REVIEW · KRAKOW
Krakow: Old Town Sightseeing Tour by Electric Golf Cart
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by MyRide · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Old Town of Krakow, minus the walking grind. This electric golf cart ride covers the big-hitters fast, with an audio guide that keeps you oriented and informed as you pass each landmark.
I also like how the route connects Planty park, Krakow’s central Main Market Square, and Wawel in one compact tour, so you leave with a clear mental map. The trade-off: it’s a 50-minute group loop, so you’re mainly seeing monuments from the outside, not settling in for long interior visits.
Key takeaways before you go
- Heated golf carts + audio guide make the experience comfortable even when the weather is unpredictable.
- A tight 50-minute loop focuses on the city’s top Old Town sights without draining your legs.
- Major landmarks on one route: Planty, Main Market Square, Latin Quarter, St. Anna, Franciscan Monastery, Wawel.
- Lots of language options for the audio, including English and many others.
- No entrance tickets included, so if you want inside access, plan to add that separately.
- Traditional Polish food tasting is part of the experience, giving you more than just sightseeing.
In This Review
- Electric Golf Cart Comfort in Krakow’s Old Town
- Where the Tour Starts: Kiss&Ride, Zabka, and the excursions.city Cart
- The 50-Minute Route: Planty, Main Square, and Wawel Views in One Loop
- Planty Park and the Medieval Remains by the Barbican
- Main Market Square: Cloth Hall and St. Mary’s Basilica
- Latin Quarter Stop: Collegium Maius Courtyard
- Church of St. Anna: Baroque 17th-Century Architecture
- Academy of Fine Arts and St. Florian: Art-Focused Views
- Franciscan Monastery and the Papal Window
- Wawel: Royal Cathedral and Royal Castle in Full Glory
- Audio Guide Languages: How the Commentary Helps You Follow Along
- The Polish Food Tasting Stop and Art Moments
- Price and Value: Why $20 Works for a 50-Minute Overview
- Who Should Book This Krakow Old Town Golf Cart Tour
- Should You Book This Electric Cart Tour of Krakow’s Old Town?
- FAQ
- How long is the Krakow Old Town sightseeing tour by electric golf cart?
- What sights are covered on the tour?
- Is a live guide included?
- Are entrance tickets included for the attractions?
- What languages are available for the audio guide?
- Are the golf carts heated?
- Where do I meet the tour?
- Is this tour private or shared?
- Is food included?
- What’s the policy if my plans change?
Electric Golf Cart Comfort in Krakow’s Old Town

This is the kind of Old Town tour that makes sense when you want context, not just photos. Instead of a long slog between viewpoints, you get a smooth electric golf cart ride through Krakow’s central historic area. And yes, the vehicles are heated, which matters a lot when you’re touring early or in colder months.
The best part is the way the sights are tied to an audio guide. You’re not wandering around guessing what you’re looking at. As you roll past each stop, the commentary explains what’s significant about the location, which helps you connect the names you see—like Planty, Cloth Hall, St. Mary’s Basilica, and Wawel—into a single story of Old Town Krakow.
The tour is also designed as a group experience. That means you move at a steady pace and you’re part of a shared rhythm. If you’re the type who likes stopping randomly to stare at every detail, you might feel a little boxed in by the schedule. Still, for a first visit or a “get my bearings fast” day, it’s a smart setup.
Where the Tour Starts: Kiss&Ride, Zabka, and the excursions.city Cart

You’ll want to keep your arrival simple and boring. Meet at Parking Kiss&Ride (2 Mikołaja Zyblikiewicza street) in front of the Zabka store. Look for a golf cart labeled excursions.city.
Because it’s a scheduled tour, being on time is important. These carts run as a group, and if you’re late you can miss the start window with your group.
One practical note for families: children 0–6 must sit on an adult’s lap while driving. If you’re traveling with kids, plan your seating accordingly so everyone is comfortable once the ride begins.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Krakow.
The 50-Minute Route: Planty, Main Square, and Wawel Views in One Loop

