Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour

REVIEW · OLD TOWN SQUARE PRAGUE

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour

  • 5.09 reviews
  • 2 - 3 hours
  • From $64
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Operated by Prague On Segway · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 5.0 (9)Duration2 - 3 hoursPrice from$64Operated byPrague On SegwayBook viaGetYourGuide

Prague by e-scooter is a smart hack. You get a guided ride that moves fast enough to cover serious ground, yet still lets you pause for photos at the best spots. I like how this tour stitches together the most famous hits in 2–3 hours, and I also like the playful parts, like signing your name at the John Lennon Wall and making a wish while you ride under Charles Bridge. One drawback: you’re on wheels, so the tour is only a fit if you feel comfortable riding in traffic-adjacent areas while wearing a mandatory helmet.

The setup is practical from the start. You get safety training plus a supervised test-drive, and the company provides helmets, water, and hot drinks at the meeting point, with raincoats and gloves if the weather turns.

The route is built for viewpoints and variety. You’ll work your way from central Prague toward the castle area, then out to high lookouts like Letná and Petrin, and finally down toward Lesser Town, the Dancing House area, and Kampa Island for those baby-figure photo moments.

Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

  • Live guide-led routing: you’re not guessing through intersections or timing stops on your own
  • Big photo viewpoints in a short window: Letná and Petrin are the kind of places that punish slow walking
  • Iconic Prague rituals: Lennon Wall signature, and a wish under Charles Bridge
  • Practical safety first: helmet, safety briefing, and a supervised practice before you roll
  • Guide quality matters here: guides like Lisa, Sebastian, Stanley, Prince, Nadja, and Caesar have been praised for keeping it informative and fun
  • Works best when you want less fatigue: the ride helps you enjoy parks and hills without feeling wrecked

Why a 2–3 Hour E-Scooter Tour Works in Prague

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Why a 2–3 Hour E-Scooter Tour Works in Prague
Prague is gorgeous, but it can also be a foot marathon. This tour is designed to solve that problem by pairing short stops with efficient travel between neighborhoods.

In practice, that means you see the center’s headline sights and then escape upward toward the views. You don’t have to choose between Old Town classics and the “wow” panoramas from Letná and Petrin, because the route is built to blend both.

It’s also a great first-day approach if you want your bearings. One of the most common bits of praise is that the guide helps you understand how the city fits together fast, and that makes the rest of your trip easier.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Old Town Square Prague.

Meeting Point, Safety Training, and What’s Included

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Meeting Point, Safety Training, and What’s Included
You meet next door to the Japan Embassy. From there, the tour starts with a safety briefing and a supervised test-drive, so you’re not thrown onto the streets cold.

What you get upfront is genuinely helpful: helmets in multiple sizes, and raincoats plus gloves if needed. You’ll also have unlimited water and hot beverages waiting at the meeting point, which is a small detail that makes a difference if you’re starting early or foggy weather rolls in.

Adults must sign a waiver before riding, and there’s a clear expectation around behavior: intoxication isn’t allowed. The driver of each trike (this is a trike setup) must be at least 18, so it’s an adult-focused activity.

The Core Stops: Lennon Wall, Charles Bridge, and Old Town Square

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - The Core Stops: Lennon Wall, Charles Bridge, and Old Town Square
This is where Prague does its best dramatic acting. You’ll stop at Maltézské náměstí for quick orientation and scenic views, then roll to the John Lennon Wall area.

At the Lennon Wall, you can write your name or a small quote. It’s a simple touch, but it’s one of the most memorable “I was here” moments in the city because the wall is all about personal marks and street-art energy.

Then comes Charles Bridge, with a photo stop and time to take in the riverfront scene. You’ll also ride under the bridge while making a wish, which is one of those classic Prague rituals that’s fun because it fits naturally into the route.

From there, the tour heads into the Old Town Square orbit. Expect time for photos and sightseeing around one of Prague’s most photogenic central squares, with a guide pointing out what to look for so you’re not just snapping random angles.

