Electric Trike Tour in Prague – City Sightseeing & Fun Riding

REVIEW · PRAGUE

Electric Trike Tour in Prague – City Sightseeing & Fun Riding

  • 5.062 reviews
  • 2 hours 30 minutes (approx.)
  • From $3.61
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Operated by Speedy Tours Prague s.r.o · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 5.0 (62)Duration2 hours 30 minutes (approx.)Price from$3.61Operated bySpeedy Tours Prague s.r.oBook viaViator

Prague in one smooth ride beats long walks. This electric trike sightseeing tour strings together major sights in about 2.5 hours, with a short supervised practice so you can actually drive (not just watch). If the weather turns, your guide has raincoats ready, which matters in Prague.

What I really like is how fast you get oriented. In a single route you’ll hit places like Old Town Square and the Charles Bridge area without the usual marathon of staircases and riverbank walking. I also liked the guide vibe; names like Tippy, Prince, and Goti came up in reviews for being patient, keeping an eye on safety, and sharing stories that make the stops stick.

One consideration: this is an around-town ride with frequent brief stops, so it’s not the best choice if you want long museum time or slow, independent wandering. You’ll be moving most of the way, and you should feel okay riding in a lively city.

In This Review

Key highlights you’ll feel right away

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Key highlights you’ll feel right away

  • 10-minute supervised training so you’re not guessing how the trike works
  • Raincoats on hand if Prague weather flips on you
  • A tight route that covers Old Town, Letná viewpoints, and the Castle area
  • Scenic “height” stops with wide views, including a multi-bridge perspective
  • A beer pause at Strahovsky Klášter if you want the classic Prague flavor
  • Small-group pacing capped at 22 riders for a smoother experience

Why an electric trike makes Prague easier (and more fun)

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Why an electric trike makes Prague easier (and more fun)
Prague is gorgeous, but it can also be a lot. Even when you love walking, the city asks you to climb hills, cross bridges at peak times, and keep switching between “main sights” and “oh wow, that street looks cool.” This e-trike tour cuts the effort and keeps you moving through the places you came for.

What makes this tour work is the rhythm. You get a short training session, then a guide leads you through a sequence of stops that build a clear picture of Prague. You’re not trying to remember routes; you’re getting your bearings while you glide above and between key areas.

The other big win is stress reduction. If you’re tired from jet lag or you just don’t want to grind kilometers, riding does the heavy lifting. You still get the street-level experience—just with less leg burn.

You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Prague

Price and value: what $3.61 really buys you here

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Price and value: what $3.61 really buys you here
The listed price is $3.61 per person for a tour of about 2 hours 30 minutes, with a guide, 10 minutes of e-trike training, water at the meeting point, and raincoats if needed. Even if you treat that as a “great deal” and not a luxury add-on, this is the kind of pricing that can be tough to beat for a guided, vehicle-based orientation.

Here’s why I call it good value: you’re paying for a shortcut through two things that are usually time-costly in Prague—getting from sight to sight efficiently and having someone explain what you’re looking at. When the tour helps you connect the dots between places like Letná viewpoints and the Castle area, it can make the rest of your trip easier to plan.

Just keep your expectations matched to the duration. This is not a multi-day deep dive. It’s a fast, guided overview with a handful of meaningful pauses.

Where you’ll start: Štěpánská 55, and why that’s convenient

You meet at Štěpánská 55 in Prague 1 (Nové Město). The tour ends back at the same meeting point, so you’re not scrambling for your “last mile” after the ride.

This location is useful because it sits in a central zone where you can reach it by public transport, taxi, rideshare, or Uber/Bolt. There’s no hotel pickup included, so plan to get yourself there. On the plus side, having a single meeting hub often keeps the group on time and reduces logistical headaches.

If you want to pair this with other plans, you can. A tour like this is ideal as a first taste of Prague—something you do early so the city makes more sense when you return on foot.

The 10-minute training: the moment that decides how smooth your ride feels

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - The 10-minute training: the moment that decides how smooth your ride feels
The tour begins with paperwork and then about 10 minutes of supervised training on the trike. This part matters more than people think. E-trikes can feel intuitive, but traffic is not the place to guess.

In practice, this training means you’ll learn:

  • how the trike responds under your control
  • how to follow the guide’s pace
  • what the basic road rules are for your group

Reviews repeatedly praise how patient guides were during this learning phase. Names like Tippy and Prince show up in feedback for clearly guiding riders and checking that everyone feels confident before heading out into busier streets.

