Paris: Guided Segway Tour

REVIEW · PARIS

Paris: Guided Segway Tour

  • 4.9219 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $58
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Operated by GO GO TOURS SARL · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.9 (219)Duration3 hoursPrice from$58Operated byGO GO TOURS SARLBook viaGetYourGuide

Paris on a Segway feels like a cheat code. You glide between landmarks with an English-speaking guide and the flexibility to stop for photos without the hassle of constant walking. I like two big things here: the small-group feel (so you can ask questions) and the way the route hits major sights fast, including the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre area.

One thing to consider: the best experience depends on weather and on how comfortable you feel on a self-balancing vehicle at first. If it’s cold or wet, you’ll want to make use of the provided rain gear and gloves and dress for short stops in open air.

Key Takeaways Before You Ride

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Key Takeaways Before You Ride

  • Small-group dynamics: You get more attention during the practice and the photo stops.
  • Photo-friendly pacing: Stops are arranged so you don’t feel like you’re racing past the best angles.
  • Landmarks, not side streets: The route is built around iconic Paris sights in a logical loop.
  • Cycle-lane heavy route: Many stretches use bike lanes, which makes the ride calmer than you might expect.
  • Helpful, patient guides: Guides such as George, Jack, Asia, Jose, and Jennifer come up again and again for care and clarity.
  • Cold-weather support: You’re given raincoats, hats, and gloves if conditions call for it.

Entering The Paris Loop: Where This Tour Starts and Why It Matters

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Entering The Paris Loop: Where This Tour Starts and Why It Matters
This Paris Segway tour starts at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais, 75007, near the Eiffel Tower side of the river. That location is handy because it keeps the ride focused on central sights instead of long transfer time across town. If you’re short on time, this helps you spend more minutes seeing Paris and fewer minutes planning transit.

You’ll also notice something right away: the tour is designed to be structured, not chaotic. Your guide leads, you follow, and the pace is set to keep the group moving smoothly. For first-time riders, that structure is a comfort.

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Getting Set Up: Training, Safety Gear, and First-Time Comfort

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Getting Set Up: Training, Safety Gear, and First-Time Comfort
Before you start sightseeing, you’ll get training and a safety talk. Even if you’ve never tried a Segway, the process is usually quick: you learn the basics on-site, then you’re off to landmarks. Several riders highlight how patient guides are during that early phase, which matters because confidence is what turns the ride from intimidating into fun.

You’ll be provided with a helmet, and if it’s chilly, you’ll also get raincoats, hats, and gloves. That may sound like small details, but in Paris it’s often the difference between enjoying the ride and wishing you had dressed differently. The Segway is an easy way to cover ground, but you still feel the air when you stop for photos.

A practical tip: wear closed-toe shoes with decent grip. The tour description doesn’t go into footwear, but it’s the simplest way to stay steady during training and quick stops.

The Route Feel: A Segway Tour That Prioritizes Views and Flow

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - The Route Feel: A Segway Tour That Prioritizes Views and Flow
This isn’t a slow crawl. It’s a loop built to show you the classic Paris skyline in a short window. The itinerary moves past major landmarks like Les Invalides, Pont Alexandre III, Grand Palais, Petit Palais, Champs-Élysées, the Louvre area, the Seine, the Arc de Triomphe, and the approach to the Eiffel Tower.

The key advantage of a Segway is that you can keep momentum. On foot, you’d spend a lot of time crossing distances between sights. Here, you glide, which means you see more in less time and you’re not exhausted before your day even really begins.

Another practical advantage: the tour includes photo opportunities arranged by the guide. Some guides are known for taking a moment to help with pictures at stops, so you’re not stuck asking strangers—or worse, trying to take shaky photos while balancing.

Les Invalides and the Army Museum Area: First Big “Wow” Stops

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Les Invalides and the Army Museum Area: First Big “Wow” Stops
The ride begins with you moving past Les Invalides for about five minutes. This is one of those places where Paris history shows up immediately—massive architecture, strong institutional presence, and that unmistakable “this city takes its past seriously” feeling.

