REVIEW · PRAGUE
E-Bike, E-Scooter Viewpoint Fun Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Prague Segway Tours · Bookable on Viator
Prague is best seen on small wheels. This E-bike, E-scooter viewpoint tour strings together major Prague sights in a tight time window, with a real ride-and-stop format instead of long stretches of walking. I love the free coffee, tea, and water waiting for you at the start, and I love how you can choose your ride style (e-bike or e-scooter). One thing to keep in mind: if weather or safety comfort is an issue, your exact vehicle type may not be what you expected.
Safety is part of the deal. You get helmet rental, a supervised test-drive, and on-the-route guidance so you’re not figuring it out on your own. The group stays small (max 15), and the guide also does photo stops for you, which is handy when you’re trying to capture multiple landmarks without slowing everyone down.
You’ll pick the tour length that fits your day. The 3-hour version reaches the Jewish Quarter and Old Town Square, while some hilltop stops and extra viewpoints don’t apply to the shorter options.
In This Review
- Key points before you go
- Why an E-bike or E-scooter loop fits Prague so well
- Getting started at Maltézské náměstí: gear, training, and free drinks
- The fast highlight ride: Lennon Wall to Charles Bridge to the Castle gate
- Old Town energy: Týn Church and the Astronomical Clock
- The Jewish Quarter and Prague Castle hills: what makes the 3-hour option worth it
- Letná viewpoints and the Metronome: where the city opens up
- Strahov Monastery Brewery and the outside-only cathedral stops
- Vehicle choice and kid options: how the tour handles families
- Price and value: why $3.58 can still feel like a lot
- Who should book this tour, and who should skip it
- Tips to make the most of your 30 min to 3 hour window
- Should you book the Prague E-Bike, E-Scooter Viewpoint Fun Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the E-Bike, E-Scooter Viewpoint Fun Tour?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- What vehicles are available?
- Is safety training included?
- Are helmets and rain gear provided?
- Do I need food or drinks during the tour?
- What stops are included only on the 3-hour tour?
- What are the rules for children?
Key points before you go

- Pick your ride: e-scooter or e-bike options, plus kid-friendly setups when needed
- Safety training first: supervised test-drive and guided riding with helmets provided
- Free drinks at the meeting point: unlimited water, coffee, and tea right when you start
- A highlight loop in one go: Lennon Wall, Charles Bridge, viewpoints up on Letná and Hradčany
- Short stops, fast access: many sights are outside-only, which keeps the tour moving
Why an E-bike or E-scooter loop fits Prague so well

Prague’s historic core is gorgeous, but it can also mean steep bits, cobblestones, and crowds that slow you down. This tour solves that problem with a simple idea: you get guided rides plus short sightseeing pauses. The result is an efficient overview that still feels like you’re in the city, not just looking at it from afar.
I also like the practical pacing. You don’t need to plan a separate route between the river, the castle hills, and the big viewpoint spots. Instead, you follow the guide’s stops and let the city unfold in a series of “there it is” moments.
And because you’re on electric wheels, you can spend your energy on looking, not on marching.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Prague
Getting started at Maltézské náměstí: gear, training, and free drinks

The tour meets at Maltézské nám. 479/7, Malá Strana. It’s near public transportation, and the activity ends back at the same place—so you’re not stuck finding your way after the ride.
Before you roll out, the operator covers the essentials:
- helmet rental (they have all sizes)
- a safety training and supervised test-drive
- protective extras if needed, like raincoats, gloves, and hats
- pictures taken by a guide during photo stops
One of the nicest touches is the unlimited water, coffee, and tea at the meeting point. If you’re arriving in Prague hungry, cold, or both, this small perk helps you feel human before you start spinning toward the viewpoints.
If it’s light rain, tours run as planned (the setup is for light rain up to 1 mm per hour). For extreme weather, the tour can be rescheduled or canceled for safety with a full refund.
The fast highlight ride: Lennon Wall to Charles Bridge to the Castle gate