The full experience is 50 minutes, which is short enough to keep energy up and long enough to hit multiple major stops. The route is built around the heart of Krakow’s Old Town, including the park of Planty and the famous Wawel area, plus key stops along the way.
Here’s what you’ll encounter, and what makes each part worth your attention.
Planty Park and the Medieval Remains by the Barbican
Your first big focus is Planty, a park area tied to some of Krakow’s medieval layout. On the ride, you’ll come across the remains of medieval walls and the Barbican.
What I like about starting here is the way it sets the stage. Planty is a “between” space—where you can understand the city’s older boundaries without needing to memorize a map. It also gives you a sense of how the Old Town fits together before the tour pushes you toward the busier center.
If you dislike parks, you might treat this as a quick warm-up. But even then, it helps you see what’s being referenced later at the Main Market Square and around Wawel.
Main Market Square: Cloth Hall and St. Mary’s Basilica
Next up is Krakow’s Main Market Square, the central stage for Old Town life. You’ll pass by or see key features like the Cloth Hall and St. Mary’s Basilica.
This is the stop that usually matters most for first-time visitors because it gives you the classic Krakow postcard view—except you’ll also understand why it’s the center of everything. If you later return on your own, you’ll know what you’re looking at and which buildings are the anchors.
One consideration: because the tour is short, you won’t get long, slow wandering time here. You’ll likely get the big picture from the cart, which is great for orientation, but not ideal if you want extended time in the square.
Latin Quarter Stop: Collegium Maius Courtyard
You’ll also pass through the Latin Quarter, with a stop connected to Collegium Maius courtyard. This is where the tour shifts from civic landmark sightseeing to something more academic and historic in tone.
What you get from seeing it during a cart ride is context. Instead of just reading about Krakow as a cultural and educational center, you physically move through the area where that identity lives.
If you like quiet corners and architecture details, you might wish the tour let you step out longer—but as a quick orientation stop, it does the job.
Church of St. Anna: Baroque 17th-Century Architecture
The route includes the Church of St. Anna, described here as a Baroque 17th-century church. From the cart, you can appreciate how baroque design typically aims for drama—forms and details that stand out even when you’re moving.
The drawback is the same as most short tours: you don’t control your time inside. If you’re the type who wants to linger at religious interiors, this is where you’ll likely want a follow-up visit on another day.
Academy of Fine Arts and St. Florian: Art-Focused Views
You’ll pass by the Academy of Fine Arts and St. Florian, and this is where the tour leans into the art angle mentioned in the highlights. You’ll have a chance to admire works of art such as paintings and sculptures as part of the experience.
Even if you’re not an art fanatic, I think this stop is useful because it connects Krakow’s reputation beyond the main square. It also breaks up the route so it isn’t just one monument after another.
If you’re heavily into art and want a full museum-style experience, a short cart tour won’t replace dedicated time. But it’s a strong “taste” and it helps you decide what to revisit later.
Franciscan Monastery and the Papal Window
One of the most specific stops on the route is the 13th-century gothic Franciscan Monastery, plus the Papal Window. Because the tour explicitly calls out the age and style—13th-century gothic—you get a clearer sense that this isn’t just random sightseeing. It’s an intentionally chosen slice of Old Town heritage.
This is also the kind of stop that tends to stick in your memory because it has a memorable name (Papal Window) and a distinct setting tied to the monastery. You’ll come away with something concrete to look up later and a reason to return.
As with other stops, the time is brief. You’ll see and learn, but you won’t get the unhurried deep look you’d want if you were making photography your main mission.
Wawel: Royal Cathedral and Royal Castle in Full Glory
Finally, you reach Wawel, with the Royal Cathedral and the Royal Castle highlighted as major sights on the route.
Wawel is the grand finale for a reason. When you arrive here at the end of the tour, you can read Krakow’s story backwards: you start at Planty (the city’s older edges), move through the Main Market (the center), detour toward cultural and religious corners, then land at the monumental royal complex.
A practical note: entrances aren’t included. So you’ll likely view the main structures and learn about them, but if you want inside access, you’ll need to plan that separately.
Audio Guide Languages: How the Commentary Helps You Follow Along

