REVIEW · KRAKOW
Krakow: Jewish Quarter and Ghetto Sightseeing Golf Cart Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by INTERCRAC Ltd. · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Krakow tells its Jewish story at fast speed. This 90-minute golf cart tour takes you through Kazimierz, then across the Vistula into Podgórze to see the former ghetto area and key memorial sites with an audio guide.
I really like how the route balances everyday life in Kazimierz with the harder wartime reality in Podgórze. I also appreciate the practical comfort: a heated electric cart with built-in audio means you can cover more ground without working up a sore-knee day.
One thing to consider is that 90 minutes is short. You’re getting the highlights, not a slow, foot-by-foot exploration, and the audio timing can vary a bit by language track.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- A 90-Minute Golf Cart Through Two Krakow Worlds
- Kazimierz First: Jewish Quarter Streets and Everyday Life
- Podgórze and the Former Ghetto: Wall Fragment and Memorial Stops
- Audio Guide on a Heated Cart: Comfort, Languages, and a Timing Quirk
- What $34 Buys You (and Where You May Need Extra Tickets)
- Where You Meet, How to Pack, and How Not to Miss the Start
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Prefer to Walk)
- Should You Book the Krakow Jewish Quarter and Ghetto Golf Cart Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Krakow Jewish Quarter and Ghetto golf cart tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Are entrance tickets included?
- Where do I meet the tour?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
- Are large bags or luggage allowed?
- What are the cancellation rules?
Key points to know before you go
- Heated, electric golf cart ride: comfortable even when Krakow weather is rude.
- Kazimierz focus: you’ll pass through the historic Jewish Quarter and learn what made it distinct.
- Podgórze ghetto landmarks: you’ll see a fragment of the ghetto wall and stop at major memorials.
- Audio guide in many languages: choose from a long list, including English and Hebrew.
- No entrance tickets included: you’re mainly doing an outside/spot-based tour, not museum access.
- Plan for pacing: short stops mean you might want to add a longer visit later if a place hits you hard.
A 90-Minute Golf Cart Through Two Krakow Worlds

This tour is built for travelers who want context without spending hours threading through neighborhoods. You start in Kazimierz (the historic Jewish Quarter) and end in Podgórze (the wartime ghetto area). The ride itself is part of the value: an electric golf cart keeps you moving, and the heating makes the experience feel “easy” rather than tiring.
You’re also not stuck scanning your phone while walking. The cart comes with an audio guide, so you get a guided narrative while you look at what’s in front of you. That’s especially useful in Krakow’s older areas, where streets can feel maze-like if you’re on your own.
What I like most is the way the tour holds two stories in your head at once. Kazimierz shows community life and coexistence over centuries. Podgórze shifts to memory, persecution, and the physical traces left behind. It’s not a replacement for deeper history reading or museum time, but it gives you a strong frame for the rest of your trip.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Krakow.
Kazimierz First: Jewish Quarter Streets and Everyday Life

Your route begins in Kazimierz, historically a separate town and a major center of Jewish life. On the cart, you glide past the kinds of places that shaped day-to-day culture: historic synagogue areas, narrower streets, and spots connected with traditions that still show up in the neighborhood today.
You’ll hear the story of who lived here and how the community’s presence shaped the area over time. That matters because Kazimierz isn’t only “old buildings for photos.” It’s a living neighborhood, and the audio helps you look at what you’re seeing with purpose, not just aesthetics.
Then the tour moves through the Christian side of Kazimierz, where cafes and galleries contribute to the modern feel. The key is that you don’t just get a timeline of history. You get the sense of how Krakow has held multiple communities across long stretches of time, sometimes peacefully, sometimes not.
Practical note: since this is a cart tour, you’ll experience street-level impressions rather than going inside buildings. If you want to see interiors (especially synagogues), plan extra time on another day.
Podgórze and the Former Ghetto: Wall Fragment and Memorial Stops

Crossing the Vistula into Podgórze is where the tour turns more solemn. This is the area associated with the wartime Jewish ghetto during World War II, and the stops are designed around visible reminders and memorial locations.
One of the strongest moments is seeing a fragment of the ghetto wall. It’s not a full preserved section meant for long lingering, but even a piece like this can hit hard because it turns an abstract term—ghetto—into something physical you can point at.
From there, you’ll visit Ghetto Heroes Square, known for its distinctive chair memorial. It’s the kind of place where the audio commentary helps you connect the symbol to the human story behind it, so you’re not just reading facts—you’re making meaning as you stand there.
The tour also includes the historic Under the Eagle Pharmacy. I like including a stop like this because it reminds you that wartime life wasn’t only about big events. It was also about how cities functioned under extreme pressure, and how everyday services and institutions existed alongside cruelty and loss.
Because the tour is limited to 90 minutes, you don’t get the luxury of slow museum-style pacing at each memorial. Still, the structure works: Kazimierz gives context, then Podgórze supplies the memory and key landmarks you’ll want to remember later when you read more or visit additional sites.
Audio Guide on a Heated Cart: Comfort, Languages, and a Timing Quirk

