Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter)

REVIEW · KRAKOW

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter)

  • 4.888 reviews
  • 3.5 hours
  • From $97
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Operated by Segway Tours & Rental Kraków · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.8 (88)Duration3.5 hoursPrice from$97Operated bySegway Tours & Rental KrakówBook viaGetYourGuide

Krakow is fun on two wheels. This Segway tour pairs the medieval feel of Old Town with time in the Jewish Quarter, all guided at a human pace (not a bus stampede). You’ll glide past big landmarks, then slip into smaller streets where Krakow really shows its personality.

I love how quickly the setup turns into real riding: the short training session is practical, and the guides (from Johan and Tom to Olga, Max, and Zee) keep you moving without rushing you. I also like the way the route compresses a lot of sightseeing into one 210-minute block, so you cover serious ground without feeling like you’re constantly walking.

One drawback to plan for: Krakow’s cobblestones can feel hard on your legs and back, especially if you’re sensitive to uneven surfaces. And yes, you’ll be around bikes, cars, and pedestrians—so it helps if you’re comfortable sharing the street.

Key Things I’d Make Time For

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Key Things I’d Make Time For

  • Fast training that gets you confident before the main loop starts
  • Old Town + Jewish Quarter in one ride (Main Square, Wawel area, synagogues)
  • Vistula river cruising for a calmer change of pace
  • Guides who handle questions well, with facts and context as you go
  • An optional Polish snack stop built into the route
  • Safety-first gear like helmets and rain protection when weather shifts

Finding Sienna 17 and Getting Trained Fast

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Finding Sienna 17 and Getting Trained Fast
Meeting at Sienna 17 Street is straightforward. The office is on the ground floor and uses a front entrance, which matters when you’re trying to locate it without doing a whole city scavenger hunt.

Before you go anywhere scenic, you get a 15-minute Segway riding training session. It’s not just a demo. It’s hands-on, with safety gear on and enough coaching to help you get control of speed, balance, and turning. This is one reason the tour works well even if you’ve never ridden before.

Then the clock shifts into the main experience: 1 hour 45 minutes of guided exploring on the Segway, with stops that make sense rather than forcing you to hop on and off every five minutes. That mix—training first, sightseeing second—is a big quality-of-life win.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Krakow.

Old Town on Wheels: Main Square, Wawel Area, and the Medieval Streets

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Old Town on Wheels: Main Square, Wawel Area, and the Medieval Streets
The Old Town portion is the kind of route you’d need half a day to do comfortably on foot. You glide through medieval streets where the walls feel close and the turns are tight. From the saddle height of a Segway, you can notice details you’d usually miss while walking fast.

You pass major sights like Main Square and the Wawel Castle area. Even if you already know the postcard names, seeing them from street level while you’re rolling past is different from reading about them. You get that quick “wait, this is right here” moment.

The best part of Old Town on a Segway is how it turns sightseeing into motion. Instead of pausing every 30 seconds to catch your breath, you keep momentum and let the city’s layout reveal itself. That’s how you end up appreciating the smaller alleys—where the charm lives.

One small thing to keep in mind: you’re moving through pedestrian and vehicle space. It’s managed, and you’re kitted out for safety, but you should still ride with calm focus, especially when traffic mixes in. If you’re the type who gets anxious in crowds, it helps to mentally treat this like biking through the center—not like a theme park ride.

Gliding the Vistula Riverside: A Different View of Krakow

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Gliding the Vistula Riverside: A Different View of Krakow
The route includes cruising down the Vistula (Wisła) riverside, and that stretch matters more than you might expect. When your eyes shift from compact Old Town streets to a wider water-and-sky view, your brain gets a breather. The ride feels smoother, the pace can feel less stop-and-go, and you get photos that don’t look like every other city shot.

Riverside sections also give you space to practice what you learned in training. Turns feel less cramped, and you can settle into a steady rhythm. It’s a built-in “reset,” which makes the rest of the day easier.

I like that this isn’t just sightseeing-from-a-point. You’re actually traveling through the city’s geography, from historic center energy to riverside openness. That physical shift helps you understand how Krakow’s neighborhoods relate to each other.

Jewish Quarter Streets and the Ghetto Chapter: Context, Pacing, and Respect

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Jewish Quarter Streets and the Ghetto Chapter: Context, Pacing, and Respect
The Jewish Quarter portion is where the tour grows more meaningful. You spend time in the neighborhoods tied to Jewish culture and its history, with guides explaining why this part of Krakow is unique in layout, architecture, and lived experience.

You’ll glide past Jewish synagogues and spend time moving through the alleys instead of only staring at a single landmark. That matters. Streets carry stories, and the tour’s structure gives you chances to connect what you see—courtyards, facades, street turns—with what your guide explains.

Some guides also touch on the wartime period and the ghetto chapter, and they do it with a tone that’s more thoughtful than tour-brochure. I’d treat this section as the emotional core of the ride. Listen for the pacing: it’s not built to be fast or jokey. Ask questions if you want clarity, because the tour supports them.

This area can be visually beautiful and historically heavy at the same time. A Segway helps you move through it efficiently, but it’s still on you to stay present. Slow down your own reactions and let the guide set the tone.

