REVIEW · KRAKOW
Electric Scooter Tour: Jewish Quarter Tour – 2-Hours of Magic!
Book on Viator →Operated by Segway Point Krakow - City Tours & Rental · Bookable on Viator
Two wheels, big stories in Kazimierz. I like that this is a guided electric scooter tour where you focus on the sights while someone else handles the route and timing. The whole thing is set up to feel smooth even if you’ve never ridden one before.
I especially love two parts: the 15-minute training that gets you confidently moving, and the way you check off major landmarks like Remuh Cemetery without feeling rushed in a tight walking line. You’ll cover more than a typical stroll, but you still get short, story-focused stops.
One thing to consider is that it depends on good weather. If Krakow is throwing rain or the streets are slick, the tour may shift dates or you’ll get a refund—so plan to keep your schedule flexible.
In This Review
- Key highlights to look for
- Why this 2-hour Jewish Quarter scooter loop makes sense
- The 15-minute training: you’ll actually be riding, not panicking
- How the ride changes your view of Kazimierz
- Stop-by-stop: what you’ll do at each landmark
- Kupa Synagogue (Synagoga Kupa): start with a strong sense of place
- Plac Wolnica: the square stop built for quick orientation
- Market Square (New Square): moving from Jewish Quarter landmarks to city landmarks
- Corpus Christi Church (Kosciol Bozego Ciala): a different style of stop, still guided
- Church on the Rock (Kosciol na Skalce): a memorable name, a useful story stop
- Remuh Cemetery: one of the emotional anchors of the route
- Father Bernatek Footbridge: closing the loop with a final viewpoint
- Price and value: what $45.89 buys you
- Practical tips so you enjoy the ride more
- Who should book this scooter tour (and who should skip it)
- Should you book this Jewish Quarter electric scooter tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Jewish Quarter electric scooter tour?
- Do I get scooter training before we start sightseeing?
- Is the tour guided in English?
- What landmarks are included in the route?
- Are admission tickets included for the stops?
- What safety equipment do I receive?
- What is the maximum group size?
- Is there a weight limit?
- Where do I meet and what’s the end point?
- Can I cancel if the weather is bad?
Key highlights to look for

- Quick training first, so beginners aren’t left behind
- Small-group feel with a maximum of 30 people
- Helmets and safety gear included, which makes the ride feel more secure
- Guided stops built around photo opportunities at famous Kazimierz landmarks
- English-language narration, with a full 2-hour outing including riding time
Why this 2-hour Jewish Quarter scooter loop makes sense
Krakow’s Kazimierz area is packed with meaningful places, and a walking tour can feel like a constant trade-off: stop for photos, then hustle to catch the next corner. This electric scooter format fixes that problem. You get speed and momentum, but the tour still slows down at key moments so you can hear the guide’s explanations and actually look around.
The timing is also practical. You’re out for about 2 hours, with 15 minutes of riding training and then about 1 hour and 45 minutes of guided touring. That means you’re not spending half your day commuting between sites, and you’re not exhausted by the end.
I also like that the vibe is family-friendly. One review that stands out is a dad taking two kids (ages 10 and 13) who had a blast riding around Krakow and seeing the sights together. That’s the kind of setup where a group of mixed ages can stay interested—because the activity itself stays fun while the guide keeps things moving.
A few more Krakow tours and experiences worth a look
The 15-minute training: you’ll actually be riding, not panicking

If you’ve never used a Segway-style scooter before, the first few minutes are everything. Here, everyone starts with a training session that covers how to enter, exit, and move safely. It’s not just theory. It’s hands-on time to get your balance, your steering feel, and your confidence.
You also get the right safety setup. Helmets and other necessary safety gear are included, and there’s a clear rule that participants who are under the influence of alcohol aren’t allowed. In real-world terms, that helps keep the group ride calmer and safer for everyone.
The weight limit is 120 kg / 265 lb, so if you’re near that range, it’s worth checking ahead so you don’t show up hoping for a workaround. The tour is built for most people, but that limit matters for the scooter mechanics.
How the ride changes your view of Kazimierz