The cart is heated, and that’s not a small detail. In Krakow, you can feel cold quickly in outdoor stops, and heating keeps the ride comfortable so you can stay focused on the commentary.
The audio guide is included and available in a large set of languages, including English, Polish, Hebrew, French, German, Spanish, and many more. That flexibility is great if you’re traveling with friends who don’t all speak English.
Here’s the one “pay attention” detail: one of the audio track comparisons showed that the English track can finish earlier than the Spanish track. Translation and timing can be different across languages, so don’t be surprised if the narration feels slightly ahead or behind your expectations depending on which language you choose. If you’re using the audio actively, it helps to stay alert through the ride rather than assume the timing will match what you remember from another language.
Also, an English-speaking driver is part of the experience. In practice, this means you’ll have a real person available to help if something isn’t clear, even though most of the narration is handled by the audio track.
What $34 Buys You (and Where You May Need Extra Tickets)
At about $34 per person for a 90-minute group cart tour, the value comes from three things:
- Time saved: Kazimierz and Podgórze involve crossing between areas, and a cart gets you from place to place efficiently.
- Built-in guidance: audio commentary is included, so you’re not paying extra for interpretation at each stop.
- Comfort and coverage: heated transportation helps you keep moving without getting worn out.
What’s not included is important. Entrance tickets are not part of the price. That means you should think of this tour as a guided route with powerful exterior/spot visits, not a full access pass to every site. If you want to go inside synagogues, museums, or exhibitions, you’ll need separate tickets and extra time.
In other words: pay $34 for orientation plus key memorial landmarks, then spend additional time where you want deeper detail.
Where You Meet, How to Pack, and How Not to Miss the Start

Logistics are straightforward, but they matter because the tour departs as a group.
You meet at the parking Kiss&Ride in front of the Zabka store. Look for the golf cart labeled excursions.city.
Arrive about 10 minutes early. Once the group has departed, latecomers can’t join, and tickets are non-refundable. That’s worth respecting, because tours like this move efficiently and don’t wait.
Packing is also limited. You can’t bring luggage or large bags. If you’re traveling with shopping bags or bigger items, plan to keep it light and manageable.
Finally, there’s no hotel pickup or drop-off. You’ll need to reach the meeting point on your own, then return there at the end.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Prefer to Walk)

This is a great fit if you’re:
- visiting for the first time and want a fast, structured route through Kazimierz and the ghetto area
- short on time but still want a meaningful narrative, not just sightseeing
- traveling with someone who prefers less walking
- someone who benefits from audio guidance while looking at real places
It’s also wheelchair accessible, which is a big plus for travelers who want to cover more ground without relying on long stretches of uneven sidewalks.
It may be less ideal if you:
- want a slow, stop-and-stare visit where you can spend 45+ minutes inside specific buildings
- prefer full independence, where you choose your own pacing at every site
- get frustrated by audio narration that varies by language timing
A quick practical way to think about it: use this tour to get your bearings fast, then choose one or two places afterward to explore more thoroughly.
Should You Book the Krakow Jewish Quarter and Ghetto Golf Cart Tour?

If your goal is to understand Krakow’s Jewish heritage in a structured way, I think this tour is an excellent use of 90 minutes. It mixes Kazimierz context with Podgórze memorial landmarks, and the heated cart + audio guide setup keeps it comfortable and easy to follow. The pricing feels reasonable for what you get: guided coverage without entrance-ticket demands.
I’d book it especially if you appreciate clear structure and you want a route that brings you to the main sites without guesswork. One driver named Nathalie is singled out for being especially pleasant, and that kind of human tone can make a serious topic feel more approachable.
On the caution side, go in expecting highlights, not exhaustive detail. If something resonates, you’ll likely want to return later on your own.
FAQ
How long is the Krakow Jewish Quarter and Ghetto golf cart tour?
The tour lasts 90 minutes.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is listed at $34 per person.
What’s included in the tour price?
You get the golf cart ride around Kazimierz and the ghetto, an audio guide, and an English-speaking driver.
Are entrance tickets included?
No. Entrance tickets are not included.
Where do I meet the tour?
Meet at the parking Kiss&Ride in front of the Zabka store. Look for a golf cart labeled excursions.city.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the tour is wheelchair accessible.
Are large bags or luggage allowed?
No. Luggage or large bags are not allowed.
What are the cancellation rules?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
