Your itinerary starts near Prague Segway Tours, right at the meeting point area. From there, you move into classic Prague photo stops, each with a quick pause so you can see the landmark and capture it without sprinting.
Stop 2: Lennonova zeď (Freedom Wall)
This is one of Prague’s most famous streetside expressions of public art. You’ll get a short look and time to grab photos. The ride format makes it feel like you’re moving through the story of the city rather than stopping in the middle of nowhere.
Stop 3: Charles Bridge
You see the Old Town icon from the route, with time for a quick appreciation moment. Charles Bridge is famous for a reason, but it can be packed—so this kind of short stop helps you still enjoy it without turning your day into a bottleneck.
Stop 4: Rudolfinum (outside only)
This is about the building’s presence and position in the river-adjacent area. Since it’s outside-only, you’re not losing time trying to fit entry schedules into the ride.
Stop 7: Prague Castle area (main gate stop varies by tour length)
You get a pause in front of the castle’s main gate on many schedules, but it’s not applied for the 30 min and 60 min tours. One important note: you can enter the castle’s free zone only during private tours. On this shared fun tour, expect the castle as a dramatic viewpoint moment from outside rather than a self-guided inside day.
If you want the castle experience to include actual time inside, you’ll need a private option (or a separate castle ticket plan). This tour is about getting you close and keeping the momentum.
Old Town energy: Týn Church and the Astronomical Clock

The Old Town focus is specifically part of the 3-hour tour only, with a dedicated stop at Staroměstské náměstí.
At this stop, you’ll be in the right place for:
- Týn Church (you’ll see it from the square area)
- the Astronomical Clock (again, outside viewing)
This works well because Staroměstské náměstí can be a patience test on its busiest days. A timed ride tour helps you get the location and the key visuals without wandering around for ages.
One caution: since this is a short stop, don’t plan on long detours here. If you want to linger, do it after the tour, once you’re back in your own pacing mode.
The Jewish Quarter and Prague Castle hills: what makes the 3-hour option worth it

If you book the longer version, you’ll add more “Prague layers” instead of repeating the postcard highlights.
Stop 5: Prague Jewish Quarter (3-hour tour only)
You’ll get time for the Jewish Quarter area, with a short pause to take it in. Even without extended entry time, this stop matters because it places you in a different part of Prague’s identity than the river-and-castle storyline.
Stop 9: Hradcany & Letna (castle area on the hills)
This is where the ride stops feeling like a checklist and starts feeling like a city walk with wheels. You’re high enough to get that “Prague map in your head” moment—different streets, different angles, and a strong sense of how the city is built around the hills.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
Letná viewpoints and the Metronome: where the city opens up

After the core highlights, the tour swings into viewpoint territory, and that’s a big reason this outing works.
Stop 8: Letná Park (views to downtown)
Letná Hill is the payoff. This is your moment to look across the city instead of looking straight at landmarks. The ride gets you up there quickly, so you can actually enjoy the view rather than just surviving the climb.
Stop 10: Metronome (Former Stalin Monument)
This is a more modern, more political stop—one of those Prague contrasts where the city’s layers show up in one place. It also gives you a different kind of landmark for photos than bridges and churches.
If you like your sightseeing with a mix of famous and unusual, this part of the loop delivers.
Strahov Monastery Brewery and the outside-only cathedral stops

Not every stop is about entering a building. Several are intentionally quick “look and appreciate” pauses, which keeps the tour moving.
Stop 11: Strahov Monastery Brewery (15th century; 15-minute stop)
This is a chance to see the character of the place and connect it with Prague’s longer timeline. You’re not going deep on a tasting or ticketed visit here—so don’t expect an indoor brewing experience included in the tour time.
Stop 12: St. Vitus Cathedral (outside only; started in 1344)
This one’s about the scale and the sky-line impact. Since it’s outside-only, you get the cathedral’s presence without turning your ride into a queue-and-wait exercise.
Stop 13: Strahovsky Klaster (12th century; not applied for 30/60 min tours)
For the longer schedules, you get extra monastery-area time. Short stop, big atmosphere from the outside.
Stop 14: Petrin Park / Petrin Hill (not applied for 30/60 min tours)
This is another hilltop feel. Again, it’s built around viewpoints and atmosphere rather than a full hike day.
Vehicle choice and kid options: how the tour handles families

