REVIEW · 2-HOUR EXPERIENCES
Paris: Experience Segway Top Highlights Small Group 2 Hours
Book on Viator →Operated by Go Go Tours - Privat Segway Tours In Paris · Bookable on Viator
Paris moves fast when you’re on a Segway. This 90-minute small-group tour strings together big sights with short photo stops and real street energy, plus safety gear and weather protection when you need it.
What I really like is the small-group feel and the sense that you’re getting a guided route rather than just following a checklist. I also like that the experience comes with the gear that matters most for comfort—a helmet and extra layers like rain coats and warm hats/gloves if it’s cold—so you can focus on the sights instead of logistics.
The main drawback to plan around is time: most stops are only about 5 minutes, so it’s great for views and photos, but not a tour where you’ll linger deep inside every monument.
In This Review
- Quick hits
- Why a 90-Minute Segway Highlights Tour Works in Paris
- Getting Started at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais (and What You’ll Want to Wear)
- Segway Training and Safety: You’ll Be Riding Soon
- Invalides: Military Museum and Napoleon’s Tomb Stop
- Pont Alexandre III: The Bridge Built for a World Fair
- Petit Palais and Grand Palais: 1900 Exhibition Buildings You’ll Remember
- Place de la Concorde to the Champs-Élysées: Paris at Prime-Spot Energy
- Arc de Triomphe and the Eiffel Tower Finale
- Guides Drive the Feeling: George, Aysa, Sebastian, and Sacha
- Value and Timing: Is $83.27 Worth It?
- Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Think Twice)
- Should You Book This Segway Highlights Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris Segway highlights tour?
- How much does it cost per person?
- Is the tour in English?
- What landmarks will we see?
- Is the tour private?
- What ride gear is included?
- Are rain gear or warm layers included?
- Is museum entry included?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Quick hits
- Segway setup is quick, and first-timers typically feel comfortable after a short training run
- Small group and private vibe with a maximum of 8 people
- Weather gear included (rain coats, hats, gloves) when conditions call for it
- A smooth, landmark-to-landmark route that covers Invalides to the Eiffel Tower
- A standout guide makes the difference, with praised guides including George, Aysa, Sebastian, and Sacha
Why a 90-Minute Segway Highlights Tour Works in Paris

If Paris feels too big on foot, this is a smart fix. A Segway lets you cover major landmarks without the constant stops, crowded sidewalks, and backtracking that can slow you down.
The tour’s timing is designed for action. You get a guided run through central sights with short stops for photos and context, then you move on before the day gets swallowed by lines and detours.
Getting Started at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais (and What You’ll Want to Wear)

You meet at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais, 75007 Paris, and the ride ends back at the same spot. It’s practical because you don’t have to plan a separate endpoint or hunt for a pickup later.
You’ll have a mobile ticket, and the tour runs in English. Come dressed for the weather; the nice part is you can borrow rain coats, hats, and gloves if it’s chilly, which helps a lot when the wind off the Seine cuts through.
For best results, wear closed-toe shoes with decent grip. You’re standing and balancing for the ride, so skip anything too slick or too floppy.
Segway Training and Safety: You’ll Be Riding Soon

This tour is made for most people, and the ride starts with an orientation so you’re not thrown into traffic feeling unsure. One review notes a short training period of about 10 minutes, after which new riders felt comfortable.
You also get a helmet and use the Segway provided by the operator. That combo matters: it’s safer, it reduces stress, and it lets you enjoy the ride instead of worrying about equipment.
There are also clear rules. The tour isn’t for people who are drunk or under drugs, which is exactly the kind of safety boundary you want on a vehicle-based experience.
Invalides: Military Museum and Napoleon’s Tomb Stop

The tour begins at Les Invalides, a huge complex tied to France’s military story. You’ll get a focused photo moment and background on the site, commissioned back in the 1600s by Louis XIV to care for wounded soldiers.
The stop also includes a free admission ticket, so you can choose to step in briefly if you want to see more than the exterior views. For many visitors, this is the moment where the tour’s pacing feels worth it—because Invalides is one of those places where a little context turns a quick look into something memorable.
Just keep expectations realistic. This is still a short stop, so treat it as a taste, not a full museum day.
Pont Alexandre III: The Bridge Built for a World Fair

Next up is Pont Alexandre III, one of the Seine’s most famous bridges. It’s especially photogenic with ornate details, and it has that grand-exposition feel that Paris does so well.
This stop is brief—about five minutes—but that’s enough time to find a good angle, take a few photos, and learn what makes this bridge so iconic. If you’re pairing this tour with other museum plans, you’ll appreciate the efficient timing here.
If you hate rushing, this is the trade-off you’re signing up for. The upside is you get more landmarks in less time; the downside is you don’t linger.
Petit Palais and Grand Palais: 1900 Exhibition Buildings You’ll Remember