From there, you pass the Army Museum area for another brief stop. Even when you don’t go inside, the exterior views and the guide’s commentary help you connect what you’re seeing to what it means in the story of France. If you like your sightseeing with context (architecture, design, culture, and history), this early section sets the tone.

Time note: the stops here are short. Think photo moment plus a guided explanation, not a long museum-style visit. If you want deep time inside, you’ll need a separate museum ticket.

Pont Alexandre III: Where the Ride Becomes Scenic

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Pont Alexandre III: Where the Ride Becomes Scenic
Next up is Pont Alexandre III, again passed for about five minutes. This bridge is all about elegance and perspective. It’s the kind of spot where you can feel the city’s “postcard” reputation come from real, physical beauty—not just marketing.

Because the tour is guided, you get more than a quick view. You’re moving through a set piece: river, bridge, and landmark alignments that are hard to appreciate if you’re just trying to find the right angle on your own.

A small drawback to know: traffic and crowd density can affect photo timing at famous bridges. The Segway helps you reposition faster than a walking group, but you still want to stay flexible in busy seasons.

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Grand Palais and Petit Palais: Two Names You’ll Recognize Instantly

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Grand Palais and Petit Palais: Two Names You’ll Recognize Instantly
You’ll pass Grand Palais (about three minutes) and Petit Palais (about three minutes). These stops work well for two reasons. First, the architecture is visually loud in a good way—perfect for quick photos. Second, the guide can connect them to Paris design culture so you understand what you’re seeing rather than just snapping pictures.

If you love architecture, you’ll likely enjoy this section more than you expect, because the tour doesn’t just name buildings. It frames why they look the way they do and how they fit into the city.

Champs-Élysées and Place de la Concorde: Iconic Streets With Real Energy

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Champs-Élysées and Place de la Concorde: Iconic Streets With Real Energy
Next, the tour passes Champs-Élysées (about five minutes) and Place de la Concorde (about five minutes). These are big-name stops, but they can also be tricky to enjoy if you come in expecting calm. Paris has crowds, and these areas are magnets.

That’s where the Segway changes the experience. You don’t have to fight for space with every walking tourist. You stay in the ride flow, guided by someone who can steer the group through the route efficiently.

Still, plan for noise and movement. This isn’t a quiet “wandering” tour. It’s a guided circuit where the city’s energy is part of the show.

The Louvre Area, Seine River, and Flame of Liberty: Paris in Layers

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - The Louvre Area, Seine River, and Flame of Liberty: Paris in Layers
You’ll pass Louvre Museum for about five minutes, then head to the Seine River (about five minutes), and the Flame of Liberty for another short pass. The Louvre stop is mainly about views and photo angles, not a museum visit.

Why this section is valuable: the Seine ties everything together visually. Even when you’re moving, you get a sense of Paris geography—the way the city “rings” around the river and how landmarks line up from different elevations and angles.

The Flame of Liberty is another example of how the tour uses brief stops to add meaning. It’s the kind of landmark you might walk past without understanding unless a guide gives you the context.

If you’re hoping to spend a lot of time here, keep expectations realistic. This is built for coverage, not long museum time.

Arc de Triomphe and the Route Up to Eiffel Tower: The Grand Finale

Paris: Guided Segway Tour - Arc de Triomphe and the Route Up to Eiffel Tower: The Grand Finale
The tour passes Arc de Triomphe for about five minutes, then heads into Parc du Champs de Mars for about five minutes, before reaching the Eiffel Tower for the final highlight. Even if you’ve seen these on screens, they land differently in person.

The Arc de Triomphe stop is short, but it’s positioned well in the route. You’re arriving with momentum, so the moment feels like a turning point instead of a random stop.

Then you reach Parc du Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower approach. This is where the Segway really pays off: you’re not stuck doing long uphill-ish walking segments with crowds. You glide, you get landmark views, and the timing helps you reach the Eiffel Tower while you still have energy for photos.

Practical reality check: the Eiffel Tower area can be busy. Your guide’s pacing and the Segway’s maneuverability help, but you’ll still want to respect that this is one of the most photographed spots on Earth.

How Long 45 Minutes to 3 Hours Really Changes the Experience

The tour duration is listed as 45 minutes to 3 hours depending on your selected time slot. That range is a big deal.