Minimum age to drive is 18+. If you’re traveling with a teen, riders aged 10 to 17 can sit in the rear seat with an adult. That’s a nice option for families who want the view without putting a 12-year-old in the driver’s chair.

How the route “stacks” Prague’s big sights

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - How the route “stacks” Prague’s big sights
The itinerary is built like a guided postcard of Prague—big squares, key towers, riverside icons, and then viewpoints that explain why people fall in love with this city.

Here’s the stop-by-stop flow, with what each place adds (and what to watch for).

Wenceslas Square: Prague’s main-center pulse

The ride starts by heading toward Wenceslas Square, one of the city’s best-known straightaways. You’ll see the National Museum building from outside and the main shopping area along the route.

This is a smart first real sight because it shows you Prague’s scale. Wenceslas Square is wide, modern in feel, and it contrasts with the old-world lanes you’ll see later. If you’re trying to understand Prague beyond photos, this gives you a base layer.

What to consider: this can be lively. Keep your eyes on the road and enjoy the scenery as you pass.

The Powder Tower: a quick history pause before the scenic climb

Next comes the Powder Tower, where you’ll stop briefly for historical background, then ride onward toward Letná Park.

The Powder Tower is one of those structures that looks like it has a lot of stories because it does. The short pause is enough to give context without turning the tour into a long lecture.

This is a good example of the tour’s style: brief, useful, and timed so you still have momentum.

Letná Park: height, views, and the city spread out

At Letná Park, you’ll ride through the area and enjoy viewpoints from higher ground. You get scenic perspective over Prague, which is the whole reason this kind of tour works.

Letná viewpoints are where Prague becomes easy to read: you start to see how rivers, bridges, hills, and neighborhoods line up. The route later reinforces that idea, so this is one of the stops that helps your brain map the city.

Time here is about 15 minutes, which is plenty to take photos and still feel like you’re part of the ride—not stuck in one spot too long.

Prague Metronome and the Stalin statue story

The tour includes a stop at the Prague Metronome, with history plus a viewpoint. You’ll learn about the Joseph Stalin statue associated with this area and what happened to it.

This is where the city’s political history shows up in a very tangible way. The metronome and the surrounding viewpoint make the past feel physical, not abstract.

If you like stories that explain why a landmark exists (not just that it exists), this stop is a highlight.

Letná viewpoint: the multi-bridge perspective

Right after the metronome story, you’ll reach another Letná viewpoint. Here, the tour focuses on panoramic views, including the chance to see five bridges together in one line.

You’ll also pass sights like the Office of the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, viewed from outside. This stop is built for people who want that moment of, Okay, so that’s how the whole city connects.

What to watch for: if it’s windy, viewpoints can feel cold fast. Layers help.

Prague Castle area: outside only, but still worth it

The tour reaches Prague Castle from the main entrance area, from outside, and includes a history plus viewpoint stop. You’ll also see St. Vitus Cathedral from outside and learn about the importance of the castle complex.

Even though you’re not going inside, you still get the “big picture” of why the Castle dominates Prague’s skyline. Think of it as the tour’s anchor stop, the place that turns all your earlier sights into context.

Time is about 10 minutes, so don’t expect a full cathedral visit here. Expect an orientation snapshot.

Strahovsky Klášter: church views and monastery beer

One of the more fun-feeling stops is Strahovsky Klášter, where you’ll see a beautiful church and enjoy a viewpoint from height. The itinerary also notes monastery beer on this stop.

This is a big part of why people rate the tour so highly: it mixes sights with an actual Prague experience you can taste. Even if you don’t drink, the pause helps you reset and take in the architecture with breathing room.

Time is about 10 minutes—enough for a drink if you want one, not enough to turn the tour into a long break.

Lennonova zeď: the Beatles-era wall

You’ll also stop at Lennonova zed from outside. This is quick, but it’s one of those places that always surprises people, because it’s not what you expect to find in the middle of a city route.

It’s a good photo stop, and it adds a softer cultural note between monuments and viewpoints.

Charles Bridge: river views and story time

Next up is Charles Bridge, with a stop designed for views and riding alongside the river. The guide shares history and importance of the bridge.

Charles Bridge is always busy, but moving at trike pace means you still get the key vibe without losing an hour just lining up for good angles. The guide’s narration helps too; you’ll understand what you’re looking at beyond the postcard.

Time is about 10 minutes, which is short, but it’s a good match for a ride-through bridge moment.

Franz Kafka Museum area: the pissing sculptures angle

The itinerary includes a stop at the Franz Kafka Museum from outside, and notes that you’ll learn about the pissing sculptures and Kafka in this spot.