This tour is designed around movement. The guide navigates so you don’t have to constantly study maps or second-guess routes. That’s a big deal in Kazimierz, where streets can be narrow and landmarks don’t always sit right on the biggest, easiest roads.
You’ll also feel a difference compared with walking. The scooter pace lets you cover ground faster, so the “I want to see it all” instinct doesn’t collapse into sore feet and missed stops. At each location, you still get a tight little window—enough time for the story and photos, without dragging.
And because the group size is capped at 30 travelers, it’s easier to keep things orderly during those short stop-and-go moments. You can listen without competing with a crowd that keeps flowing through.
Stop-by-stop: what you’ll do at each landmark
The tour is structured as a series of short arrivals and story stops. Plan for about 10 minutes per main location after the initial training, with time for listening, looking, and snapping photos.
Kupa Synagogue (Synagoga Kupa): start with a strong sense of place
Your first real sightseeing stop is the Kupa Synagogue (Synagoga Kupa). You’ll arrive on the scooters, park for a brief moment, and then the guide explains the story behind the synagogue. After that, you move on.
What makes this a good start is the contrast: you’re fresh from training, so you’re still in learning mode, and the guide can set the tone for what you’re seeing in Kazimierz. It helps you understand the area as more than a scenic district—you’re there for specific sites with specific meaning.
If you care about Jewish Krakow and the Kazimierz neighborhood, this is the kind of opening that gives you context quickly, before the route continues.
Plac Wolnica: the square stop built for quick orientation
Next comes Plac Wolnica. Again, you roll in on the scooters, get a guided story about the square, and then you’re off.
Squares like this work well on a scooter tour because they give you a natural “breather.” You can orient yourself—mentally and visually—then get back on the road with a clearer sense of how the streets connect. Even without lingering for long periods, the stop helps tie the route to real geography.
This also tends to be a nice photo moment. The tour is explicitly built around photo opportunities at key locations, and a square usually makes it easier to frame shots without constantly adjusting your angle.
Market Square (New Square): moving from Jewish Quarter landmarks to city landmarks
From Plac Wolnica, you head to the Market Square area (described as arriving to the New Square in the route details). The guide tells the story of the location, then you continue.
Even if you think you know Krakow’s main square vibe, doing it from the Kazimierz circuit can change how it feels. You’re not just checking a box; you’re connecting districts through guided storytelling. The scooter pace also helps here—you can cover this larger landmark moment without turning the tour into an exhausting marathon.
One small practical advantage: because this is a group tour with planned stops, you’re less likely to spend time wandering in the wrong direction looking for the best angle.
Corpus Christi Church (Kosciol Bozego Ciala): a different style of stop, still guided
After the squares, you arrive at the Corpus Christi Church (Kosciol Bozego Ciala). The routine stays the same: arrive, listen to the guide’s story, then move on.
This kind of stop matters because it keeps the route varied. You’re seeing more than one thread of Krakow’s religious and architectural landscape. You’ll feel like you’re covering the area in a broader way rather than getting stuck in just one category of sights.
Also, church stops on scooter tours are usually efficient. You’re not spending hours trying to time entrances or wandering around waiting for the group to catch up. You’re getting a short, guided snapshot.
Church on the Rock (Kosciol na Skalce): a memorable name, a useful story stop
Next is Church on the Rock (Kosciol na Skalce). The guide gives you the story, you get your photo opportunity, and then you continue onward.
Stops like this are exactly why the tour format works. A guided explanation turns the location from a name on a map into something you can picture and remember. And because you’re on scooters, you’re not losing time by getting stuck in slow walking traffic or backtracking.
If you enjoy architecture and religious sites but don’t want a heavy, all-day church crawl, this fits the sweet spot.
Remuh Cemetery: one of the emotional anchors of the route
Then you reach Remuh Cemetery. Like the other stops, you arrive on the scooters and get a guided story, with time to absorb what you’re seeing and take photos.
This stop is often the one people remember after the ride ends. The reason is simple: cemetery visits tend to leave an impression, and the guide’s story helps you pay attention instead of rushing past details.
Because the schedule keeps things respectful and time-boxed, you can focus without feeling like you’re trapped in a long silence. You’ll have enough time to look, but the tour doesn’t drag you out of the moment.
Father Bernatek Footbridge: closing the loop with a final viewpoint
The last stop is Father Bernatek Footbridge. You’ll roll up, hear the guide’s story about the footbridge, and then wrap up back where you started.
This is a smart ending. Bridges and riverside viewpoints often provide a natural “reset,” a place to look at the city layout and imagine the route you just covered. And since the tour ends back at the meeting point, it gives you a clean, satisfying finish instead of an awkward half-transfer to somewhere else.
Price and value: what $45.89 buys you
At $45.89 per person, the value is in the combination: you’re paying for a local guide, a short riding training session, the electric scooter rental for the full tour, and safety gear. You’re also getting structured stops with photo opportunities and insider tips from the guide.
A walking tour might cost less, but you’d usually trade away one big benefit: coverage speed. Here, the scooter helps you see multiple landmark areas in a short timeframe without turning your day into nonstop walking.
It’s also not a huge group—maximum 30 travelers—so the guide can keep things organized. That matters for both comfort and listening.
Finally, the route includes stops where the listing notes admission ticket free for those locations. If you’re trying to budget and avoid surprise entry costs, that’s a plus.
Practical tips so you enjoy the ride more

