REVIEW · PRAGUE
Grand City Tour of Prague on Cruiser e-Bikes or e-Scooters
Book on Viator →Operated by Euro Segway Prague · Bookable on Viator
Three hours, one smooth Prague loop. This Grand City Tour lets you cover the big-name sights fast, without turning your day into a sore-feet competition, and it’s designed for a private feel on a cruiser e-bike or e-scooter.
I especially like that the tour feels personal: it’s private (only your group) and you get a quick training session before you roll out, so you’re not guessing how to handle the bike or scooter. A second thing I like is the guide-led pacing—your stops are short and purposeful, and the guide can adjust if you’ve already seen something.
One consideration: this is a “see-and-glance” route, not a slow, inside-everything marathon. Many stops are timed at about 5 minutes (and even the longer ones are still brief), so if you want to linger, you’ll likely want a separate return trip.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice on this Prague e-bike or e-scooter tour
- Prague in 3 hours on e-bikes or e-scooters: what this tour really gives you
- Start at Maltezské Square and get your 5–10 minute training
- Letná Park, the Metronome, and the viewpoint start that fixes your bearings
- Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral: big names, quick context
- Strahov: the 12th-century monastery feel and the brewery stops
- Petrin Hill and Petrin Park viewpoints: where the electric ride earns its keep
- Kampa Park and the John Lennon Wall: two very different sides of the river
- Charles Bridge in a tight window: iconic photos without wasting the day
- Kafka Museum stop and Rudolfinum: quirky detours, practical timing
- The Prague Jewish Quarter: Old Jewish Cemetery and the oldest synagogue in Europe
- Old Town Hall and the Astronomical Clock, then Old Town Square
- What set the tour apart in the guide’s performance
- Price and value: does $102.13 make sense for a 3-hour private overview?
- Who this Prague e-bike or e-scooter tour fits best
- Should you book this tour? My practical verdict
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague Grand City Tour?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- Where do you meet for the tour?
- Is the tour private?
- What’s included in the price?
- Do I need tickets for the stops?
- Can I bring or use my own helmet?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Key things you’ll notice on this Prague e-bike or e-scooter tour

- Private group feel, so you’re not squeezed into a crowd dynamic
- Short, high-impact stops from Letna viewpoints to Old Town Square
- Quick training (5–10 minutes) plus helmets and hygienic protectors in multiple sizes
- Included photo service so you can focus on the route, not on asking strangers
- Prague at a practical angle: views first, then iconic landmarks, then back to the center
- English live guiding with an itinerary that can be adjusted mid-tour
Prague in 3 hours on e-bikes or e-scooters: what this tour really gives you

Prague has a way of tricking your sense of distance. One minute you’re near a landmark, the next you’re looking at a hill, a set of stairs, or a long pedestrian stretch that eats your energy. This tour solves that problem with electric help and a tight route that’s built for a big overview in about 3 hours.
You’re also not stuck with a fixed group schedule. Your tour time can fit your day, and because it’s private, you get a more natural back-and-forth with your guide—questions, small detours, and course corrections if you already visited one spot.
The best value here is how much guidance you get without overloading you. You get a live guide, training, and the gear to ride comfortably, then a sequence of stops that keeps you moving while still giving you moments to take photos and orient yourself.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Prague
Start at Maltezské Square and get your 5–10 minute training

The tour starts and ends back at the meeting point at Maltezské Square 9, Malá Strana (Praha 1). If you’re arriving by public transit, this area is a handy hub, so you’re not fighting complicated last-mile logistics.
Before you head out, there’s a 5–10 minute training session. That matters more than it sounds. Electric scooters and cruiser e-bikes are easy, but you still need comfort with starting, stopping, and staying balanced—especially when you’ll be riding through busy pedestrian zones and sightseeing corridors.
You’ll also be equipped with helmets and a hygienic protector with all sizes. Add raincoats if needed, and you’re set up for the real-life weather that can show up in Prague. This is one of those “small inclusions” that can decide whether a tour feels smooth or stressful.
Letná Park, the Metronome, and the viewpoint start that fixes your bearings
After training, the first stretch sets the tone. You’ll stop at Letná Park for a city-view moment and then check out the Metronome as a visual landmark.
Letná Park is the kind of spot that helps you understand Prague’s layout. Instead of arriving at the famous areas with no context, you get a quick orientation. The Metronome adds a different kind of interest too—less about a single building and more about a symbolic object you can anchor to your mental map.
Times here are short (around 5 minutes), so don’t treat it like a long photo hike. Treat it like the moment your guide helps you “lock in” where you are in relation to the rest of the route.
Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral: big names, quick context

