Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour

REVIEW · PARIS

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour

  • 5.047 reviews
  • 1.5 hours
  • From $88
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Operated by GO GO TOURS SARL · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 5.0 (47)Duration1.5 hoursPrice from$88Operated byGO GO TOURS SARLBook viaGetYourGuide

Paris looks different at Segway speed. In this 1.5-hour private ride, you cover big landmarks efficiently while your guide keeps the route smooth and the stops photo-friendly. I like how you’re not stuck in the usual walking grind, and you can keep rolling past major sights—then pause when the guide sets you up for the best shots.

My other favorite part is the mix of famous stops packed into one short outing, including the Eiffel Tower area, the Seine, and spots around the Louvre and Musée d’Orsay. The one drawback to plan for: you’ll mainly see highlights from the outside and from the ride itself, not do in-depth museum time or long, lingering visits.

Key things I’d plan around

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Key things I’d plan around

  • Private group feel: you ride with your guide and your group, so the pace stays personal
  • Photo stops you don’t have to hunt for: the guide lines up moments along the route
  • Landmark coverage in 90 minutes: Eiffel Tower area, Invalides, Pont Alexandre III, and more
  • Easy mobility for Paris streets: you get movement without burning your feet out
  • Seine break time: a short pause that breaks up the route and resets your energy

Why a Private Segway Tour Works So Well for Paris Sightseeing

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Why a Private Segway Tour Works So Well for Paris Sightseeing
Paris is packed with “must-see” sights, but trying to link them all by foot can turn into a long, stop-and-start slog. A Segway changes that math. In 90 minutes, you’re able to move across multiple neighborhoods and still have moments to take photos—without spending your day inside a vehicle or under the pressure of a tour rush.

The private setup matters more than people expect. With a guide who stays focused on your group, you get smoother navigation and a calmer vibe. You’re not fighting the flow of a big crowd trying to squeeze onto the sidewalk at the same time. You also benefit from real guidance as you go—your route is paced, and you’re told what to look for before you pass each landmark.

It also feels practical: you’re getting a “big-sights overview” that helps you understand where things sit in Paris. That makes later independent exploring easier, because you’ll remember the angles, the river crossing points, and the general geography.

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Getting Started at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais: Safety First, Then Rolling

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Getting Started at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais: Safety First, Then Rolling
You meet at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais, 75007, which puts you in a very sensible starting zone for the central Paris highlights you’ll see on this route. You’ll get a helmet and a professional guide, so you’re not out there guessing how the equipment should feel.

Before you plan your day, do note the safety requirements. Your weight needs to fall between 88 and 260 pounds, and pregnant women aren’t permitted on the tour. If you’re bringing kids or teens, the weight rule is the real gatekeeper—not just age—so check that first so everyone can relax about it.

The good news: once you’re matched with the Segway and briefed for safety, you’ll spend your energy on the fun part—watching Paris slide by and stepping off at the planned photo moments.

Eiffel Tower Area and the Invalides Zone: Big Names, Quick Views

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Eiffel Tower Area and the Invalides Zone: Big Names, Quick Views
Since you start near the Eiffel Tower side of Paris, the tour naturally sets you up for that classic “I’m really here” feeling early on. From your starting point, you pass by Les Invalides and the Army Museum area. Even if you don’t go inside, this stop gives you context—this is one of those Paris districts where the buildings and monument scale tell you history is stacked into the city fabric.

Then you shift direction toward one of the most photogenic bridges in the city: Pont Alexandre III. This bridge area is a great “Segway contrast” moment. You’re moving through a grand, ceremonial part of Paris, but you’re doing it with speed and freedom, so it doesn’t feel like you’re stuck in one place waiting for the light.

If you’re visiting at night, this kind of route can be extra magical. One guide-led ride mentioned the night-time beauty of the city and how the Eiffel Tower moments looked fantastic. If your schedule lines up with evening, you may catch that glow—so treat your time slot as part of the experience.

Pont Alexandre III to Champs-Élysées: Seeing the Grand Paris Story in 90 Minutes

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Pont Alexandre III to Champs-Élysées: Seeing the Grand Paris Story in 90 Minutes
After Pont Alexandre III, the route keeps steering you toward the showpiece avenue everyone knows: Champs-Élysées. You get to experience it from the Segway, which helps because the boulevard can feel long and repetitive when you’re walking. On a Segway, you’re not “trudging through.” You’re tracking the rhythm of the city while your guide points out what’s worth noticing.

A smart feature here is that the guide comments as you pass each landmark. That means you’re not just taking snapshots—you’re getting quick context that helps the sights make sense. The tour is designed to give you a clean narrative arc without turning into a lecture.

Next up is Place de la Concorde. This is one of those squares where the scale hits you immediately. You’ll pass by it briefly, but it’s a powerful visual anchor—another “big stage” stop that tells you you’re moving through the center of Paris rather than skimming the edges.

Louvre and the Central Classics: Fast, Focused, and Outside-Focused

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Louvre and the Central Classics: Fast, Focused, and Outside-Focused
Few sights carry more weight than the Louvre Museum. On this Segway tour, you get close enough to recognize the landmark instantly as you pass by, without spending your valuable time dealing with long museum plans. This is a “see it, orient yourself, then decide later” kind of experience.

That outside-focused approach is useful if you’re short on time. If you know you want museum time separately, this tour helps you connect the Louvre area to the rest of what you’ll see—especially the river corridor that runs through the next part of the route.

Then you transition to the heart of the Paris postcard world: the Seine River. You’ll have a break time there and then continue along the route. That pause matters because it gives your body a reset and gives your eyes a chance to slow down. It’s not just a transfer moment—it’s part of the tour’s pacing.

