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
Book on GetYourGuide →

Operated by Segway Tours & Rental Kraków · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Krakow looks better on silent wheels. On the Segway Tour Krakow, I like how first-time riding gets handled fast, and I love the guide-led storytelling that makes key sights feel connected instead of just photographed. You’ll roll through medieval streets, cruise by the Wisła/Vistula, and then unwind into the winding lanes of the Jewish Quarter, with guides such as Tom, Johan, and Olga bringing the city’s layers to life.

One caution: the cobblestones can be bumpy enough to feel in your back and legs, and the mix of bikes, cars, and pedestrians means you’ll want to stay focused from the start. If you’re sensitive to tight physical sitting or you’re anxious around traffic, plan to take it slow during the first few minutes.

Quick Snapshot: Old Town + Jewish Quarter by Segway

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Quick Snapshot: Old Town + Jewish Quarter by Segway

  • Duration: 210 minutes total (15 minutes training + 1 hour 45 minutes guided tour)
  • Price: $97 per person, with safety gear, raincoats, and insurance included
  • What you see: Old Town lanes, the Wisła/Vistula riverside, Main Square, a Wawel Castle pass-by, and Jewish Quarter synagogues
  • Stops and pace: A short snack break is part of the route if you want it
  • Languages: English, Polish, German
  • Riding limits: 30 kg minimum, 135 kg maximum; high-heeled shoes not allowed

Why This Segway Format Fits Krakow So Well

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Why This Segway Format Fits Krakow So Well
Krakow is a city of tight streets, small turns, and places where walking speed doesn’t match sightseeing hunger. A Segway gives you glide-time where you’d otherwise spend energy stepping over uneven ground and pausing for every photo angle.

Even better, the tour is designed around storytelling, not just motion. You’re guided through Old Town and then steered into the Jewish Quarter with enough context to help the streets make sense, not just impress you.

And it matters that there’s real training first. The setup is made to help you feel confident before you’re mixing with foot traffic, bikes, and the occasional car.

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

The 210-Minute Plan: Training, Old Town Roll, and Jewish Quarter Time

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - The 210-Minute Plan: Training, Old Town Roll, and Jewish Quarter Time
This tour runs about 3.5 hours, but the time is split in a way that keeps the learning curve manageable. You start with a 15-minute Segway riding training session, then move into about 1 hour 45 minutes of guided touring.

That rhythm helps because you’re not thrown straight into the busiest sight-streets. Instead, you practice the basics first—starting, stopping, and turning—so the rest of the tour becomes about listening and looking, not figuring out the device.

What the training actually changes for you

In practice, training means you can relax your shoulders and focus on staying aware. Guides also help you adjust pace, which is a big deal on cobblestones and in crowded areas.

One rider-style takeaway I’d treat as a rule: if you’re new to Segways, ask questions immediately during training. The earlier you do that, the smoother the rest feels.

Getting Oriented: Main Square to Wawel Without Walking Yourself Tired

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Getting Oriented: Main Square to Wawel Without Walking Yourself Tired
A big part of the appeal here is distance without the fatigue. You’ll glide past major landmarks like Krakow’s Main Square and Wawel Castle, which is especially handy if you’ve only got one afternoon.

Even if you plan to come back later, this first pass gives you a mental map. When you know where things are relative to each other, you stop wandering aimlessly and start choosing what to see up close.

Why the pass-by pacing can be a plus

You’re not stuck on a bus timeline or trapped in long queues. The tour also includes skip-the-ticket-line (for stops where that applies), so you lose less time to waiting and more time to moving and listening.

The vibe is practical: you get the sweep of the area and then you can decide what needs a second visit.

Old Town Medieval Streets: Seeing the Shape of Krakow

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Old Town Medieval Streets: Seeing the Shape of Krakow
The heart of the route is the medieval street feel—narrow lanes, old façades, and corners that look like they belong to different centuries. You’ll cruise through Old Town as your guide connects the buildings to the city’s story.

This is where the Segway really earns its keep. Walking can be slow in all the right places, but driving a car is obviously not the move on these streets. A glide keeps you moving while still letting you notice details.

The real value: stories that attach to streets

Guides like Tom, Johan, and Olga are repeatedly praised for mixing history with on-the-ground explanation. That matters because it changes the experience from sightseeing to understanding.

When the route is guided well, you’ll start recognizing patterns—how the city’s power and trade routes shaped where people gathered and where life shifted over time.

Cruising the Wisła/Vistula Riverside: A Break From the Tight Lanes

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Cruising the Wisła/Vistula Riverside: A Break From the Tight Lanes
After the medieval lanes, you’ll cruise down the Wisła/Vistula riverside. This is a smart change of scenery, and it also changes the riding feel. You generally get a more open flow compared to the densest street sections.

Riverside time is valuable because it gives your brain a reset between Old Town and the Jewish Quarter. You’ll also be able to enjoy views and atmosphere without constantly negotiating turns.

What I’d pay attention to here

Stay alert to pedestrians and cyclists, even if it feels calmer. A riverside route can still be busy in spots, and your guide will be managing safety the whole time.

If you like walking but hate repeating the same stretch twice, this riverside segment is one of those “you get it once” moments.

Jewish Quarter Alleys: Culture, Synagogues, and the Wartime Narrative

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Jewish Quarter Alleys: Culture, Synagogues, and the Wartime Narrative
The Jewish Quarter portion is the emotional and historical core of this tour. You’ll get lost in the charming alleys (in the good way), learn what made this part of the city distinct, and glide past Jewish synagogues.