Next up are Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral. Even with brief stop times (Prague Castle around 15 minutes, St. Vitus Cathedral about 5 minutes), this is the part of the tour that most people came for.
Why it works on an e-bike or scooter day: you get to the right area without spending your whole morning doing stair navigation or backtracking. The guide’s job is to give you the meaning of what you’re looking at, so you leave with a stronger sense of the castle complex as a centerpiece rather than a quick glance at a wall of stone.
A drawback to know: this isn’t a deep ticketed visit. It’s a focused stop for orientation and photos, with your time managed tightly. If you want to spend a lot of time inside, plan to treat this tour as the “overview day” and follow up later.
Strahov: the 12th-century monastery feel and the brewery stops

Then the route shifts to the Strahov area with two related stops: Strahovsky Klaster and Strahov Monastery Brewery.
Here’s what makes this stretch special based on what you’ll actually see on the itinerary. At Strahovsky Klaster, you’re looking at a monastery from the 12th century plus a brewery from the 14th century. Later, the Strahov Monastery Brewery stop focuses on the 15th-century brewery story.
Even if you don’t turn this into a long tasting session, these stops give you a different Prague flavor. It’s not only about famous squares and bridges. It’s about how the city’s religious and everyday life intersected over centuries, with breweries tied to monasteries as a practical tradition.
Keep expectations realistic. Both stops are time-limited (about 5 minutes and 15 minutes). That means you’re getting history cues and atmosphere, not an extended sit-down experience.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Prague
Petrin Hill and Petrin Park viewpoints: where the electric ride earns its keep

One of the smartest design choices in this route is sending you toward Petrin next. You’ll pause at Petrin Hill and then at Petrin Park for viewpoints.
Petrin-style sightseeing is exactly where electric transport pays off. A viewpoint route sounds simple, until you start factoring in how much walking and climbing you’d do without assistance. With an e-bike or scooter, you can spend more of your energy taking in the views instead of saving it for the climb.
This section is also short per stop (about 5 minutes each). So if you’re the type who wants to linger for golden hour, you’ll probably want an additional solo walk later. But for a guided overview day, it’s an excellent use of time.
Kampa Park and the John Lennon Wall: two very different sides of the river

After Petrin, you’ll go to Kampa Park on Kampa Island and then continue to Lennonova zed (the John Lennon Wall).
Kampa Park gives you a calmer break between big landmarks—good for photos and breathing room, even if the stop is only about 5 minutes. Then you pivot to Lennonova zed, which is memorable because it’s instantly recognizable and emotionally “felt” by people who know its story.
This is one of the reasons I like this tour’s pacing: it mixes formal monuments with places that feel more personal and human. You’re not trapped in one style of sightseeing.
Charles Bridge in a tight window: iconic photos without wasting the day

