REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by GO GO TOURS SARL · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Paris on a Segway feels like fast-forward. In a smooth, private setup, you zip between landmark zones with Segway freedom and a guide who keeps you moving. You also get planned photo stops, so you’re not just rushing past the sights.
I really like how much ground this route covers in 90 minutes. You pass major icons like the Eiffel Tower area, the Louvre zone, Pont Alexandre III, and the Champs-Élysées, while your guide explains what you’re seeing as you go.
One consideration: this is mostly a pass-by style tour, with short segments at each landmark rather than long museum time. If you want lots of time inside buildings, you’ll likely need to plan that separately.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you ride
- Entering Paris on a Personal Segway (Not a Hop-On Bus)
- Where to Meet at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais
- The Route That Links the Eiffel Area to the Louvre Zone
- Les Invalides and the Army Museum area
- Pont Alexandre III: the bridge moment
- Champs-Élysées and Place de la Concorde
- The Louvre Area and Seine Break: When Photos Matter
- Louvre zone pass-by
- Seine River break time
- Musée d’Orsay and the Final Push Toward the Eiffel Tower
- Musée d’Orsay pass-by
- Parc du Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower finish
- Your Guide, Safety Gear, and the Real Pace of the Tour
- Price and Value: Is $88 Worth It?
- Who This Private Segway Tour Fits Best
- Quick Checklist: Practical Things to Know Before You Go
- Should You Book This 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris private Segway tour?
- What is the price per person?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is this tour private?
- What is included in the tour price?
- Are food and drinks included?
- Which major sights are on the route?
- What language is the tour guide?
- Is there a weight limit for riders?
- Are pregnant women allowed on the tour?
Key things to know before you ride

- A tight 90-minute loop that hits Eiffel Tower, Louvre area, Pont Alexandre III, and the Seine corridor
- Photo stops built into the route, so you can actually capture the views without hunting for angles
- Private group experience with an English live guide and your own Segway
- Safety gear included with a helmet and a guide leading the way
- Good for teens and families when everyone wants motion plus history at a comfortable pace
Entering Paris on a Personal Segway (Not a Hop-On Bus)

This tour is built for people who want the highlights without the stop-and-start rhythm of buses or the slow grind of walking. With your own Segway, you get around faster, which matters in Paris, where getting from one famous corner to another can eat up time.
The biggest payoff is how the route feels “lighter.” Instead of fighting crowds at one site and then trying to regroup elsewhere, the day flows from one sight zone to the next. You still get commentary as you pass the key buildings and monuments, and the guide sets you up for photos at organized stops.
Because it’s private, it’s also easier to keep the pace comfortable. You’re not mixed into a large group that moves on rails. Your guide can shape the rhythm around your party, which is a big deal when you’re traveling with teens.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Paris
Where to Meet at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais

You’ll start at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais, 75007. That location puts you in a very practical pocket of central Paris, close to the Eiffel Tower side of the river.
Your tour ends back at the same address, which simplifies your day. You don’t have to worry about transportation back to a far-off drop-off point, or reworking your evening plans around a different neighborhood.
The Route That Links the Eiffel Area to the Louvre Zone

The tour is designed like a classic Paris highlights circuit, with a mix of grand streets, major bridges, and the river’s viewpoints. Even though many stops are short pass-bys, the order makes sense: you’re moving through the city’s most “recognizable” skyline in a sequence that feels coherent.
It also helps that your guide uses the Segway time efficiently. As you roll by each landmark zone, you get context that turns what looks like scenery into something you can actually place.
Les Invalides and the Army Museum area
You pass by Les Invalides, one of the city’s most important monumental complexes. It’s the kind of sight that looks impressive even if you don’t have a museum ticket in hand.
You’ll also pass the Army Museum, Paris zone. Since you’re not being scheduled for a long interior visit here, the value is visual: you see the scale and setting, then you move on before Paris traffic and crowd energy slow you down.
If you’re the type who likes quick “wow moments” over lengthy stops, this is a good match.
Pont Alexandre III: the bridge moment
Next up is Pont Alexandre III. This bridge is famous for how it frames the river and the grand Paris skyline. From a Segway, you get a smoother sweep along the area without having to crowd-squeeze like you might on foot.
This stop is also a great photo setup. The tour is specifically structured with photo pauses, and this is exactly the kind of location where a quick break turns into a handful of strong shots.
Champs-Élysées and Place de la Concorde
Then you roll into the Champs-Élysées corridor. This is one of those streets where you can feel how much Paris is about spectacle, not just sightseeing. The guide’s commentary helps you understand what you’re looking at as the scenery changes street by street.
After that comes Place de la Concorde. It’s a big open square, which works well for a moving tour. You’re not stuck behind barriers for long, and the wide layout makes it easier to absorb the scale of what’s around you.
A practical tip for this section: if you want photos, keep an eye on where the guide stops. Don’t drift to the edges of your lane—Paris has tight spaces, and your best angles come from the spots your guide positions you for.
The Louvre Area and Seine Break: When Photos Matter

