Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour

REVIEW · STRASBOURG

Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour

  • 4.8435 reviews
  • 1.5 hours
  • From $58
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Operated by One City Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Learning a Segway in Strasbourg is strangely easy. This 90-minute guided ride mixes first-time training with city sightseeing, so you move fast without feeling rushed.

What I like most is the way you get to see key neighborhoods—especially Petite France—and still get real explanations from a guide. Second, you get to roll along the riverside trail for that breezy, low-effort feeling you don’t get when you’re walking block after block.

One thing to consider: you’ll want to come ready for hands-on riding. If you hate feeling a bit wobbly at first, you might want to mentally budget a few minutes for practice before you feel confident.

Quick hits before you book

Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour - Quick hits before you book

  • 90 minutes with a guide: enough time to cover major sights without turning it into a long slog
  • Training for new riders: you’ll learn controls up front, and guides are praised for patience
  • Petite France plus big landmarks: the route connects classic scenes like the cathedral area and the Neustadt
  • Riverside riding: you’re outdoors most of the experience, which helps it feel playful
  • Multi-language options: live guidance is available in English, French, and German

How this 1.5-hour Strasbourg Segway tour really feels

Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour - How this 1.5-hour Strasbourg Segway tour really feels
A Segway tour sounds a little too fun to be practical, but that’s the point. In Strasbourg, where the old streets and river edges can make sightseeing feel slow, a guided glide is a smart shortcut. You get motion, fresh air, and quick access to the areas that most visitors want to photograph—without the fatigue that sometimes comes with a jam-packed walking day.

The tour is 90 minutes long, and it’s guided end to end. That matters because you’re not just steering around; you’re learning the rhythm of riding, then using it to connect a handful of top sights with context along the way. The included helmet helps you feel set up for comfort and safety right away.

Price-wise, it’s $58 per person. For a city highlights tour, that’s in the zone where you’re paying for the Segway equipment and the guide time. Where it becomes good value is simple: you’re getting transportation plus a guided tour, not just a self-guided rental with a map. And the reviews are loud about the instruction—especially for first-timers—which makes the experience more likely to click quickly.

You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Strasbourg

The route: Petite France, cathedral area, and Neustadt in one sweep

Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour - The route: Petite France, cathedral area, and Neustadt in one sweep
You can’t see Strasbourg like a local on foot in 90 minutes. This tour gives you an efficient “best of” arc by threading through several key zones.

Riverside trail riding (the calm start)

The experience begins with you getting up to speed with the Segway. Once you’re comfortable, you glide along the riverside trail. This portion tends to feel like the tour’s warm-up and payoff at the same time: you build confidence while enjoying smoother paths than tight street corners.

Why that’s valuable: once you’re riding confidently, the rest of the tour feels like sightseeing instead of “learning how not to bump things.”

Practical tip for you: if you’re prone to rushing, slow yourself down at the start. Most people get the hang of it fast, but the safest way to enjoy it is to focus on smooth, small movements rather than quick corrections.

Petite France (where the photos make sense)

Next, the tour includes Petite France, the historic quarter people come to see for its classic atmosphere and river-linked character. On a Segway, you get the chance to move from viewpoint to viewpoint without losing time to long distances between photo spots.

What to watch for: don’t treat this like a stop-and-snap-only moment. The value is in the guide’s explanations—how this area fits into Strasbourg’s story and what you should notice as you roll through.

A likely downside: if you’re hoping for lots of time to hop off and linger for a full museum-length experience, this is still a guided ride. You’ll see a lot, but it’s not a slow, hours-long wandering session.

Cathedral area (big views, clear landmarks)

The tour also covers the cathedral area. Strasbourg’s main sights can feel overwhelming on foot because you keep craning your neck while trying not to lose your group. On a Segway, you stay oriented and keep moving as you approach landmark moments.

Why it works: the guide can point out details while you’re positioned for good sightlines. You’re not standing still the whole time, which helps the tour maintain momentum.

One consideration: the cathedral area may have busier pedestrian sections. You’ll still be in control, but expect you’ll follow the guide’s pace and instructions for safe riding.

Neustadt (the next layer of the city)

Finally, the tour includes the Neustadt—Strasbourg’s more expansive, grander side. This contrast is one of the reasons the Segway format feels right here. You can move between the older, more scenic zones and the broader city areas without turning it into a logistics puzzle.

What you’ll likely appreciate: you’ll leave with a mental map. After the tour, the parts you saw feel easier to revisit later on foot, because you’ll already know where things are.

