REVIEW · KRAKOW
Offroad Segway Guided Krakow City Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Cruising Krakow Bike Tours · Bookable on Viator
Kraków on a Segway is a smart way to see more without rushing. I like the small-group feel and the fact you get a quick orientation before you’re cruising the streets, plus the route is packed with major landmarks and the stories behind them. One thing to consider: this is not for everyone, since it’s not recommended for pregnant travelers and you’ll need basic comfort riding and balancing on your own.
The experience starts in central Kraków and keeps you moving with easy stops for photos and explanations. Guides such as Mike and Chris set a friendly tone right from the start, get you sorted fast with waivers and safety gear, and keep the city history clear and funny. If you’re hoping for a slow, quiet walking pace, a Segway tour may feel a bit too active.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel on the Tour
- Why a Guided Segway City Tour Works So Well in Kraków
- Getting Started: Safety Lesson, Waiver Time, and Real Control
- The Route Mix: Old Town Landmarks Plus Jewish Kraków Stops
- Stop-by-Stop: From Collegium Maius Courtyard to Plac Bohaterów Getta
- Stop 1: Muzeum Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego Collegium Maius
- Stop 2: Muzeum Krakowa – Stara Synagoga
- Stop 3: Fabryka Emalia Oskara Schindlera
- Stop 4: New Jewish Cemetery
- Stop 5: Dragon’s Den (ticket not included)
- Stop 6: Cruising Krakow Bike & Segway Tours (quick orientation point)
- Stop 7: Father Bernatek Footbridge
- Stop 8: Plac Bohaterów Getta
- What “Off-Road” Really Means in the 3-Hour Quarry Option
- Price and Value: How $15.58 Stacks Up for Time and Effort
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
- Practical Tips: Where to Meet, What to Wear, and How to Make It Easier
- The Tour’s Best Promise: Friendly, Funny Guides and Smooth Momentum
- Should You Book the Offroad Segway Guided Kraków City Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Offroad Segway Guided Krakow City Tour?
- How big is the group?
- Do I need prior Segway experience?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- What’s included in the price?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel on the Tour

- Quick Segway orientation so you can get comfortable before heading into the streets
- Max 8 travelers keeps things personal and easier for first-timers
- Jewish Kraków route focus with stops tied to synagogues, cemeteries, and memorial sites
- Free admission at several museums for the included stops
- Optional 3-hour off-road quarry ride with dirt paths and cliffside views
- Helmet + guided support included for peace of mind while you ride
Why a Guided Segway City Tour Works So Well in Kraków

Kraków has lanes that feel made for wandering. The problem is time. Old Town sights are spread out enough that, on foot, you can spend your day crossing streets, climbing small hills, and waiting for your group to catch up.
On a Segway tour, you still stop for the meaningful sights, but you cover the distance with less effort. You end up spending more of your energy on watching, listening, and looking closely at what’s around you.
The best part is the mix of speed and structure. Your guide keeps you pointed the right way, then gives you short, well-timed stops so you don’t lose the thread of the route. And because the group stays small, it’s easier to get help if you need a moment.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Krakow
Getting Started: Safety Lesson, Waiver Time, and Real Control
Before you ride through the city, you get a brief instruction session. It’s designed to help you feel stable on one of the self-balancing electric scooters. Even if you’re brand new, the goal is to get you to a point where steering feels more instinctive before you leave the training area.
In practice, this is the moment that determines whether your whole tour feels smooth. The guides I’d count on for this kind of thing do two things well: they keep the rules simple and they get you into the gear quickly. You’ll also handle the waiver and safety setup, then put on a helmet before you start moving.
If you’re short on time or you’re worried about feeling wobbly, there are shorter options: a 15- or 30-minute ride around Kraków’s Old Town. That’s a good “try it first” approach without committing to the full route.
The Route Mix: Old Town Landmarks Plus Jewish Kraków Stops

