REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague: Segway Sightseeing Live-Guided Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Prague Segway Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Prague on a Segway feels like switching gears. You get a quick safety setup, then glide through parts of the city that most walking tours never reach in time. I love that this tour isn’t only about photo stops—it also includes a short practice session so you’re not battling your balance while trying to enjoy the views.
My other favorite part is the route mix: you’ll look toward Prague Castle from the road, then move on to major landmarks like Strahov Stadium and the Maxe van der Stoela park area. One thing to consider: the tour is designed for riding, so you have to follow the rules (like wearing a helmet and not using high-heeled shoes), and it’s not suitable for everyone health-wise.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Bet You’ll Enjoy
- Segways in Prague: why this 1–2 hour ride makes sense
- Meeting at the Embassy of Japan office, then riding beyond downtown
- Safety training and practice: how you get steady before the big sights
- Prague Castle views, Strahov Stadium, and the Maxe van der Stoela park cruise
- Villas, modern streets, and Brevnov Monastery and Brewery area
- The guide matters: names I’ve seen and the kind of stories you’ll get
- Price and value: what $68 buys you in real time
- What to wear, bring, and skip so the tour feels easy
- Who should book this Segway tour (and who shouldn’t)
- Should you book this Prague Segway Sightseeing Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague Segway Sightseeing Live-Guided Tour?
- Where do we meet for the tour?
- Does the tour stay in central Prague downtown?
- Is a guide included, and what languages are offered?
- What’s included in the price?
- What’s not included?
- Are helmets required?
- What are the age and weight requirements?
- Who should avoid booking this Segway tour?
Key Things I’d Bet You’ll Enjoy

- Segway confidence in the first minutes: safety training plus practice before you hit the streets
- Big-view Prague Castle moments: viewpoints you can actually see without a long climb
- Strahov Stadium by Segway: that dramatic scale comes through quickly from the road
- Park time: you’ll cruise through the Maxe van der Stoela park area for a calmer pace
- Villas and “Beverly Hills” feel: roll past modern homes and upscale residences
- Brevnov Monastery and Brewery area: you’ll see the historic site and get a chance to taste craft beer, if available
Segways in Prague: why this 1–2 hour ride makes sense

Prague is great on foot, but some of the best sights sit at the edge of where a walk turns into a long grind. A Segway changes the math. In 1 to 2 hours, you can cover more ground than you would with a typical sightseeing route, and you still move at an easy pace that lets you look up at architecture and landmarks.
This tour is also built around comfort for real people, not stunt riders. You start with an introduction and safety training, then do a short practice session. That matters because nothing kills a sightseeing mood faster than trying to learn “how to ride” while you’re also trying to read signs, spot views, and listen to the guide.
If you like city tours where you can ask questions and keep moving, this fits. It’s a live-guided experience with a professional guide, and it works well for families with kids old enough to handle the minimum age requirement.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Prague
Meeting at the Embassy of Japan office, then riding beyond downtown

Your meeting point is the activity provider’s office next to the Embassy of Japan. From there, the tour doesn’t just stay in the most central, flat-feeling streets. The Segway ride runs outside Prague’s downtown area.
That means you’ll use a minibus shuttle to get from the office to the tour’s starting location and then back again. For you, the benefit is simple: you spend more of your time actually on the Segway, not stuck in traffic or walking long distances just to reach the right roads.
It’s also a good detail to plan your day around. If you’re stacking activities, I suggest giving yourself an extra 30 to 45 minutes buffer so you’re not sprinting between plans.
One small perk before you roll out: in the office, you can enjoy unlimited coffee, tea, and water. It’s not the highlight of Prague, but it’s a nice way to settle in, especially if you’re dealing with morning nerves.
Safety training and practice: how you get steady before the big sights

Segway tours either feel smooth or stressful. This one leans toward smooth, because it gives you time to learn. You’ll get an introduction, safety training, and a practice session before you’re on the main roads.
Here’s what to remember so you don’t waste that practice time:
- Wear shoes that feel stable on pavement. High-heeled shoes aren’t allowed.
- Bring a government ID or passport (and children need their own).
- You’ll need a helmet for the ride, and the local partner provides helmets in all sizes.
There are also clear rider rules that affect comfort and safety: the minimum age is 7, the minimum weight is 35 kg, and the tour isn’t suitable for pregnant women or people with pre-existing medical conditions. If any of those apply to you, it’s worth respecting the limits instead of trying to “push through.”
The practical result of all this: once you’re rolling, you can focus on Prague. You’re not white-knuckling your way to the next view.
Prague Castle views, Strahov Stadium, and the Maxe van der Stoela park cruise

After training, you’ll hit Prague’s streets with your guide. The tour is designed around sightlines and landmark scale, so you spend time looking—not just traveling.
One of the biggest draws is the stretch with views toward Prague Castle. Even when you’re not right at the foot of the castle grounds, being out on the road gives you perspective. You see how the city layers upward and how the river-and-old-town views connect in your mind.
Then you’ll ride past Strahov Stadium, described as the largest sports stadium ever built. Even if you’re not a sports person, the scale reads instantly from where you’re positioned. It’s one of those landmarks that becomes more impressive when you experience it while moving through the area instead of stopping once and leaving.
The route also includes time driving through the Maxe van der Stoela park area. Parks are valuable on a sightseeing day because they break the tight rhythm of streets and buildings. You get a calmer pace, and it makes the tour feel more like a day of exploring Prague than a sprint of quick stops.
The overall pacing works because the ride segments alternate between:
- big landmark viewpoints you can track with your eyes
- calmer zones where you can settle back and listen
If you’ve ever felt walking tours turn into noise—too many stops, too little time—this format helps you keep your head clear.
Villas, modern streets, and Brevnov Monastery and Brewery area