Polish Snack Stop: A Small Break That Makes the Route Human

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Polish Snack Stop: A Small Break That Makes the Route Human
About halfway through your sightseeing time, there’s an option to stop for a Polish snack. It’s not just a food add-on. It gives you a brief reset while still keeping the flow of the tour.

Because this stop is “along the way,” it fits the logic of the route: you don’t get a long sit-down break that drains the afternoon. Instead, you get a quick local bite, then roll back out.

If you have dietary needs, you’ll want to ask what’s available at the moment you arrive. The tour data only says there’s an optional snack, not the exact menu. Treat the snack stop as a chance to taste something typical rather than a guaranteed full meal.

Price and Value for 210 Minutes of Moving Sightseeing

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Price and Value for 210 Minutes of Moving Sightseeing
At about $97 per person for 210 minutes, this tour competes on one big advantage: time. You’re not paying just for a guide. You’re paying for transportation that covers more ground than walking in the same period.

Remember that the total includes 15 minutes of training and 1 hour 45 minutes of guided riding. That means most of the time is actual touring, not standing around learning the basics. If you’re doing Krakow in a tight schedule, the value is strongest here.

This tour also includes the stuff that often costs extra on other experiences: safety gear, raincoats (if weather turns), insurance, and training. You’re not stuck doing a last-minute scramble for helmets or hoping the forecast stays polite.

One practical note: the tour includes a skip-the-ticket-line feature. The exact sites covered aren’t specified in the details, but it does signal you’ll avoid some common waiting games that can chew up a sightseeing day.

It also helps that the experience holds a strong average rating (4.8 from 88 reviews). Most of the praise centers on smooth instruction and how much you manage to see without feeling rushed.

Comfort Notes: Cobblestones, Traffic, and What to Wear

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Comfort Notes: Cobblestones, Traffic, and What to Wear
Krakow’s sidewalks can be tricky, and cobblestones are part of the deal. A few people note that riding can feel a bit hard on back and legs after time on uneven paving. That’s worth taking seriously if you have knee issues or you prefer softer surfaces.

So, I’d plan smart:

  • wear comfortable shoes with grip
  • dress for weather, since raincoats are provided but you still need warm layers if it’s cold
  • skip high-heeled shoes (not allowed)

Traffic is another consideration. You’ll share space with bikes, cars, and pedestrians at times. In practice, this tour works because you get safety briefing and you ride with the group. Still, it’s not a quiet private track. If you’re timid on shared streets, tell your guide early so they can set your expectations.

Weather can matter with any outdoor activity, but the inclusion of raincoats helps. Some riders also suggest packing extra cold-weather comfort, like gloves, when conditions turn chilly.

Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
This is a great fit if you want to see a lot fast but still care about walking through streets you’d skip with a bus. You’ll enjoy it most if you:

  • like guided context, not just photo stops
  • enjoy being in motion rather than waiting at every corner
  • want to combine Old Town with the Jewish Quarter in one go

It’s also a strong choice for first-time Segway riders, because the training is built in and the guides are often praised for being patient.

But it’s not for everyone. It’s not suitable for children under 8 and not recommended for pregnant women, based on the provided rules. There are also weight limits: minimum 30 kg, maximum 135 kg. High heels are not allowed either.

If you have medical limitations that affect balance, mobility, or sensitivity to vibration, it’s worth checking with the provider before booking. The tour includes insurance, but it doesn’t change the physical reality of riding over cobblestones.

Should You Book This Segway Tour of Krakow’s Old Town and Jewish Quarter?

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Should You Book This Segway Tour of Krakow’s Old Town and Jewish Quarter?
I’d book it if you want a smart mix: landmark highlights like Main Square and Wawel plus street-level immersion in the Jewish Quarter, with the Vistula riverside giving you a calmer change of pace.

Choose it when your biggest constraint is time. One 210-minute block lets you cover more than you’d comfortably walk, and the included training means you don’t need experience to start.

Skip it if you know you’re uncomfortable with uneven cobblestones or if shared street traffic makes you anxious. And if you want a slow, deeply contemplative history lesson without moving much, you might prefer something with longer stops and more foot time.

If you match the ride style, this tour is a solid way to see Krakow in a fresh, memorable format.

FAQ

How long is the Segway tour?

The full tour lasts 210 minutes, including a 15-minute Segway training session and 1 hour 45 minutes of guided touring.

Where do I meet for the tour?

You meet at Sienna 17 Street, Krakow at the Segway point. The office is on the ground floor with a front entrance.

Is Segway training included?

Yes. You get Segway usage training before you start the guided route.

What’s included in the price?

Inclusions include a licensed local tour guide, Segway usage training, original Segways, safety gear, raincoats if needed, and insurance.

What languages are offered?

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

What weather support is provided?

Raincoats are provided in case of bad weather.

Are there any shoe or clothing rules?

High-heeled shoes are not allowed. You should bring comfortable shoes and weather-appropriate clothing.

What are the weight limits?

There is a minimum weight of 30 kg and a maximum weight of 135 kg.

Is it refundable if my plans change?

Yes, you can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. The activity also offers reserve now and pay later.

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