door to the Embassy of Japan, at Euro Segway Prague tours.
What’s included with the tour?
Included are live guiding, safety training and a supervised test-drive, helmets (all sizes), raincoats if needed, gloves throughout the winter season, unlimited water and coffee at the meeting point, and a gift postcard.
What language is the guide?
The live tour guide speaks English.
Do I need experience riding an electric scooter or eBike?
No prior experience is required in the provided information, because the tour includes a safety briefing and a supervised test-drive.
Are there any age or weight limits?
Yes. The minimum age is 7 years old, and the maximum permitted weight is 290 pounds (145 kg).
Is food included?
Food and drinks are not included during the tour (they are optional).
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. Reserve now and pay later is also offered.



