Then the route moves into the world of exhibition-era architecture. Petit Palais and Grand Palais were both shaped by the 1900 Universal Exhibition energy, and the buildings themselves are often what people notice first.
At each stop, you get a short guided moment plus history to connect what you’re seeing to why it exists. That matters because these buildings can look like just pretty stone from a distance—until you understand their purpose.
The practical side: because entry isn’t included at these stops, the tour keeps you moving. That’s good for time management, and it works well if you’re the type who likes to see lots of variety in a day.
Place de la Concorde to the Champs-Élysées: Paris at Prime-Spot Energy

From Place de la Concorde, you’ll ride into one of Paris’s most recognizable axes. This square sits between the Champs-Élysées and the Tuileries Gardens, and it’s tied to major moments in French public life, which gives the area more weight than the postcard look suggests.
Then you’ll pass by the Champs-Élysées, a street with roots going back to Louis XIV and later reshaped by Napoleon’s era. The tour keeps it moving, so think of this as a fast-moving orientation to the city’s showpiece streets.
Short stops here are still worthwhile because the Segway route gives you a different angle than standing still. You’re not only looking—you’re gliding, so you experience the street flow in a way that walking tours can’t fully replicate.
Arc de Triomphe and the Eiffel Tower Finale

The Arc de Triomphe stop is built around what the monument was designed to remember—France’s army victories. You’ll get background and photo time, then you’re back on the Segway heading toward the grand finale.
Finally, the tour closes with the Eiffel Tower, which has become the symbol of France and Paris for decades. A key detail you’ll hear is that when Gustave Eiffel achieved the structure in 1889, it was intended as a temporary landmark, and it wasn’t immediately the favorite view people wanted in the city.
This ending matters because it turns the tower into a conclusion instead of an isolated stop. You’ll arrive there having already learned how the city’s major monuments connect through time and design.
Guides Drive the Feeling: George, Aysa, Sebastian, and Sacha

A Segway tour is only as good as its guide. The good news here is that the experience is strongly associated with guides who keep things lively and easy to follow.
In the praised examples, guides like George bring an engaging, relatable style that makes the tour feel more personal than a standard sightseeing loop. Aysa is noted for thoughtful routing and a good sense of pacing, especially on family trips and milestone birthdays.
Sebastian is mentioned for a gentle route with helpful answers and well-timed stops for viewing. Sacha is highlighted for knowledge and photo opportunities at the must-see points, which is exactly what you want from a short tour.
If you’re the type who gets bored by lectures, don’t panic. This format is built for interaction, quick explanations, and moving on before attention fades.
Value and Timing: Is $83.27 Worth It?
At $83.27 per person, this tour isn’t the cheapest way to see Paris. But it’s priced more like a bundle: guided route + Segway + helmet + built-in photo stops + practical weather gear.
You’re also buying time. In about 1.5 hours, you hit a chain of headline landmarks in a way that would take much longer on foot, especially if you factor in crowds and sidewalk navigation. That time savings can be valuable if you’re packing a tight Paris schedule.
The free Invalides admission ticket adds extra value if you use it for a quick interior visit. And the small-group cap (up to 8 people) helps the whole experience feel less chaotic than big bus tours.
Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Think Twice)
This is a great match for you if you want a high-impact highlights day with minimal planning. It’s also a strong option if you like the idea of learning a bit at each stop without committing to long museum time.
It’s especially good for first-time Segway riders. The training period keeps things manageable, and once you’re comfortable, the sightseeing feels effortless.
Consider thinking twice if you’re the kind of person who wants long, slow museum immersion at each stop. The tour is designed for movement, and many stops are only around five minutes, so you won’t get the kind of deep time you might want at major indoor attractions.
Should You Book This Segway Highlights Tour?
Book it if your goal is to see a lot of Paris landmarks fast, with a guide who keeps the route smooth and the explanations clear. It’s a practical way to get street-level views of the Seine, exhibition-era architecture, grand squares, and two of the city’s biggest icons—without spending your day stuck in transit.
Skip it if you’re chasing a slow, museum-first itinerary. If you want long entry times, deep indoor exploring, and lots of wandering, you’ll likely prefer a walking or museum-focused day where the schedule isn’t built around quick photo stops.
FAQ
How long is the Paris Segway highlights tour?
The tour lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes.
How much does it cost per person?
The price is $83.27 per person.
Is the tour in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
What landmarks will we see?
You’ll visit or pass by Les Invalides, Pont Alexandre III, Petit Palais, Grand Palais, Place de la Concorde, the Champs-Élysées, Arc de Triomphe, and the Eiffel Tower.
Is the tour private?
The experience is described as a private tour for just your party, and it has a maximum group size of 8 travelers.
What ride gear is included?
You’ll get the Segway and a helmet.
Are rain gear or warm layers included?
Yes. Rain coats, hats, and gloves are available if it’s cold.
Is museum entry included?
At Les Invalides, admission is listed as free. For the other stops, admission is listed as not included.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais, 75007 Paris, France, and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.
What’s the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance of the experience start time. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid isn’t refunded.