This tour is powered by an audio guide, not a live guide. That’s a key difference, and it changes what the tour is best at.
The audio is described as expert commentary, and it’s delivered through the tour system in a lot of languages, including English and many more (Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Spanish, and more). If you’re traveling with a mixed group, the language list makes it easier to keep everyone synced to the same experience.
Also, the vehicles are equipped with audio guide gear, so you’re not juggling phones and apps while you ride. In practice, it means you can keep your attention on the street and buildings and let the narration do the work.
If you’re someone who likes asking spontaneous questions or hearing personality-driven storytelling from a person, you may miss that. But for most first-time visitors, the trade-off is worth it: audio keeps you on schedule and gives you consistent explanations for every stop.
The Polish Food Tasting Stop and Art Moments
One highlight you should look forward to is the chance to get a taste of traditional Polish cuisine during lunch. The tour format suggests you’ll have a short food component built into the day’s flow, which is a smart move because it prevents the tour from feeling like sightseeing only.
Because the tour details don’t specify the exact dishes, I’d treat this as a sampling moment rather than a full meal experience. Still, it’s a nice value add for $20 because you’re not paying extra just for a snack break at a time when you might be hungry anyway.
The other “more than scenery” piece is the art focus: the route includes areas where you can admire paintings and sculptures, and the Academy of Fine Arts stop is an obvious reason why. If you want your day in Krakow to feel more layered—culture plus landmarks—this tour quietly delivers that.
Price and Value: Why $20 Works for a 50-Minute Overview
At $20 per person for a 50-minute electric golf cart ride with transportation and an audio guide, this is priced like a practical orientation tour rather than a premium, full-day experience.
Here’s why I think it’s good value:
- You’re paying for movement through the Old Town without long walking between major sights.
- The audio guide adds meaning, so you don’t just collect names.
- The vehicle being heated is a real comfort upgrade that’s not always included on cheaper tours.
- You also get a traditional Polish food tasting/lunch component, which makes it more complete than a pure “drive-by photos” loop.
The main thing to be honest about is what’s not included: entrance tickets. If you plan to go inside multiple sites, your total spend will rise. But as a paid overview that helps you decide what to revisit, this price makes sense.
If you’re traveling on a tight schedule or you want a “first pass” day, $20 is a low-risk way to get oriented.
Who Should Book This Krakow Old Town Golf Cart Tour

This tour fits best if you:
- Want a first-time Krakow overview that covers major Old Town names quickly
- Prefer to save your legs for exploring later on foot
- Like structured sightseeing with audio commentary
- Need a short, easy day segment that still feels like you did something worthwhile
It might not be the best match if you:
- Want long stops and time to go inside multiple attractions
- Prefer a live guide with interactive questions (this one includes an audio guide, not a live guide)
- Are hoping for a private tour pace
If your goal is to learn enough to navigate Krakow intelligently afterward, this ride is a good tool. If your goal is slow travel and deep site time, you’ll likely want something longer and ticket-inclusive.
Should You Book This Electric Cart Tour of Krakow’s Old Town?
Book it if you want a fast, comfortable, names-to-stories introduction to Krakow’s most important landmarks: Planty, the Main Market Square, Latin Quarter, St. Anna, the Franciscan Monastery with the Papal Window, and the Wawel Royal Cathedral and Royal Castle area.
I’d skip it or pair it carefully if you strongly want inside visits during the tour itself, because entrance tickets aren’t included and the ride is short by design. Also, if audio-only narration doesn’t fit your style, you may feel it’s less personal than a live-guided walking tour.
Bottom line: for its price, its heated cart comfort, and its stop list, this is a smart way to get oriented and learn what to prioritize later in Krakow.
FAQ
How long is the Krakow Old Town sightseeing tour by electric golf cart?
It lasts 50 minutes.
What sights are covered on the tour?
You’ll see the route through Planty, Main Market Square (including Cloth Hall and St. Mary’s Basilica), the Latin Quarter (including Collegium Maius courtyard), Church of St. Anna, Academy of Fine Arts and St. Florian, the Franciscan Monastery and Papal Window, and Wawel (Royal Cathedral and Royal Castle).
Is a live guide included?
No. The tour includes an audio guide, not a live guide.
Are entrance tickets included for the attractions?
No. Entrance tickets are not included.
What languages are available for the audio guide?
The audio guide is available in many languages, including English and others such as French, German, Italian, Spanish, Polish, Japanese, Korean, and more.
Are the golf carts heated?
Yes. The vehicles are heated and equipped with the audio guide.
Where do I meet the tour?
Meet at Parking Kiss&Ride, 2 Mikołaja Zyblikiewicza street, in front of the Zabka store. Look for a golf cart labeled excursions.city.
Is this tour private or shared?
It’s a group tour.
Is food included?
The highlights state that you get a taste of traditional Polish cuisine during lunch.
What’s the policy if my plans change?
There is free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now & pay later.




