This isn’t just an architecture tour. The guiding includes context about the culture’s foundation and also the weight of the 20th century, with descriptions that can be poignant.

One important practical note: this area often feels more intense because it’s packed with meaning. If you’re the type who likes to process slowly, take your cues from the pace your guide sets and don’t try to multitask too much.

Why a Segway works here

Walking is the obvious option for atmospheres like this, but it’s also easy to miss the wider layout. A guided glide helps you cover more ground so you can understand how different sites relate to each other.

It’s also easier on your feet than doing the whole thing on foot—especially if you want to come back later and explore specific streets more carefully.

A Snack Stop in the Middle: Small Break, Big Motivation

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - A Snack Stop in the Middle: Small Break, Big Motivation
The tour includes a chance to purchase a delicious Polish snack along the way (optional, depending on what you choose). I like this kind of break because it turns the tour from nonstop movement into a real break in the rhythm.

It also helps you settle between areas: snack time gives you a moment to breathe, check how your legs feel, and refuel for the rest of the route.

If you’re sensitive to eating on the move, pick a snack that’s easy to handle while standing and taking a few steps.

Price and Value: What $97 Buys You (and Why It’s Not Just Transportation)

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Price and Value: What $97 Buys You (and Why It’s Not Just Transportation)
$97 for about 3.5 hours sounds simple, but the value comes from what’s included. You’re not paying only for the Segway; you’re paying for a licensed local guide, Segway training, safety gear, raincoats, and insurance.

That combination matters because it reduces hassle. You don’t have to arrange gear or worry as much about weather pivots, and the guide’s role is what turns the route into a coherent experience.

Where the value shows most

The biggest payoff is time plus coverage. Old Town and the Jewish Quarter are both the kind of places where you can easily burn hours on foot. Here, you cover a lot of ground while still getting context, not just movement.

And you get something else: a tour that’s designed so you can return later with a map in your head. That’s the kind of value that shows up the next day when you choose where to walk.

Safety, Gear, and Comfort: What to Wear and What to Expect

Segway Tour Krakow: Full Tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter) - Safety, Gear, and Comfort: What to Wear and What to Expect
You’ll receive safety gear and raincoats if the weather turns. That’s one of those “small” inclusions that can save your day, especially with Krakow’s changeable skies.

You’ll also want comfortable shoes. Avoid high-heeled shoes, since they’re explicitly not allowed. Dress for weather, because even when you’re gliding, you’re still outside for a few hours.

Cobblestones and your body

One drawback that comes up is that cobblestones can feel hard on your back and legs. You’re sitting and balancing for longer than you might expect, and bumps add up.

If you tend to get sore, I’d plan for that. Bring a relaxed mindset, start slow, and let the guide help you find a steady pace.

Traffic awareness

Krakow’s streets can be active with bikes, cars, and lots of pedestrians. The tour includes training and guidance for confidence, but the real trick is staying present—no scanning your phone, no zone-outs.

If you’re a nervous rider, ask for extra patience during the first minutes. The guides are used to working with new riders and slowing down when needed.

Meeting Point: Sienna 17 Street (Segway Point)

You meet at Sienna 17 Street, Krakow, at the Segway Point. The office is on the ground floor with a front entrance, so you’re not hunting a maze of stairs before you start.

I’d arrive a bit early so you can get settled, double-check your shoes, and use the restroom before the training starts. One rider noted the meeting point didn’t have a WC on hand and that water wasn’t offered, so I’d rather plan than scramble.

Who Should Book This Segway Tour, and Who Should Skip It

This tour is a great fit if you want to cover Old Town and the Jewish Quarter without spending your whole day walking. It’s also ideal if you’re the kind of traveler who likes guidance and prefers knowing what you’re looking at.

It’s less ideal if you’re dealing with physical discomfort from sitting on bumpy surfaces, since cobblestones can strain legs and back.

Not suitable for

The tour isn’t suitable for:

  • Children under 8 years
  • Pregnant women

And there are rider weight limits:

  • Minimum 30 kg
  • Maximum 135 kg

If you’re outside those limits, you’ll want a different Krakow plan.

Should You Book the Segway Tour Krakow Full (Old Town + Jewish Quarter)?

Book it if you want a practical, guided way to see Krakow fast without turning history into a blur. I’d especially recommend it when you want both the medieval Old Town experience and the deeper Jewish Quarter story, with a guide who can pace the emotional parts responsibly.

Skip it if you’re not comfortable with traffic mixing and if cobblestones and sustained sitting usually bother you. In that case, a slower walking tour might feel more natural.

My honest take: this is one of the better ways to get an overview with real context—especially if you’re aiming to return afterward and explore at your own pace.

FAQ

How long is the Segway Tour Krakow full tour (Old Town + Jewish Quarter)?

The total duration is 210 minutes. That includes 15 minutes of Segway riding training and 1 hour and 45 minutes of guided touring.

Where is the meeting point for the tour?

The meeting point is at Sienna 17 Street, Krakow (Segway Point). The office is on the ground floor with a front entrance.

What languages are the guides available in?

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

Are there weight limits for riding the Segway?

Yes. The minimum weight is 30 kg and the maximum weight is 135 kg.

What should I wear or avoid during the tour?

Bring comfortable shoes and weather-appropriate clothing. High-heeled shoes are not allowed.

What is the cancellation policy?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. The tour also offers reserve now & pay later, so you can book without paying immediately.

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Krakow we have reviewed

Explore Poland