REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague City sightseeing in Night Trike Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Speedy Tours Prague s.r.o · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Prague glows when you ride it slowly. This Night Trike Tour strings together major landmarks and viewpoints in a way that helps you get your bearings fast, even if it’s your first evening in town.
What I like most is how practical it feels right from the start: you get hands-on e-trike training and a short test drive before you roll out. Then the guide keeps the ride moving with photo-friendly stops and historical background that makes the sights easier to place.
One thing to keep in mind: there’s no WC available inside the garage at the meeting spot (as of the current setup), so plan accordingly before you arrive.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- How the Night Trike Experience Feels in Motion
- Price and Value: What You’re Really Paying For
- Meet at Štěpánská 55: Starting Smoothly Matters
- The Training and Test Drive: The Part You’ll Be Glad You Get
- Route Breakdown: What Each Stop Is For (and What to Watch)
- Wenceslas Square: Your City-Center Orientation
- Powder Tower Pass-By: A Quick Landmark Moment
- Letná Park: Where You Feel the City Open Up
- The Prague Giant Metronome: Photo Stop With Personality
- Letná Viewpoint: The Panoramas You Came For
- Prague Castle Main Entrance (Outside Only): The Big Name View
- Strahov Monastery: A Historic Pause Before the Bridge Views
- John Lennon Wall: Street History With a Human Touch
- Charles Bridge View: The Iconic Moment Without the Long Trek
- Franz Kafka Museum (Outside): Recognize the Place, Keep Moving
- Rudolfinum (Outside): A Refined Contrast to Street-Level Sights
- Pařížská Street: Shopping Street Energy in Small Doses
- Old Town Square, Prague: Closing the Loop With the Main Stage
- What Makes This Tour Work So Well for Most Visitors
- Who Should Book This (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book Speedy Tours Prague? My Take
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague Night Trike Tour?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Do I need ID?
- Who can drive the e-trike?
- Is there a toilet on site?
Key Highlights at a Glance

- Retro-styled e-trike training plus a short test drive so you’re not guessing
- Short, timed photo stops at classic Prague spots and lookout points
- Letná viewpoints and the Giant Metronome route for big city panoramas
- Outside-only views of Prague Castle’s main entrance, good for orientation
- A guide who explains the backstory while you move efficiently through town
How the Night Trike Experience Feels in Motion

This is the kind of Prague tour that works when you want energy, views, and context without getting stuck in long walking lines. You sign a disclaimer, then you’ll get instruction on the retro styled e-trike and a small test drive right away. It’s a smart way to start because the goal isn’t just sightseeing—it’s learning how to handle the ride confidently.
Once you’re rolling, the pace is built for photos and quick understanding. The route flows from the city center toward hilltop viewpoints, then back down through iconic neighborhoods. Expect lots of brief pauses rather than one long stop. That’s exactly what helps if you have limited time, or if you’re traveling with a mix of walkers and non-walkers.
The e-trikes themselves are designed to feel steady. In particular, the experience is described as easy to maneuver with good brakes, and the upfront lesson helps nervous riders settle in. If you’ve been on scooters before, you’ll still find the seating and control setup reassuring.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Prague
Price and Value: What You’re Really Paying For

The listed price is $2.33 per person, which is unusually low for a guided, vehicle-based sightseeing tour. Even if you treat it as a promo-style price, the value case is clear from what’s included.
You’re paying for:
- a live tour guide
- the e-trike for two people
- helmets, plus water at the meeting point
- raincoats if needed
- a dedicated 10-minute training and intro
The big value isn’t only the vehicle. It’s the way the tour organizes Prague into a route you can understand quickly: central squares, bridge views, and viewpoint stops are stitched together so you leave with a mental map. At night, lighting can make landmarks feel closer together than they actually are—this tour helps you connect what you see to where it sits in the city.
Your “cost” to consider is time and weather: you’ll be outdoors for the ride and photo moments. Also, the tour includes a helmet requirement, so you’ll want to arrive with comfortable travel clothes and shoes.
Meet at Štěpánská 55: Starting Smoothly Matters