Kafka Museum Area, the Narrowest Street, and the Peeing Statues

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Kafka Museum Area, the Narrowest Street, and the Peeing Statues
Prague has a serious side and a playful side, often within a few blocks. The tour includes stops that reflect both.

You’ll pass by the Franz Kafka Museum area, including a view connected with the famous peeing statues theme. You’ll also get to see Prague’s narrowest street, which is one of those “you have to see it in person” moments. It helps break up the more formal sights with something quirky and instantly memorable.

A practical note: older streets can feel tight. The riding portion is managed by the guide, but if you’re the type who hates close quarters, just plan to slow down your expectations and trust the group pace.

Crossing Toward the Jewish Quarter and Historic Sites by the Water

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Crossing Toward the Jewish Quarter and Historic Sites by the Water
After you cross the river, the tour shifts into a calmer, historically heavy zone: the Jewish quarter. This is where the city’s layers feel especially close—old streets, older stories, and visible reminders of how communities lived here for centuries.

You’ll see landmarks tied to Jewish history, including the old Jewish cemetery and the oldest synagogue in Europe. Even if your knowledge of Prague history is light, a good guide makes these stops click by explaining what you’re looking at and why it matters.

This portion works well on an e-scooter because you’re covering distance without turning every turn into a mini walking tour. It keeps the day moving while still giving you time to absorb the feel of the neighborhood.

Letná Hill and the Metronome: the Best View-First Move

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Letná Hill and the Metronome: the Best View-First Move
Letná Park is the part of Prague that often steals the show. You’ll head to Letná with a photo stop and time to enjoy the viewpoints.

There’s a reason the metronome shows up in a lot of “best view” routes. The Letná area gives you wide city angles that feel different from the castle views—more panorama, more skyline, and more room to frame the river and bridges.

The timing and pace matter here. One of the strongest praises in past groups is that the ride is a real favor to your legs, especially in parks and uphill stretches like this. If you’ve been walking all morning, this is the moment where e-scooter use feels like it earns its keep.

The tour is also described as a sunset-ready stop, which makes sense. Even if you don’t chase perfect golden hour, being up here at the right time turns photos from touristy to actually worth keeping.

Prague Castle Surroundings, St. Vitus Cathedral, and Castle Gardens

Once you reach the castle district area, the city shifts into a bigger scale. You’ll spend time in the Castle District surroundings with photo stops, plus walking time where the ground and viewpoints require it.

St. Vitus Cathedral and the gardens are the key targets in this section. St. Vitus is one of Prague’s signature monuments, and the cathedral area tends to change how you feel about Prague once you’re standing in its presence.

The castle-zone walk can be slower than the riding parts, but that’s normal. This portion balances the convenience of scooters with the reality that some spots simply need walking to experience properly.

Strahov Monastery and the Brewery Setting Above the City

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Strahov Monastery and the Brewery Setting Above the City
After the castle area, you’ll head to Strahov Monastery. This stop adds a different flavor: a historic religious site paired with a view.

Strahov is known here for housing a 15th-century brewery, and that’s part of what makes it feel more than just a scenic stop. It gives you a sense of how old institutions kept operating through time, not just how they look in photos.

The best advantage of this stop is the breathing room it provides. You get walking time, sightseeing time, and scenic views, with the guide helping you know where to stand for photos without wasting your energy.

Petrin Hill, Petrin Tower, and the Best Downhill Rhythm

Prague: Grand e-Scooter Guided Tour - Petrin Hill, Petrin Tower, and the Best Downhill Rhythm
Petrin Hill is where the day’s motion starts to feel purposeful. You’ll climb easy hills and work your way toward Petrin Tower, which is described as the top point of Prague.

Then you descend via Petrin Gardens toward Lesser Town. This “up and down” rhythm is smart for energy management because your legs get used to shorter efforts while the scooter handles the longer legs between the sights.

The tour also includes photo stops and scenic driving time around this part of Prague, which is exactly what you want when you’re trying to cover a lot without turning the day into pure stair climbing.