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Seine Break Time to Musée d’Orsay: A River Reset and a Culture Hit

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Seine Break Time to Musée d’Orsay: A River Reset and a Culture Hit
The Seine is where Paris goes from “famous” to “felt.” Even with only a short break, you’re given a moment that helps you register the river’s importance in how the city connects. You’re moving through areas that make sense visually once you understand the river as the spine of Paris.

Then you pass by Musée d’Orsay. Orsay is a landmark many people plan around for a full visit, and seeing it from the outside as part of a wider circuit is a good way to build anticipation. You get the location in your mind—so when you later return for a longer museum plan, you’ll feel oriented instead of arriving cold.

The Segway format keeps this efficient. You’re not losing time to slow walking links between river zones. Your guide keeps things moving, while you still get the chance to stop and photograph when it counts.

Parc du Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower Finale: Landmarks You Can Feel

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Parc du Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower Finale: Landmarks You Can Feel
Near the end, the route brings you to Parc du Champs de Mars and then back toward the Eiffel Tower area. This part of the tour feels like a “closing scene.” By now you’ve seen enough major Paris landmarks to recognize patterns: the geometry of big avenues, the way the river divides and connects districts, and how the Eiffel Tower sits like a magnet at the end of many viewpoints.

Parc du Champs de Mars is also a nice shift in texture. After the grand city scenes—boulevards, monuments, and museum-front facades—you get a bit more open, park-like space. That can help you take photos without feeling cramped, and it gives you a comfortable sense of contrast before the tour wraps back around to the starting point.

Ending near the Eiffel Tower also makes sense because it’s the one landmark that most people emotionally want to see on arrival—and again in context after they’ve already “mapped” the city around it.

Photography Stops and Guide Commentary: How This Becomes More Than a Ride

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Photography Stops and Guide Commentary: How This Becomes More Than a Ride
The tour isn’t just about getting from A to B. You’ll have plenty of opportunities to take photographs during organized stops. That’s the difference between snapping random pictures and getting shots that actually show off the landmark angles you came for.

What also helps: the guide provides interesting commentary about what you’re passing. This is where the experience turns practical. Instead of you trying to guess what each building represents, you get quick context while your wheels are rolling. That means you remember things later, and it’s easier to connect the dots between the sites.

A highlight from the guide experience shows up in comments about a guide named Jack. People praised him as very good, engaging, and effective at leading the group to the exact places they were dreaming to see. That lines up with what you want from this kind of tour: quick routing, clear guidance, and confidence that you’ll end up at the right spots for photos.

Also, the ride works well for younger visitors who still want to be impressed. One review specifically called it great for teens and mentioned how a 12-year-old stayed easily impressed. Just remember: the equipment requirement is weight-based, so make sure everyone meets the 88–260 pounds range.

Price and Timing: Is $88 Worth It for 90 Minutes?

Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour - Price and Timing: Is $88 Worth It for 90 Minutes?
At $88 per person for 90 minutes, the value comes down to one question: do you want efficiency plus guidance?

For me, this price is reasonable when you treat it as a tool:

  • You cover multiple major sights in a short window.
  • You get a professional guide, a Segway, and a helmet.
  • You get planned photo stops and commentary so you’re not just “riding around.”

If you prefer wandering without structure, this might feel a bit structured. And if you’re hoping for long indoor time or deep museum focus, you’ll likely want a different day plan—because this tour is built around seeing highlights and passing through key zones.

But if you’re working with limited time in Paris, want to feel mobile, and like getting a guided overview that you can build on later, this is a strong use of your hours.

Also, you don’t have to worry about food and drinks on the tour itself. It’s not included, so you’ll want to plan a snack or a meal around your ride start.

Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want a Different Plan)

This tour fits best if you:

  • Want a fast, guided overview of classic Paris landmarks
  • Like the idea of moving through the city with mobility rather than walking long stretches
  • Appreciate photo stops that are planned, not accidental
  • Have kids or teens who’ll stay engaged—again, as long as everyone meets the weight requirement

It may be less satisfying if you:

  • Want lots of time at one site
  • Are looking for museum entry and deep indoor experiences
  • Have mobility comfort issues that could make Segway riding stressful (you’ll still get safety gear, but this is an active format)

If you’re traveling with a group and want a shared “Paris highlights” experience without splitting time into multiple tours, the private format is a nice way to keep things smooth.

Should You Book This 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour?

I’d book it if you want a high-impact Paris day in a short window. The combination of private guiding, Segway freedom, and planned photo stops makes this feel efficient without being rushed in the usual tour-bus way.

My main reason to hesitate is also the main reason it works for many people: you’re mostly passing by major landmarks rather than doing long, in-depth visits. So, if your heart is set on slow museum time, pair this with another day of museum plans.

If you do book, I’d think about timing. If you can choose an evening slot, the Eiffel Tower area and city lights can add a lot to the experience.

FAQ

How long is the Paris 1.5-hour private Segway tour?

The tour lasts 90 minutes.

Is this tour private?

Yes. It’s a private group tour.

What’s included in the price?

You get a professional guide, a Segway, and a safety helmet.

Is food or drinks included?

No. Food and drinks are not included.

What language is the guide?

The tour is listed with an English live guide, and it may be operated by a multilingual guide.

Where do we meet?

The meeting point is 101 Avenue Bourdonnais, 75007.

Are there any weight limits or restrictions?

Yes. Guests must weigh between 88 and 260 pounds, and pregnant women are not permitted.

If you want, tell me your travel dates and whether you’re aiming for daytime or evening. I can help you decide what part of the route will likely feel best with your schedule.

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