The meeting point is Štěpánská 55, and you’ll wait in front of the garage door or contact the team by phone (WhatsApp is available too). That matters because e-trike tours depend on everyone lining up together—your training and departure happen as a group.
Bring your passport or ID card. You’ll also deal with a disclaimer form at the start, which is normal for vehicle-based tours.
One practical note: the tour offers water at the meeting point, plus raincoats if needed, so pack light but don’t skip your everyday essentials like a phone and a charging cable if you’re relying on photos all evening.
The Training and Test Drive: The Part You’ll Be Glad You Get

Before the sightseeing starts, you’ll receive instruction on the retro styled e-bike / e-trike setup and get a short practice drive. Then the actual tour begins from the city center.
This matters more than it sounds. If you’re on the edge about handling the vehicle, a guided intro is the difference between enjoying the ride and constantly worrying. One key piece of feedback is that each participant gets a good lesson at the beginning, so you don’t feel left behind.
Also, the vehicle is described as stable with reliable brakes. That’s reassuring if you’re picturing night rides, street corners, and sudden stops for photos. You’ll still want to drive calmly, keep your speed sensible, and follow guide instructions, but the baseline setup is meant to be confidence-building.
Route Breakdown: What Each Stop Is For (and What to Watch)

This tour runs a loop that covers Prague’s top highlights with timed sightseeing moments. The exact order is structured to move you from famous squares into hill viewpoints and back through classic Old Town streets.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Prague
Wenceslas Square: Your City-Center Orientation
You start at Wenceslas Square for about 10 minutes. This is a strong opener because it sets the tone: central Prague, easy landmarks, and a sense of scale. If you’re trying to understand how the rest of the route connects, this is the first anchor.
At night, the square’s lighting helps it feel dramatic, but it’s still useful as a way to learn the direction of travel. Take a couple photos, then be ready—this tour keeps rolling.
Powder Tower Pass-By: A Quick Landmark Moment
Next up is a Powder Tower stop for around 10 minutes. You’re not here for a long deep-dive or ticketed visit; you’re here to recognize the landmark and connect it to the historic flow of the city.
If you like architecture, use the short window to zoom in on details and grab one clean shot. At night, highlights can wash out fine stone textures—so keep your phone steady.
Letná Park: Where You Feel the City Open Up
Letná Park is next for about 10 minutes. This is where Prague starts to feel less like streets and more like a place with viewpoints and distance. It’s also a natural transition from central sights to the higher perspectives later.
Think of this as the “wake-up” moment. You’re moving toward the big panorama section of the ride.
The Prague Giant Metronome: Photo Stop With Personality
You’ll get around 15 minutes at the Prague Giant Metronome area. This is one of those landmarks that feels instantly recognizable in photos, but the value here is the context: you understand it as part of a bigger hilltop scene, not just a standalone photo prop.
If you want the best shot, treat the stop as a small photography session: take one from the main view, then turn for another angle while the group is pausing.
Letná Viewpoint: The Panoramas You Came For
Letná Viewpoint is another 15-minute stop. This is where the night timing makes sense. You’ll see Prague’s lights spread out, and you’ll get a sense of how the river and districts relate.
This is also where you can mentally connect later stops like Charles Bridge and Old Town Square. Even if you don’t study a map, the view helps you “place” what you’ll see next.
Prague Castle Main Entrance (Outside Only): The Big Name View
Prague Castle gets about 10 minutes, and importantly, you’ll see the main entrance only from outside. That means you’re getting orientation, not a full castle visit.
For many first-time visitors, that’s a good trade. The tour keeps you moving and avoids turning the evening into hours of queues and museum time. You’ll still come away knowing where the castle sits and how it frames the city.
Strahov Monastery: A Historic Pause Before the Bridge Views
Strahov Monastery is a longer 20-minute stop. This is your chance to slow down a bit and absorb a historic setting. The monastery area works well at night because the surroundings feel calmer, and the guide can connect it to Prague’s larger story.
Use this time for a proper look and photos where the lighting cooperates. If the group is moving in and out quickly, follow the plan—your next highlights are close.
John Lennon Wall: Street History With a Human Touch
Then you’ll stop at the John Lennon Wall for about 10 minutes. It’s famous, but the tour’s value is how it lands in the route: after monastery and viewpoints, you get a different side of Prague—street art and cultural memory.
For photos, aim for a clean angle and watch the light. Some areas can be darker than you expect at night, so don’t over-rely on fast autofocus.
Charles Bridge View: The Iconic Moment Without the Long Trek
Charles Bridge is approached as a view stop for about 10 minutes. That’s a practical advantage. You get the bridge’s presence and the classic photo composition without turning the evening into a long walk across crowded streets.
If you want a memorable shot, look for a spot where the bridge leads the eye. Then keep your timing tight—this tour’s plan is built around short, efficient photo breaks.
Franz Kafka Museum (Outside): Recognize the Place, Keep Moving
You’ll have about 10 minutes at the Franz Kafka Museum area, from outside. This is another orientation stop: you spot the location, connect it to the cultural idea of Kafka and Prague, and then continue.
It works best if you’re the type who likes knowing where famous names connect to real streets. If you want to go inside, you’d do that on your own later.
Rudolfinum (Outside): A Refined Contrast to Street-Level Sights
Rudolfinum gets about 10 minutes and is also outside. This building adds a more formal, civic feel to the route. It’s a nice contrast after murals, bridges, and monastery views.
At night, exterior lighting can make the structure feel clean and sharp—ideal for quick photos.
Pařížská Street: Shopping Street Energy in Small Doses
Pařížská Street is on the plan for about 5 minutes. Don’t treat it like a shopping spree. Treat it like a quick “this is Prague’s style” moment—street life, elegant sidewalks, and a change in vibe.
It’s short by design, which helps keep the overall tour moving smoothly.
Old Town Square, Prague: Closing the Loop With the Main Stage
Finally, you end at Old Town Square for about 10 minutes and then return to Štěpánská 55.
Old Town Square is the kind of sight that can look completely different depending on the hour. At night, it feels theatrical, and the tour ends in a place that ties the evening together. If you’re deciding where you’ll spend more time tomorrow, this stop helps you choose.
What Makes This Tour Work So Well for Most Visitors