Legion Bridge, the Dancing House, and the National Theater Area

Next comes the river-and-architecture stretch toward Lesser Town. You’ll ride toward Legion Bridge and take in the sights connected with the Dancing House and the National Theater area.

This section is less about deep monument time and more about seeing the contrast. Prague isn’t just gothic castles and old stone streets; it also has modern architecture that makes the city feel alive and evolving.

Photo opportunities here are usually easy because the bridge angles and river positions give you straight lines for framing. With a guide, you also get quick orientation on where the best angles typically are so you don’t lose 20 minutes hunting.

Kampa Island and the Baby Sculptures Photo Moment

Kampa Island adds a playful ending. You’ll reach the island of Kampa and get time for pictures, including the baby sculptures that have become one of the city’s most charming “stop and grin” scenes.

This is the kind of finish that helps the day land well. After cathedrals, viewpoints, and hills, Kampa feels lighter and more human—less “major landmark” and more “yes, that’s a weirdly adorable thing in Prague.”

It’s also an easy place to wrap up because you’re still in the central river area, so the return feels logical rather than exhausting.

Price and Value: What You’re Really Paying For

At $64 per person for about 2–3 hours, the price is competitive when you compare what you get: a live guide, safety training, helmets, rain gear, unlimited water and hot drinks at the meeting point, and a postcard souvenir.

The best part is the time efficiency. Prague attractions are scattered in a way that makes solo sightseeing hard if you’re trying to see castles and viewpoints without burning out. This tour turns that problem into a plan.

You also pay for photo help and pacing. Multiple past groups highlighted guides for taking excellent pictures and keeping the tour fun while still informative. Names that have come up for strong guiding include Lisa, Sebastian, Prince, Stanley, Nadja, and Caesar, which is a good sign that the experience isn’t only about the route.

Food isn’t included, so if you’re doing this later in the day, plan a quick meal before or after. Comfortable shoes matter too, because you’ll do some walking around the castle zone and viewpoints.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)

This is a strong choice if you want a first-pass overview and you value viewpoints. It’s especially well-suited for people who don’t want to spend the whole day walking up and down hills, but still want the iconic angles.

It’s also a good fit for couples and small groups who want shared time with a guide, not just a self-guided ride. Private or small groups are available, which can help if you want more flexibility with pace and photo stops.

On the skip side: it’s not suitable for pregnant women, people with heart problems, or people with epilepsy. Intoxication is not allowed, and there are weight limits (maximum 160 kg).

If you’re traveling with a child aged 1–6, the tour notes that a classic electric bike with a special child seat can be provided. The child’s maximum weight is 22 kg (including clothing), and the maximum number of such kids in the group is 2.

Should You Book This Prague On e-Scooter Tour?

Book it if your priorities are: seeing major sights quickly, getting to big viewpoints like Letná and Petrin, and still having time for the quirky Prague stops like Lennon Wall and Kampa’s baby sculptures. The value is strongest when you want a guide to handle route logic and timing so you can focus on pictures and context.

Skip it (or look for another option) if you strongly prefer long walking days with no riding involved, or if health conditions make riding and handling a scooter unsafe for you. Also, if you feel uneasy around helmets and traffic-adjacent movement, this might not be the right match.

FAQ

Where is the meeting point?

You meet next door to the Japan Embassy.

How long is the tour, and how fast do the e-scooters go?

The tour lasts about 2–3 hours, and e-scooters are limited by local law to a maximum speed of 24 km/h.

What’s included in the price?

You get a live guide, safety training and a supervised test-drive, a helmet in multiple sizes, raincoats and gloves if needed, unlimited water and hot beverages at the meeting point, and a Prague postcard souvenir.

Do I need a driver’s license?

No. A driver’s license is not required, though adults must sign a waiver agreement before the tour.

What should I bring?

Bring a passport or ID card, and wear comfortable shoes.

Who is the tour not suitable for?

The tour is not suitable for pregnant women, people with heart problems, or people with epilepsy.

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