This is a family-friendly format in the sense that it reduces the walking load. There are options depending on age and comfort with riding.
Here’s what you need to know:
- Minimum age to become a driver is 10.
- If a child feels uncomfortable driving, the operator can offer a 2-seater electric scooter for the child to ride on the back seat (and they mention it can be used for 7–8 year olds as well).
- If you want to take a younger child (1–6 years old), the only option provided is a classic electric bike with a special child seat (EU certified). The child’s max weight (including clothing) is 22 kg / 48.5 lbs, and the child goes free of charge—but you must note this in special requirements.
One practical takeaway: if you’re traveling with kids, choose your tour length based on how long the group ride feels to them. The shorter tours might be the better “taste test,” and the longer ones can work if your kids handle the stops and time on the route.
Price and value: why $3.58 can still feel like a lot
The listed price is $3.58 per person, and there are group discounts. Even if you treat that as a special offer price, the bigger value question is simple: are you getting a lot of guided time and major sights for it?
This tour does a good job of packing:
- live guiding
- safety training and supervised test-drive
- helmets
- rain gear support
- photo shooting by the guide
- unlimited drinks at the start
Also, many stops are outside viewing, which keeps the tour moving and reduces the “time lost” factor that can happen with ticketed attractions.
A realistic caution: if you’re expecting a ticketed entry tour of major interiors (like castle zone time), this shared format doesn’t promise it. The castle free zone is mentioned as something available during private tours only. So the value is strongest for people who want the big sight images and the guided flow, not a deep inside itinerary.
Who should book this tour, and who should skip it
This is best for:
- people who want an overview without doing it all by foot
- visitors who like being out in the open air but don’t want a 6-hour walking loop
- families who want to cut walking time and let the kids enjoy the ride
It’s not a great match if you have limited mobility, since it’s not recommended for that situation.
And there’s one more “real life” consideration. Electric rides depend on both safety and comfort. In rare circumstances, the exact vehicle you booked may not be available at the start due to conditions. When that happens, the operator may offer alternate ride types (and if you can’t drive safely, they may have to stop participation for safety reasons). If you’re traveling with a strong preference for a specific ride type, you’ll sleep better if you’re flexible when you arrive.
Tips to make the most of your 30 min to 3 hour window
This tour comes in different lengths:
- 30 min and 60 min options
- 3-hour tour with added stops like the Jewish Quarter and Old Town Square
If you only have a short window, go for the fastest “great hits” version and accept that some hilltop or monastery stops won’t be included.
If you can spare the full time, the 3-hour itinerary is where you get more variety: the Jewish Quarter stop, Old Town Square, more Prague-hill area moments, and additional monastery/park-style viewpoints. It’s not about seeing every corner of Prague. It’s about hitting the parts that help you understand the city’s layout and elevation.
Should you book the Prague E-Bike, E-Scooter Viewpoint Fun Tour?
I’d book it if you want a guided, high-energy overview that mixes classic postcards with viewpoint payoff, and you value saving your legs for later. The free drinks at the meeting point, the safety training, the helmet rental, and the photo help are all practical touches that make the experience smoother than DIY sightseeing.
I’d skip or reconsider if:
- you need full indoor entry experiences at major sites
- you have mobility limits that make electric riding difficult
- you’re traveling on a day where weather could be extreme and you don’t have flexibility for rescheduling
If your goal is simple—get oriented fast and see the key Prague moments without turning your day into a long hike—this is a strong fit.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the E-Bike, E-Scooter Viewpoint Fun Tour?
The tour duration ranges from about 30 minutes up to about 3 hours, depending on the option you book.
Where do I meet for the tour?
You meet at Maltézské nám. 479/7, Malá Strana, 118 00 Praha-Praha 1, Czechia.
What vehicles are available?
The tour offers different electric options including e-bikes and e-scooters.
Is safety training included?
Yes. You get safety training and a supervised test-drive before riding.
Are helmets and rain gear provided?
Helmet rental is included. If needed, raincoats are provided for light rain, and you can also receive gloves and hats.
Do I need food or drinks during the tour?
Food and drinks are not included, but there is unlimited water, coffee, and tea provided at the meeting point.
What stops are included only on the 3-hour tour?
The Prague Jewish Quarter and Staroměstské náměstí with Týn Church and the Astronomical Clock are included only in the 3-hour tour.
What are the rules for children?
The minimum age to drive is 10. For younger children who don’t feel comfortable driving, options include a 2-seater electric scooter, and for ages 1–6 a classic electric bike with a child seat is available with a maximum child weight of 22 kg (48.5 lbs).



