This works well because Prague likes to play with stories in public spaces. The short explanation makes these famous street sculptures feel less random and more intentional.

If you enjoy oddball Prague details, this stop is your kind of moment.

Rudolfinum: another classic building pass-by

You’ll also pass Rudolfinum from outside. Expect a brief note on why it matters in Prague.

This is the kind of stop that helps you connect architecture to life: museums, music, and the city’s cultural institutions.

Pariszka Street: wealth watching, Prague style

Another quick one: Parizska Street, described as the most expensive street of Prague, where you can see premium brands like Rolex from outside.

It’s not a shopping excursion, and you’re not lingering. But it’s a fun contrast against the old-town streets—one minute you’re thinking about towers, the next you’re noticing luxury storefront energy.

Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock

Finally, you end in Stare Město (Old Town) around Old Town Square, with a stop focused on the Astronomical clock and its historical background.

Even without extra time for museums, this is the logical capstone. You’ve been moving through viewpoints and landmarks; now you land in the city’s classic central stage.

Time here is about 5 minutes, so use it for your main photos and for absorbing the clock context so you can plan a longer visit later.

Guides, group size, and why you feel cared for

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Guides, group size, and why you feel cared for
This tour caps at 22 travelers, which keeps it from feeling chaotic. It’s big enough to be lively, small enough to keep instruction workable.

What stands out in feedback is how guides manage the learning curve. People specifically call out patient coaching, attention to safety, and guides who stay engaged throughout instead of doing a quick handoff.

Names that come up include Goti, Tippy, Prince, and TP (with some spelling variations). The common thread is clear: the guides focus on you having a good time and being comfortable enough to ride confidently.

If you’re worried about traffic or your balance, this is a good sign. The training plus the guide’s ongoing attention is the combo that makes the experience work.

Weather-proofing: raincoats, plus what to wear

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Weather-proofing: raincoats, plus what to wear
The tour includes raincoats if needed, and there’s also water available at the meeting point. That’s practical—Prague weather can change fast.

One review mentioned it being cold with even some snow during the experience. That tells me you should dress for real outdoor time, not just a short stroll. Wear layers, and bring something warm for pauses at viewpoints.

A trike ride can feel breezy, especially on higher areas like Letná. If you tend to get cold easily, plan accordingly.

Who should book this e-trike tour?

Electric Trike Tour in Prague - City Sightseeing & Fun Riding - Who should book this e-trike tour?
This is ideal if you:

  • want a first-time Prague overview without long walking days
  • like seeing many landmarks in a short window
  • enjoy historical explanations but don’t want museums to take over your day
  • want a fun, slightly thrilling way to move through the city safely

It’s not the best match if you:

  • need long time inside venues (cathedrals, galleries, guided museum entry)
  • want a mostly hands-off route with lots of independent wandering
  • hate the idea of riding alongside traffic and crowds, even at a guided pace

Still, if your goal is orientation and enjoyment, this tour hits the sweet spot.

Should you book the Electric Trike Tour in Prague?

If you’re trying to make the most of limited time, I think you should seriously consider booking. The mix of quick training, major-sight routing, and viewpoint moments (Letná and the Castle area) is exactly how you get Prague to “click” fast. Add raincoats and water, and it’s one of those low-planning options that still feels personalized thanks to the guide-led storytelling.

I’d only hold off if your travel style is very slow and you want deep museum time instead of a guided highlights circuit. Otherwise, this is a fun, efficient way to see Prague’s big icons and start mapping your next day on foot.

FAQ

FAQ

How long is the Electric Trike Tour in Prague?

The tour lasts about 2 hours 30 minutes.

What’s included in the price?

The tour includes 10 minutes of e-trike training, a tour guide, water at the meeting point, and raincoats if needed.

Where does the tour start and end?

You meet at Štěpánská 55, 110 00 Praha 1-Nové Město, Czechia and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.

Is hotel pickup available?

No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not offered.

Do I need to speak Czech or another language?

The tour is offered in English.

Do I have to drive, and what are the age rules?

To drive the e-trike, the minimum age is 18+. Children aged 10 to 17 can sit on the rear seat with an adult.

Is there training before the ride starts?

Yes. You’ll get about 10 minutes of supervised training at the beginning.

What if it rains?

The guide provides raincoats if needed, and there’s no stated need to stop the tour just because of weather.

Is there a mobile ticket?

Yes. The tour offers a mobile ticket.

What’s the maximum group size?

The group is capped at a maximum of 22 travelers.

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