Training and guides: what makes this tour so repeatable

Strasbourg: 1.5-Hour Guided Segway Tour - Training and guides: what makes this tour so repeatable
The standout strength of this experience is the instruction. Over and over, the praise centers on guides teaching first-time riders in a calm, patient way. That’s huge, because a bad first few minutes can ruin the whole thing.

If you’re riding your own Segway for the first time, you’ll start with training and then practice enough to feel steady. The reviews mention people getting comfortable in roughly 10–15 minutes, which tells me the process is designed to reduce anxiety quickly.

You might be guided by instructors such as Vincent, Yves (also mentioned as a manager/owner in feedback), Salome, Emmy, Veronique, or Quinten. I like that variety because it suggests consistency in how the experience is run, not just one perfect guide.

How the guide adds value beyond the ride

A Segway tour can turn into a sightseeing blur if the guide is vague. Here, the guide role is part of why this works: you get explanations as you pass landmarks, which turns your “cool ride” into something you can actually remember.

That’s also why language options matter. You can get live guidance in English, French, or German, so you’re not stuck piecing together bits from handouts.

What to bring (and what to skip)

Included in the tour:

  • Guide
  • Segway
  • Helmet

Not included:

  • Water

So yes, bring water. Even if the tour is only 90 minutes, you’re still outdoors and operating a vehicle. A small bottle is an easy win.

Other practical mindset: wear comfortable clothing and shoes with good grip. The tour is built for safe movement through streets and trails, but your feet matter for stability, especially when you’re learning.

Timing: why 90 minutes is the sweet spot in Strasbourg

Strasbourg is a great city for “short loops.” In 90 minutes, you can cover a meaningful slice of the center and still have energy left for lunch, a museum, or an evening walk by the river.

This tour’s timing is also friendly for families and mixed-age groups. The reviews mention it working well even when someone in the group is nervous at first. That points to a tour style that doesn’t treat first-time riders like an inconvenience.

If you’re planning your day, I’d use this tour early enough that it helps you orient yourself. Afterward, you can return on foot to the spots you enjoyed most—especially Petite France and the cathedral area.

Price and value: is $58 reasonable for a Segway tour?

Let’s be practical about the math. You’re paying for:

  • a guided route (not self-guided)
  • Segway equipment
  • helmet
  • live instruction for riding

At $58 for 90 minutes, the value is strongest when:

  • you want to see several major sights in one pass
  • you’re not sure you can comfortably cover the same ground on foot in the time you have
  • you care about getting explanations, not just passing by buildings

The recurring theme in the feedback is that instruction and guide quality make the Segway feel accessible. If you were expecting a complicated learning curve, you’re likely to be pleasantly surprised by how fast the tour helps you ride. That’s part of what makes the price feel more justified.

Best for who? And who should skip it

You’ll probably love this tour if you:

  • want an efficient, fun highlights circuit in a limited time window
  • like moving through a city rather than standing still
  • want guided context while you ride
  • are okay with a short period of practice before you feel smooth

This may not be your best choice if you:

  • dislike the idea of riding a vehicle in city traffic patterns, even with a guide
  • want long stop-and-stare time at fewer locations
  • get very uncomfortable when you’re learning new physical skills

Weather reality: what happens when it rains

One of the most useful bits of real-world info from feedback is that the provider may adjust the schedule if weather interferes. One example given: a tour was rearranged for the next day with no extra cost when it was raining.

That doesn’t mean every situation will be handled the same way, but it tells you the company isn’t rigid. If you’re booking during a changeable season, it’s reassuring.

Should you book the Strasbourg 1.5-hour Segway tour?

I’d book it if you want a high-fun, low-effort way to cover Strasbourg’s top sights quickly, especially if you’re short on time or tired of crisscrossing on foot. The strongest reason is the combination of clear instruction and a route that hits Petite France, the cathedral area, and the Neustadt, plus a riverside trail for a more relaxed feel.

I’d think twice if your priority is slow, lingering museum-style sightseeing. This tour is about moving, learning, and getting a guided snapshot—then using that to explore more later.

If you go in with the right expectations—90 minutes, some practice time, and a guide-led highlights loop—you’ll come away feeling like you truly got your bearings in Strasbourg.

FAQ

How long is the Strasbourg guided Segway tour?

The tour duration is 90 minutes.

What is included in the price?

The tour includes a guide, a Segway, and a helmet.

Do I need to bring water?

Water is not included, so it’s a good idea to bring your own.

What languages are available for the live guide?

The live tour guide is available in English, French, and German.

Is there a chance to get a full refund if my plans change?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Are helmets provided?

Yes, helmets are included.

Do first-time riders get help?

Yes. The tour includes a guide and training, and the experience is repeatedly praised for being patient with first-time riders.

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