Prague isn’t only old stone and famous bridges. This tour also touches the “newer” side in a way that still feels unmistakably Prague.
Your guide will show you the secrets of Prague’s own Beverly Hills—a stretch associated with modern villas and luxurious residences. I like this part because it gives you contrast. You stop seeing only historic postcard angles and start understanding how the city looks when it’s expensive, landscaped, and spread out.
After that, you’ll come across Brevnov Monastery and Brewery. Brevnov is one of the stops that adds a practical local flavor to a tour built around motion. The monastery setting brings history into the scene, and the brewery connection ties it to contemporary Czech culture.
Worth noting: your tour price does not list food or drinks as included. So if you want to taste craft beers and ales at the brewery, plan on paying for that on-site if it’s offered during your visit. Still, the value is that the tour places you in the right area and gives you the context to appreciate what you’re seeing.
The guide matters: names I’ve seen and the kind of stories you’ll get

A Segway can be fun even with a weak guide, but the best tours are about the stories between the views. This one is a live tour with a professional guide, and it runs in multiple languages: English, Czech, Russian, and Spanish.
From past experiences shared under this tour style, names like Daniel, Randall, and Sibastian come up. The pattern behind those names is what matters to you: guides here tend to focus on comfort first—patience, step-by-step instruction, and a willingness to make sure you’re actually enjoying the ride.
So when you’re moving past landmarks like Strahov Stadium or toward Prague Castle viewpoints, you’re not just seeing objects. You’re getting the why behind the streets and the little details that help you remember Prague as a place, not just a list.
If you like asking questions, this tour format is friendly. You have an ongoing moment with the guide as you roll through different areas, instead of hearing a story only during short, crowded stops.
Price and value: what $68 buys you in real time

At $68 per person for a 1 to 2 hour tour, you might wonder if it’s worth it versus a normal walking tour. Here’s how I’d judge it for your trip.
You’re paying for three things:
- The Segway itself (plus the helmet and guided training setup)
- Time efficiency: you cover more areas than walking alone in the same timeframe
- Guided context in multiple languages
If you only want a couple of photo stops, you could spend less elsewhere. But if you want a mix of viewpoints, parks, and landmark areas with less physical strain, the value gets clearer.
Also, the route runs outside downtown with a shuttle involved. That matters because it signals the operator is trying to position you for riding rather than just marketing a Segway “stroll.” You’re not only moving; you’re being taken to rideable streets where those sights make sense.
And because the tour includes unlimited coffee, tea, and water in the office, you get a small head start on comfort before you launch.
What to wear, bring, and skip so the tour feels easy

This is the part that decides whether the experience feels carefree or annoying. The rules are straightforward, and if you follow them, you’ll have a smoother ride.
Bring:
- Passport or ID card (children need their own ID/passport as well)
Not allowed:
- High-heeled shoes
- Pets
- Backpacks
You’ll also be required to wear a helmet, which is provided in all sizes by the local partner. If rain shows up, rain ponchos are available.
One more practical thought: keep your day flexible. Starting times can shift, so you’ll want to choose your preferred time when you reserve, then stay ready for small adjustments on the day.
Who should book this Segway tour (and who shouldn’t)

I’d recommend this tour if you want:
- a fun, fast way to see major Prague viewpoints without walking for hours
- a guided route that includes parks and landmark areas
- a beginner-friendly Segway setup with training and practice
It’s also a solid option for families with kids who meet the minimum age (7) and minimum weight (35 kg). The experience is designed around guided handling, not leaving you alone to figure things out.
But skip it if:
- you’re pregnant (the tour isn’t suitable)
- you have pre-existing medical conditions that affect your ability to ride safely
- you can’t comfortably follow gear rules like helmet use and stable footwear
Also, if you’re expecting a tour that stays strictly in the busiest downtown sights, you might find the outside-downtown structure different from your mental map. The upside is you get a wider look at the city.
Should you book this Prague Segway Sightseeing Tour?
If you’re looking for a lively way to cover Prague in a short window, I think this is a strong pick. You’ll get real landmarks, park cruising, a view toward Prague Castle, and a ride that makes the city feel bigger and more connected than a tight walking loop.
I’d book it if you’re comfortable riding with safety rules, you meet the age/weight requirements, and you want more than quick sightseeing snapshots. I’d hold off if health or stability concerns apply, or if you prefer purely walking-based routes where you control every stop on your own.
If your goal is to glide through Prague’s highlights with a guide who helps you feel steady fast, this one earns its place.
FAQ
How long is the Prague Segway Sightseeing Live-Guided Tour?
The duration is listed as 1 to 2 hours. Starting times vary based on availability.
Where do we meet for the tour?
You meet at the activity provider’s office next to the Embassy of Japan.
Does the tour stay in central Prague downtown?
No. The Segway tour runs outside Prague’s downtown area. A minibus shuttle transfers you from the office to the starting location and back again.
Is a guide included, and what languages are offered?
Yes, a live tour guide is included. The tour is available in English, Czech, Russian, and Spanish. Private group options are available.
What’s included in the price?
Included items are the Segway, tour guide, roundtrip transfer from the starting point, safety training and practice, helmet, unlimited coffee/tea/water in the office, and rain ponchos if needed.
What’s not included?
Food and drinks during the tour are not included.
Are helmets required?
Yes. Helmet use is mandatory, and the partner provides helmets in all sizes.
What are the age and weight requirements?
The minimum age is 7 years old, and the minimum weight is 35 kg.
Who should avoid booking this Segway tour?
The tour is not suitable for pregnant women and people with pre-existing medical conditions. Also, pets and backpacks aren’t allowed, and high-heeled shoes aren’t permitted.