What makes this tour more than a sightseeing loop is the way it blends classic Kraków highlights with a focused historical storyline. You’ll ride through and stop at major sites tied to Kraków’s education, community life, and the darker parts of 20th-century history.
The itinerary length depends on the tour you pick, but the stops are built to keep the pacing tight. Each stop is usually only a few minutes, so you’re seeing the highlights without turning it into a slow museum day.
You’ll also notice that multiple stops list admission as free. That matters because it lowers friction. You can pay less out of pocket and keep your attention on the guide’s explanation instead of thinking about tickets.
Stop-by-Stop: From Collegium Maius Courtyard to Plac Bohaterów Getta

Here’s how the route reads in real time, and why each stop is worth your attention.
Stop 1: Muzeum Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego Collegium Maius
Your guide leads you into the courtyard of the Collegium Maius area, tied to the University of Jagiellonian. Even with a short stop, you get a feel for the campus as a lived space, not just a logo on a postcard.
This is a strong start because it anchors you in Kraków’s longer timeline: education, architecture, and how the city grew its identity over centuries. The stop is brief, and that’s fine. Think of it as setting the tone.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Krakow
Stop 2: Muzeum Krakowa – Stara Synagoga
At the old synagogue site, your guide explains the story behind what you see and what you can explore from there. Synagogues are more than buildings in this part of the city. They’re memory markers, with layers that don’t always show on the street.
The stop is short, but it’s framed so you understand why the location matters. If you want deeper context, you can follow up later on your own, but the tour gives you the right starting point.
Stop 3: Fabryka Emalia Oskara Schindlera
This stop is one of the emotional anchors of the itinerary. Your guide explains what the factory site represents and what you can explore today. Even when you know the general idea, seeing a real place like this changes the way the story lands.
The time here is limited, so you won’t get a full museum experience. What you do get is guidance—what to notice first and how to connect the place to the broader Kraków narrative.
Stop 4: New Jewish Cemetery
You stop at the New Jewish Cemetery with an explanation focused on what you can see and what the site communicates. Cemetery stops can feel heavy, but they also help you understand that history isn’t only documents and dates. It’s people, lives, and community continuity and loss.
Because the stop is only a few minutes, you should come in ready to absorb more than you photograph. Let the guide’s context do the heavy lifting.
Stop 5: Dragon’s Den (ticket not included)
Dragon’s Den is included as a stop, but the admission is not listed as included. That means you may need to decide on the spot whether to go inside or just take in the exterior area and the guide’s framing.
This is one of the few “heads up” moments in the itinerary. If you know you want the full site, budget extra. If you’re satisfied with the explanation and a quick look, you won’t be stuck feeling you missed the tour.
Stop 6: Cruising Krakow Bike & Segway Tours (quick orientation point)
This is a practical stop with a short duration. Your guide may use it as a reference point so you can stay oriented for the next stretch.
In tours like this, these quick pauses actually help. They keep you from feeling like you’re just being moved along. You get small reset moments that make it easier to enjoy the ride.
Stop 7: Father Bernatek Footbridge
The footbridge stop is one you’ll feel physically because it’s a change in scenery and it connects you to Kraków’s river views. Your guide explains what you can expect here, and it’s a nice moment to shift from memorial sites to open views.
This is a good breather stop. Even if you’re tired, it’s easier to appreciate a view without also trying to read plaques or rush through indoor spaces.
Stop 8: Plac Bohaterów Getta
The final stop is Plac Bohaterów Getta, with an explanation focused on why the location matters. This square is tied to the history of the Kraków ghetto area, so it carries weight.
Ending here gives your ride a clear emotional arc. You start with city roots and education, then move through key Jewish sites, and finish on a memorial location tied to survival and tragedy. It’s not a light ending, but it’s one of the most meaningful ways to close the tour.
What “Off-Road” Really Means in the 3-Hour Quarry Option
If you choose the longer tour, you add a different kind of Kraków: the old quarry setting. Instead of only city streets, you’ll roll along dirt paths and get panoramic views from a lookout perched high up on limestone cliffs.
This is where the Segway experience feels most special, because you get motion plus nature plus height. You’re not just seeing buildings. You’re changing terrain and perspective.
You should expect this part to feel more adventurous and more physical in terms of balance. It’s still guided, and you still have helmets, but dirt paths are different from smooth paving. If you want photos with a wide, skyline-like view, this option is the one to pick.
Price and Value: How $15.58 Stacks Up for Time and Effort
At about $15.58 per person, this tour is priced like a serious bargain for what’s included. You get a professional guide, use of the Segway, and a helmet. You also get multiple stops where admission is listed as free.
The big value isn’t just the equipment. It’s how much you can fit into one outing. A one- to three-hour window is perfect for travelers who want highlights without booking separate museum days. If you’re moving quickly through Kraków, this kind of tour can save you time and reduce decision fatigue.
The main “cost” isn’t money—it’s that you need to be comfortable riding. If you’re nervous about balance or you can’t do this kind of movement, the tour stops being good value because you won’t enjoy it.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
This works well for most travelers who want a guided route without spending all day walking. The group limit of eight helps first-timers feel supported, and the orientation lesson lowers the entry barrier.
It’s also a strong choice if you care about history but don’t want to do it alone. Your guide’s job is to give you the storyline so the stops connect, not just sit side-by-side on a map.
There are also clear reasons some people might pass. It’s not recommended for pregnant women. And since it runs in weather conditions that require you to dress appropriately, you’ll want to be ready for a ride that continues even when you’d rather be indoors.
Practical Tips: Where to Meet, What to Wear, and How to Make It Easier

