REVIEW · PRAGUE
Electric Trike Tour in Prague – City Sightseeing & Fun Riding
Book on Viator →Operated by Speedy Tours Prague s.r.o · Bookable on Viator
Prague feels faster from a trike. This tour is a guided e-trike ride that hits big sights without turning your feet into a sore mess, and you get 10-minute supervised training so you can actually handle the vehicle. I especially like how the route strings together major landmarks in a short window, plus the guide keeps the energy going with stories as you move. One thing to consider: it’s a sightseeing sprint, so if you want slow museum time, this format may feel a bit hurried.
If you’re worried about weather, you can relax—your guide carries raincoats, and you don’t have to stop the day. I also like the simple setup: you show your mobile ticket, start at a central meeting point with water, and roll with a small group. Guides such as Tippy, Prince, and Goti have been called out for being patient and attentive, especially during the practice phase.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth knowing
- Why an electric trike is a smart Prague move in about 2.5 hours
- The 10-minute supervised training that makes first-timers comfortable
- Meeting at Štěpánská 55: arrive ready to roll, not scramble
- Your Prague ride: what each stop is for and what to expect
- Stop 1: Training at the start point
- Stop 2: Wenceslas Square
- Stop 3: The Powder Tower
- Stop 4: Letná Park
- Stop 5: Prague Metronome
- Stop 6: Letná viewpoint and a five-bridge perspective
- Stop 7: Prague Castle (outside only)
- Stop 8: Strahovsky Klaster and monastery beer
- Stop 9: Lennonova zeď (John Lennon Wall) from outside
- Stop 10: Charles Bridge
- Stop 11: Franz Kafka Museum (outside)
- Stop 12: Rudolfinum
- Stop 13: Parizska Street
- Stop 14: Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock
- Stop 15: Return to the starting point
- Safety and comfort: how to make this ride feel easy
- Price and value: what you’re really paying for
- Who this electric trike tour suits best
- Should you book this Electric Trike Tour in Prague?
- FAQ
- How long is the electric trike tour?
- Do I need experience to ride the e-trike?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Is food included?
- Is water included?
- What are the age rules for driving?
- What if it rains?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key highlights worth knowing

- 10-minute training before traffic so first-timers can get comfortable fast
- Raincoats included to keep the ride going when the sky changes
- Stop density that saves your legs from Wenceslas Square through the river sights and Old Town
- Viewpoints built for photos like the Letná viewpoints and the line of bridges
- Hands-on fun without skill stress because the e-trike does the hard work
- A fun stop at Strahovsky Klaster where monastery beer is available
Why an electric trike is a smart Prague move in about 2.5 hours

Prague is beautiful, but it can also eat time. This tour is designed for the opposite problem: you want to see a lot, you want it to feel fun, and you want it without long walking detours.
For value, the listed price is strikingly low for what you get—a guided route, short vehicle training, water, and rain gear bundled in. Even if the price makes you suspicious at first, the tour’s structure helps it make sense: you’re paying for efficient sight coverage in a tight time slot.
The vibe is part tour, part moving story time. You’ll get real context at major stops like Charles Bridge and Prague Castle from outside, so your photos aren’t just pretty—they come with something to remember.
This is also a great way to get your bearings early in the trip. After a ride like this, your first independent walk around the Old Town area usually feels much easier, because you already understand how the city pieces connect.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Prague
The 10-minute supervised training that makes first-timers comfortable

You start with paperwork and a short practice session—about 10 minutes of supervised training—before you ride in the wider city. That matters because it removes the biggest fear factor: you’re not expected to figure out the trike while everyone else is already moving.
You’ll learn how to control speed and direction and how to behave on the road with your group. Guides have also been described as patient and quick to adjust when someone is still getting comfortable, which can make a big difference if you’re anxious about balance or steering.
There’s also a built-in safety mindset: you get a disclaimer form first, and the guide explains how to handle the route rules so you don’t feel lost. I like this approach because it keeps the ride fun without turning it into a chaotic free-for-all.
Age rules are straightforward. You must be 18+ to drive, while kids ages 10–17 can sit on the rear seat with an adult. That can be a nice compromise for families who want the experience without demanding that younger kids handle the controls.
Meeting at Štěpánská 55: arrive ready to roll, not scramble
The meeting point is Štěpánská 55, Praha 1–Nové Město, and the tour ends back there. That means you can plan your day without guessing how you’ll get home afterward—you simply return to the starting area.
It’s also near public transportation, and the tour notes you can use transit, Uber, Bolt, or a taxi to get there. I’d still aim to arrive a little early, because you’ll be signing the disclaimer and doing the training before the fun starts.
What helps most is dressing for movement. This tour can run in cold conditions, and some riders reported snow during the experience. So bring warm layers and anything you’d wear for a brisk winter walk, even if the ride is electric.
You’ll have water at the meeting point, which is a small detail but important on a 2.5-hour loop. And if the weather turns, raincoats are available, so you don’t need to guess your wardrobe based on the sky.
Your Prague ride: what each stop is for and what to expect