This night trike format hits a sweet spot: it’s short enough to fit into a day plan, but it still covers the big hitters that shape first-time Prague understanding.
I especially like how the route mixes:
- central icons (Wenceslas Square, Old Town Square)
- hill viewpoints (Letná Park and viewpoints)
- historic landmarks (Powder Tower, Strahov Monastery)
- cultural scenes (John Lennon Wall, Kafka museum area)
- classic city photography (Charles Bridge view)
That mix is why you end with more than photos. You end with a “mental map.” The guide’s explanations also help you understand what you’re seeing, not just where to point your camera.
Who Should Book This (and Who Might Skip It)

This is a great fit if:
- you want a fast overview of Prague without tiring out
- you enjoy photos and night lighting
- you prefer a guided narrative over wandering randomly
- you’re comfortable riding an e-vehicle after a short lesson
It’s less ideal if:
- you want long indoor museum time (this tour is built for brief exterior and viewpoint stops)
- you need restroom access on demand (there’s no WC inside the garage at the meeting point)
There are also clear safety and suitability notes:
- driving the e-trike is 18+
- ages 10–17 can ride in the rear seat with an adult
- it’s not suitable for children under 10, people with epilepsy, or pregnant women
Should You Book Speedy Tours Prague? My Take

If you’re aiming for a night highlight route with easy vehicle handling, a clear start-up training, and multiple viewpoint stops, I think this is a smart choice. The listed guide support, helmets, and rain protection reduce friction, and the stop timing keeps you from wasting time searching for the next view.
I’d book it if you want to leave Prague with both photos and a practical understanding of where everything sits. I’d skip it if your ideal evening is slow, quiet, and museum-heavy—this tour is about motion, views, and guided context.
FAQ

FAQ
How long is the Prague Night Trike Tour?
The duration is listed as 5 to 150 minutes, depending on availability and starting times.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet at Štěpánská 55. Wait in front of the garage door or contact the team by phone (WhatsApp is also available).
What’s included in the tour price?
Included are the e-trike for two people, 10 minutes of training, a tour guide, water at the meeting point, helmets, and raincoats if needed.
Is hotel pickup included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
Do I need ID?
Yes. You should bring your passport or ID card.
Who can drive the e-trike?
You must be 18+ to drive. Ages 10–17 can sit on the rear seat with an adult.
Is there a toilet on site?
At the moment, there is no WC available inside the garage at the meeting point.



