You meet at Sławkowska 6A, 31-014 Kraków. The tour ends back at the same meeting point, which makes your next plan easy. It’s also described as being near public transportation, so you can build it into a day without needing a taxi for every segment.
Dress for the forecast, since the tour operates in all weather conditions. That usually means comfortable shoes, a layer you can manage, and protection from rain or wind if needed. If it’s chilly, the ride still moves quickly, so warming up in the beginning matters.
Bring your phone charger mindset, too. Short stops mean you’ll want your camera ready, and the river and cliff views make it worth capturing a few wide shots.
The Tour’s Best Promise: Friendly, Funny Guides and Smooth Momentum
The reviews-style details point to something important: guides do more than explain. They set the tone for your confidence.
Guides like Mike and Chris are described as getting people sorted quickly with waivers and safety gear, then keeping the city facts interesting with humor. That combo matters. If you’re nervous, humor reduces pressure. If you’re curious, it keeps you listening instead of just watching road signs.
Also, the experience is described as flexible, with multiple options depending on time and interest. That’s ideal in a city where your schedule can shift. You’re not trapped in one fixed route and length.
Should You Book the Offroad Segway Guided Kraków City Tour?
Book it if you want to see major Kraków sites quickly, with guidance that connects the story from stop to stop. The mix of Old Town locations and Jewish Kraków stops gives you more than just photo ops. And if you pick the 3-hour quarry option, you also get a change of scenery and some impressive views.
Skip it (or think twice) if balance and riding comfort are a challenge for you, or if the ride pace sounds too active. And if you’re hoping every stop is included with zero extra costs, note that Dragon’s Den admission isn’t included.
If you’re trying to make the most of a day and you like hands-on exploring, this is exactly the kind of Kraków activity that earns its spot on your itinerary.
FAQ
How long is the Offroad Segway Guided Krakow City Tour?
You can choose from tour options lasting about 1 to 3 hours. There are also shorter 15- or 30-minute Segway tests around Kraków’s Old Town.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum group size of 8 travelers.
Do I need prior Segway experience?
No. You’ll get a brief orientation lesson first, and most travelers can participate.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
What’s included in the price?
Included are a professional guide, Segway use (X2 Segway), and a helmet.
Where do I meet for the tour?
You meet at Sławkowska 6A, 31-014 Kraków, Poland, and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.
Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.





