The itinerary is packed with short, focused moments. Most stops are around 5 to 15 minutes, so think of them as photo-and-story breaks more than long museum visits.
Also note a key rhythm: you’re riding between sights, then pausing to learn or look. If you go in expecting constant full stops, you’ll enjoy it more if you switch your mindset to a moving tour with brief story stops.
Stop 1: Training at the start point
Before you hit the city streets, you get that brief supervised e-trike training. This is where you’ll quickly find your comfort level—steering, speed control, and staying with the group.
Practical tip: if you’re a little nervous, tell your guide early. The guides you’ll encounter—like Tippy and Prince in past groups—have been described as attentive about making sure people feel confident before the route expands.
Stop 2: Wenceslas Square
Wenceslas Square is the classic Prague “big center” marker, and you’ll pause to see it along with the National Museum building from outside. You’ll also catch the vibe of the main shopping area in Prague, so it’s a good first pulse-check for the city.
Stop 3: The Powder Tower
The Powder Tower is a quick history stop—small, but it gives you a sense of Prague’s older layers. After this, the ride continues toward the greener elevations of the city.
This stop is short on purpose. The goal isn’t a full guided walk-through—it’s to frame what you’re seeing as you move.
Stop 4: Letná Park
Letná Park is where the scenery begins to feel bigger. You’ll ride within the park and take in Prague from higher ground, with views that make you understand why people come here for pictures.
A downside of this stop format: because you’re riding, your time to linger is limited. The trade-off is that you get those heights without trekking across multiple viewpoints on foot.
Stop 5: Prague Metronome
At the Prague Metronome, you’ll get the story behind what happened to Joseph Stalin’s statue in the area. This is one of the more political-history moments on the ride, but delivered in plain, practical terms as you look outward.
It’s a good reminder that Prague isn’t only about castles and bridges. It’s also about the layers of the 20th century.
Stop 6: Letná viewpoint and a five-bridge perspective
From the viewpoint at Letná, you can see five bridges lined up in one view. The tour also notes you’ll look toward the Office of the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, which adds a modern-government anchor to a spot that could otherwise feel purely scenic.
Photo tip: take your photos quickly, then turn your head to watch the whole line. That five-bridge view is the moment you’ll remember later when you walk near the river.
Stop 7: Prague Castle (outside only)
You’ll reach the main entrance of Prague Castle, and the tour explains it with viewpoint context. You’ll also see St. Vitus Cathedral from outside, but the experience is designed for orientation, not ticketed time inside.
If you’re hoping for a full castle visit, this isn’t that. But for first-timers, the outside look plus the guide’s framing helps you know what you’ll want to explore later.
Stop 8: Strahovsky Klaster and monastery beer
At Strahovsky Klaster, you’ll see a church and a “from the height” viewpoint. This is also where monastery beer is mentioned as part of the stop experience.
That combination—architecture view, viewpoint pauses, and a drink option—makes this one of the more enjoyable breaks on the route. It also helps break up the day’s concentration.
Stop 9: Lennonova zeď (John Lennon Wall) from outside
The tour includes a pause at Lennonova zeď from outside. It’s a short visit, but it gives you the location you’ll likely want to return to later if you care about street memorial culture.
Stop 10: Charles Bridge
At Charles Bridge, you’ll see river views and ride along the side of the water. The guide explains the bridge’s history and importance, so you’re not just looking at a postcard.
This is a stop that can easily eat time if you walk, so the trike format helps you keep your day moving while still getting the key sight.
Stop 11: Franz Kafka Museum (outside)
You’ll pass Franz Kafka Museum from outside and hear about the famous pissing sculptures connected to the area. It’s a quick, quirky stop that pairs well with the more monumental sights before and after it.
If you like Prague for its oddball details as much as its grand views, this is a nice contrast moment.
Stop 12: Rudolfinum
At Rudolfinum, you’ll see the building from outside and learn why it matters in Prague. Like several stops, it’s about giving you enough context to make the architecture feel intentional.
Stop 13: Parizska Street
The tour drives past Parizska Street, known for expensive shopping. You’ll look at premium brand storefronts from outside—like ROLEX—and get a sense of modern Prague style layered over the old streets.
This is brief, but it helps you understand how the city isn’t frozen in time.
Stop 14: Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock
At Stare Město (Old Town), you’ll reach Old Town Square and get the story behind the Astronomical clock. The stop is short, but it nails one of the city’s most central meeting points.
Practical tip: if you want extra time for photos, do it quickly and keep an eye on where your group is headed next, because the trike ride moves on schedule.
Stop 15: Return to the starting point
You come back to Štěpánská 55. From there, you’re free to end the tour or continue your own day around the center.
Safety and comfort: how to make this ride feel easy