Next is Charles Bridge, with a 5-minute stop.
On paper, five minutes doesn’t sound like much. In practice, it’s a good reminder that on a first visit you don’t need endless minutes on every single postcard spot. You need enough time to walk a little, frame a photo, and confirm it matches what you imagined.
If you’re sensitive to crowds, plan your expectations around short stops. This route keeps you moving, which helps you avoid the trap of being stuck in one place for too long.
Kafka Museum stop and Rudolfinum: quirky detours, practical timing
Two shorter stops add variety in a way that keeps the day from feeling like a single long museum walk.
First, there’s the Franz Kafka Muzeum stop described with peeing statues. It’s brief (about 2 minutes), which suggests you’re not doing a full exhibit in this moment. You’re spotting the place, getting the quirky factor, and moving on with the route.
Then comes Rudolfinum (around 5 minutes). This kind of stop is perfect for an overview tour: you see the landmark, you register it, and your guide can connect it back to the city’s character without you needing to plan extra time.
The value here is rhythm. When stops are short but meaningful, you end the tour with a stronger sense of what Prague looks like in real life.
The Prague Jewish Quarter: Old Jewish Cemetery and the oldest synagogue in Europe
From there, you’ll head to the Prague Jewish Quarter, including the Old Jewish Cemetery and the oldest synagogue in Europe (as listed on the itinerary).
This is the part of the day that you should take a little slower in your head, even if your physical stop is about 5 minutes. Cemetery and synagogue sites are not “quick photo” stops in the way some landmarks are. Treat it as a respectful orientation moment—read what you can, look carefully, and let the guide’s context do the heavy lifting.
Because it’s part of a tight loop, you won’t get a long guided narrative here. Still, it’s a key inclusion because it broadens the tour beyond castles and bridges.
Old Town Hall and the Astronomical Clock, then Old Town Square
Your route finishes in the historic core with Old Town Hall with Astronomical Clock and then Old Town Square, including Týn Church and the Jan Hus Monument.
These stops are also time-limited (about 5 minutes each), but they’re the heart of the classic Prague postcard layer. The Astronomical Clock area is a must-see because it gives you a signature focal point for your first-day orientation. Then Old Town Square ties it all together with the surrounding church and monument views.
This is where I think the e-bike/scooter format really shines for many people. You’re not fighting the day with too much walking. You’re getting the major visual anchors in the order that makes sense—then you wrap back to where you started.
What set the tour apart in the guide’s performance
The biggest difference on any guide-led ride is how the guide handles your group’s energy and attention span. In one standout experience, the guide was Nick (Nikita), described as fun and engaging, with lots of details about Prague and the Czech Republic—history plus modern-day context.
The same review also highlighted a very useful skill: when the guide realized the group had already visited a place, the itinerary was adjusted. That’s what you want from a private tour. You don’t want to feel like a human GPS that never stops.
If you’re booking because you want stories and explanations—not just movement—this kind of guide responsiveness is a big selling point.
Price and value: does $102.13 make sense for a 3-hour private overview?
At $102.13 per person for about 3 hours, you’re paying for more than transportation. You’re paying for live guiding, a training session, photo service, and included ride gear like helmets and hygienic protectors, plus raincoats if needed.
That combo adds up, especially because the route is packed with major stops. If you attempted to self-plan all of this by public transit plus walking, you’d likely spend energy managing timing and meeting points. Here, the tour does the structure and you do the sightseeing.
The private format also matters. Even if you love the idea of Prague’s highlights, you don’t want to spend your day in a large group moving at someone else’s pace. Private tours tend to give better Q&A time and a more flexible feel when you want something changed.
The trade-off is the “brief stop” structure. You’re buying breadth and guidance, not long lingering time. If you’re the type who wants to spend an hour inside major sites, plan extra time beyond this tour.
Who this Prague e-bike or e-scooter tour fits best
This is a strong match if you:
- want a first-time Prague overview that covers castles, viewpoints, bridges, and historic squares
- prefer spending your effort on photos and stories instead of climbing and walking all day
- like the idea of a private guide who can adjust the pace
It may not be the best fit if you:
- want a slow, deep visit where you park in one place for a long stretch
- need lots of indoor time at major sights during the same morning
Also note the rule on riding: the activity is strongly forbidden for anyone under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or strong medicine. That’s for safety, and it’s consistent with a scooter/e-bike tour model.
Should you book this tour? My practical verdict
If you want a smart first-date-with-Prague plan, I’d book it. You get an efficient route, real guidance, included gear, and a private setup that keeps the day from feeling rushed in the wrong way.
But go in with the right mindset: this is a high-impact overview, not a slow sightseeing binge. If you treat it like the day you learn how Prague fits together—then return later for your favorites—it works beautifully.
FAQ
How long is the Prague Grand City Tour?
The tour lasts about 3 hours.
What language is the tour offered in?
It’s offered in English.
Where do you meet for the tour?
The start meeting point is Euro Segway Prague tours at Maltezské Square 9, Malá Strana, 118 00 Praha-Praha 1, Czechia.
Is the tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
What’s included in the price?
Included are live guiding, a training session (5–10 minutes) before the tour, photo service, helmets and hygienic protector (with all sizes), and raincoats if needed.
Do I need tickets for the stops?
The itinerary shows admission ticket free at the listed stops.
Can I bring or use my own helmet?
The tour provides helmets and hygienic protectors in all sizes.
What’s the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount you paid is not refunded.





