The tour then heads toward the Louvre Museum area and the river. Even if you’re not going in, this is where Paris starts to feel cinematic: monumental façades, wide sightlines, and the Seine acting like the city’s central hallway.
Louvre zone pass-by
You’ll pass by the Louvre Museum. The value here isn’t a deep museum visit. It’s getting the setting—the classic Paris “major icon” view—while you’re still fresh and not exhausted from a long walking day.
Because you’re moving, you also avoid the common sightseeing trap of spending too much time in one crowded spot. You get to see the landmark, then keep your momentum.
The tour also includes Grand and Petit Palais along the way. That matters because these buildings are part of the same grand visual story, and seeing them from the Segway adds extra context to the “this is the Paris people picture” feeling.
Seine River break time
There’s a Seine River break time during the tour. It’s a short pause—listed as about 10 minutes—so think of it as a breather and a photo window, not a meal stop.
This is the segment that can really reset your energy. After rolling past major streets and buildings, you get a moment to slow down, check your photos, and enjoy the river air.
Musée d’Orsay and the Final Push Toward the Eiffel Tower

After the river, the tour continues to Musée d’Orsay and then onward to the Parc du Champs de Mars area. This is a strong sequence because it sets up the Eiffel Tower as the finish rather than a mid-ride stop.
Musée d’Orsay pass-by
You’ll pass by Musée d’Orsay. Even without going inside, it’s a great landmark to see as part of the Seine corridor. It helps connect the modern Paris skyline with the river’s older, iconic viewpoints.
Parc du Champs de Mars and the Eiffel Tower finish
Finally, you move through Parc du Champs de Mars and reach the Eiffel Tower area. This ending matters because it gives you the classic payoff: you’re not leaving the Eiffel Tower zone mid-tour, so you can take in the moment while you still have time for photos.
One of the strongest comments from real riders is how the Eiffel Tower and surrounding light can look especially good when the city is darker. If you’re choosing a time slot that lands near evening, it can add extra sparkle to the end of the ride.
Your Guide, Safety Gear, and the Real Pace of the Tour

This experience includes a professional guide and a safety helmet. The tour is also led in English, though the operator notes the tour may be run by a multilingual guide. Either way, you’ll have live guiding throughout.
What I like about this setup is the combination of movement and commentary. You’re not only getting from A to B—you’re getting help understanding what you’re looking at as you pass it.
The guide quality seems to be a big theme in the feedback, including praise for a guide named Jack. People highlighted that Jack led them to the exact places they wanted to see and kept things engaging—especially for a family outing with a 12-year-old.
Price and Value: Is $88 Worth It?

At $88 per person for about 90 minutes, you’re paying for three things: the Segway itself, a helmet, and a guide who can manage a private route through central Paris.
Is it cheap? No. But the value comes from what you get in time. You cover a concentrated set of major landmarks without spending hours walking long distances between them. For many people, that time savings is the whole point—especially if you have limited days in Paris.
The tour also doesn’t include food and drinks. That’s normal for a 90-minute ride, but it means you’ll want to plan around meals separately.
So here’s the honest comparison: if you’d spend part of the day bouncing between far-apart areas on foot, this can feel like a smart swap. If you’re hoping for long museum time or a deep interior tour, it’s not that kind of experience.
Who This Private Segway Tour Fits Best

This is a good fit if you want Paris highlights in a compact window and you like the idea of controlling your own pace. It’s also a strong option for teens—one review specifically called out that it worked well with teenagers, and another mentioned a 12-year-old being impressed by how much the group covered.
It can also suit couples who want a fun, different way to see iconic landmarks without getting bogged down in logistics. You’ll get the big-photo moments, plus the added context from the guide.
It’s less ideal if your top priority is slow wandering and long indoor time. Because the route includes several short pass-bys, you’ll feel the structure. You’re meant to travel through Paris, not to linger inside places.
Quick Checklist: Practical Things to Know Before You Go

There are a few “read this first” facts you should match to your situation:
- Weight requirement: between 88 pounds and 260 pounds.
- Pregnancy restriction: pregnant women are not permitted.
- Tour length: 90 minutes.
- Food and drinks: not included.
If any of those don’t work, you’ll want to choose a different style of tour.
Also, the tour notes confirmation is received at time of booking and offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance, plus reserve now and pay later. Those are the kind of flexibility features that help if your Paris schedule is still shifting.
Should You Book This 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour?
If your goal is to see a lot of Paris in a tight window—Eiffel Tower area, Louvre zone, Pont Alexandre III, and the Champs-Élysées corridor—then yes, it’s a book-worthy idea. The private format, the included Segway and helmet, and the planned photo stops make the experience feel purposeful rather than chaotic.
If you’re the type who wants long museum visits or hours of wandering at one landmark, look at other tour styles. This one is designed for movement, quick photo moments, and strong sightseeing coverage in about 90 minutes.
My rule of thumb: book it when you want the city’s top visual hits plus guidance, and you’re happy doing the “see it now, explore deeper later” strategy.
FAQ
How long is the Paris private Segway tour?
The tour lasts 90 minutes.
What is the price per person?
The price is $88 per person.
Where is the meeting point?
The meeting point is 101 Avenue Bourdonnais, 75007.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private group experience.
What is included in the tour price?
It includes a professional guide, a Segway, and a safety helmet.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
Which major sights are on the route?
You pass by places including the Eiffel Tower, Les Invalides/Army Museum area, Pont Alexandre III, Champs-Élysées, Place de la Concorde, Louvre Museum area, the Seine River, Musée d’Orsay, and Parc du Champs de Mars, plus Grand and Petit Palais.
What language is the tour guide?
The tour is English.
Is there a weight limit for riders?
Yes. Riders must weigh between 88 pounds and 260 pounds.
Are pregnant women allowed on the tour?
No. Pregnant women are not permitted.



