The biggest reason people love this tour is that it doesn’t punish you for not being an expert. With the training upfront and a guide watching the group closely, the experience tends to feel controlled.
From the way the route is structured, you’ll spend less energy on long walking and more energy enjoying movement and views. That’s a real quality-of-life upgrade in a city where distances can surprise you.
The group size is capped at 22 people, which helps with attention and makes it easier for the guide to check in. And since the tour includes raincoats, the guide isn’t forced to cancel early just because the weather shifts.
To feel comfortable, I’d plan on moving outdoors for a good chunk of time. Wear layers, and if you’re riding in cooler months, bring gloves or anything that keeps your hands warm while you’re learning controls.
Price and value: what you’re really paying for

At $3.61 per person, the tour price is best understood as a time-and-effort trade. You’re paying to compress a lot of sightseeing into a single guided loop, with training and key comfort items included.
Even with the low sticker price, you’re getting real “extras” that usually cost more on their own: guide time, 10-minute training, water, and raincoats. That’s why the deal feels strong for a 2.5-hour format.
The only clear downside on the money side is what’s not included: food and drinks aren’t part of the ticket. That said, the itinerary itself includes a stop where monastery beer is available, so you’ll have a natural moment to try a local drink without turning the day into a separate planning problem.
If you’re comparing options, I’d treat this tour like the fast orientation layer of your Prague trip. Then you spend the rest of your time choosing either a longer castle day or a slower Old Town walk—based on what grabbed your attention most.
Who this electric trike tour suits best

This is a great fit if you want to:
- see a lot of Prague fast without long walks
- get first-timer context for places like Charles Bridge and Prague Castle (outside)
- enjoy a fun vehicle experience without serious skill barriers
- travel with older kids who can ride in the rear seat while you drive
It’s also appealing if you have limited mobility or you simply don’t feel like stacking kilometer after kilometer.
On the other hand, if your dream day is slow and quiet, with museum time and long photo stops, you might prefer a different format. The trike tour is about motion and short stops, so you’ll get the biggest payoff if you like that style.
Should you book this Electric Trike Tour in Prague?

I’d book it if you want a fun, efficient introduction to Prague. The combination of short supervised training, a densely packed route, and raincoats makes it a low-stress way to see the city’s key landmarks in one go.
You should think twice if you expect deep museum time or long lingering at each attraction. This tour is built for orientation and story moments, not for getting fully inside every site.
My practical advice: schedule it early in your trip. After this ride, you’ll know what you want to return to—whether that’s the riverside, the Castle area, or the Old Town center—because you’ll already understand how everything connects.
FAQ
How long is the electric trike tour?
The tour lasts about 2 hours 30 minutes.
Do I need experience to ride the e-trike?
No. You start with a supervised training session for about 10 minutes.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Štěpánská 55, Praha 1–Nové Město, Czechia, and ends back at the same meeting point.
Is food included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
Is water included?
Yes. Water is provided at the meeting point.
What are the age rules for driving?
You must be 18+ to drive the e-trike. Ages 10–17 can sit on the rear seat with an adult.
What if it rains?
Raincoats are available, so you can keep riding if the weather changes.
Can I cancel for free?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.