Here’s how to make this kind of scooter tour feel easy instead of stressful:
- Arrive a few minutes early, so the training start time feels calm.
- Wear shoes you can stand in comfortably. The tour is short, but you’ll park the scooter and walk a bit at stops.
- Bring a light layer. The tour depends on weather, and Krakow can change moods quickly.
- If you’re traveling with kids or teens, this format can work well because it stays active. Still, be sure they take the training seriously so the whole group ride feels smooth.
- If you want photos, get ready at each stop rather than scrambling for your phone while everyone’s moving.
Who should book this scooter tour (and who should skip it)
This tour is a good fit if you:
- want to see the Kazimierz highlights without long hours of walking
- are new to scooter riding and want training instead of jumping straight in
- like guided context at major stops, with timeboxed stories and photo stops
- prefer a fun activity that still includes real sightseeing structure
You might want to consider another option if you:
- strongly dislike riding on scooters or have balance concerns (even with training and helmets)
- need a very quiet, lingering pace at sites, because the stop times are short and the route moves
- don’t have flexible plans for weather, since the tour requires good weather and can be rescheduled or refunded
Should you book this Jewish Quarter electric scooter tour?

Yes, if you want an efficient, beginner-friendly way to cover major Kazimierz landmarks while still getting guided explanations. The big draw is the mix of riding fun plus structured stops like Kupa Synagogue, Plac Wolnica, Remuh Cemetery, and Father Bernatek Footbridge—all within a reasonable 2-hour window.
If your travel style leans toward walking slowly and spending long periods in one place, you may feel the pacing is too brisk. But for most people, especially first-timers to Krakow, this is a smart way to get oriented fast and see a lot without burning your legs.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Jewish Quarter electric scooter tour?
It runs for about 2 hours, including a 15-minute scooter/Segway training session and roughly 1 hour and 45 minutes of guided touring.
Do I get scooter training before we start sightseeing?
Yes. Every participant receives training at the beginning, including how to enter, exit, and move on the scooter.
Is the tour guided in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
What landmarks are included in the route?
The tour includes stops at Kupa Synagogue (Synagoga Kupa), Plac Wolnica, Market Square (New Square), Corpus Christi Church (Kosciol Bozego Ciala), Church on the Rock (Kosciol na Skalce), Remuh Cemetery, and Father Bernatek Footbridge.
Are admission tickets included for the stops?
The route details state that admission tickets are free for the stops listed.
What safety equipment do I receive?
Helmets and other necessary safety gear are included.
What is the maximum group size?
The maximum group size is 30 travelers.
Is there a weight limit?
Yes. The maximum weight is 120 kg (265 lb).
Where do I meet and what’s the end point?
You meet at Segway TourSienna 17, 31-041 Kraków, Poland, and the tour ends back at the meeting point.
Can I cancel if the weather is bad?
If the tour is canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. You can also cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance.

