  • In a shorter slot, you’ll feel the tour as a fast highlight sweep: a few major stops, quick explanations, and enough photo time to get your memories.
  • In a longer slot, you’re more likely to ask follow-up questions, slow down for your preferred angles, and get more value from the guide’s commentary.

If you’re visiting Paris for just one day, a shorter duration can be smart. If you want more education and more time at photo points, go longer.

Either way, remember this is a guided circuit built around iconic landmarks. If your dream day includes long museum browsing, plan to pair this with separate ticketed time afterward.

What You’ll Learn: Commentary That Turns Landmarks Into Context

A strong part of this experience is the guided storytelling. The tour includes commentary on the art, design, culture, and history of Paris as you ride. That matters because Paris landmarks can feel familiar yet confusing. A guide helps connect the dots: why a building matters, how an area fits the city, and what to notice beyond the obvious.

Some riders specifically praise certain guides for teaching clearly and answering questions patiently. Names that come up often include George, Jack, Asia, Jose, and Jennifer. I’d treat that as a quality indicator, not a guarantee, but it lines up with what makes a Segway tour work: you need a leader who keeps things safe and also keeps the learning flowing.

Price and Value: Is $58 Worth It?

At $58 per person, you’re paying for three things at once: an experienced guide, the Segway equipment, and the safety gear. You’re also buying convenience: you cover multiple central sights that would otherwise take a lot of walking (and a lot of energy).

The biggest value case is simple: if you want to see major Paris highlights in a short window without constant navigation, this works. If you’re the type who loves reading signs and standing in line at museums, you might find this feels too fast. But if you want a guided overview with moving views and photo stops, the price starts to make sense.

Two costs to keep in mind:

  • Food and drinks aren’t included, so plan a snack plan if you’re riding midday.
  • The tour includes pass-by stops at sights like the Louvre, so it’s not a substitute for paid museum entry.

Weather, Crowds, and Comfort: Small Factors That Matter

Paris weather changes fast. The tour includes rain gear, hats, and gloves when it’s cold, which is thoughtful. Still, if you’re sensitive to wind or wet, dress in layers and keep your hands warm.

Crowds are the other big variable. Famous areas like Champs-Élysées and the Eiffel Tower can be packed. The tour’s structure and Segway mobility help, but you’ll still want patience for photo timing at peak hours.

One more comfort note: if you have balance concerns or physical limitations, you might find the practice phase extra important. The tour is set up for safety training, but your personal comfort matters. When in doubt, choose a shorter duration so you’re not stuck longer than you need.

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

This Paris Segway tour is ideal if you:

  • Want a big-sights circuit without a full day of walking
  • Prefer a guide to handle the flow and route choices
  • Enjoy photo stops and short explanations more than long museum time
  • Want an active, fun way to cover central Paris quickly

You might skip it if you:

  • Prefer quiet neighborhoods and long, slow wandering over icons
  • Want to spend substantial time inside museums or churches during the tour
  • Are uneasy about trying a new balancing device even after a short training session

Should You Book This Paris Segway Tour?

Yes, book it if you want a guided highlight pass with real energy, minimal effort, and a route that hits the Eiffel Tower, Louvre area, and the grand central Paris landmarks in one go. The best results happen when you’re open to a structured ride, you dress for the weather, and you’re ready for quick photo stops instead of long museum time.

If you’re on a tight schedule, this tour is a strong way to get your bearings and see the city’s “greatest hits” without turning your feet into your main attraction.

FAQ

How long is the Paris Segway tour?

The duration is listed as 45 minutes to 3 hours, depending on the time slot you choose.

Where does the tour meet?

The meeting point is 101 Avenue Bourdonnais, 75007.

Is the tour guided, and what language is it in?

Yes. The tour includes a live guide, and it’s offered in English.

Do I need to pay for the tour immediately?

The tour is listed with reserve & pay later, so you can book your spot without paying today.

What equipment is included?

You get a helmet, and if the weather is cold you may also receive raincoats, hats, and gloves.

What is not included in the price?

Food and drinks are not included.

Can I get a refund if my plans change?

Free cancellation is listed up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Is this a private or small-group experience?

It’s described as a private group with a small-group Segway tour setup.

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