REVIEW · PARIS
Highlights of Paris Bike Tour in English or Dutch
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Fat Tire Tours - Paris · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Paris looks better at bike speed. This 3-hour ride strings together major landmarks on a bike-friendly route with a local guide who makes the city make sense instead of sounding like a textbook.
One thing I especially like is the way you can stop for big, iconic photo moments, from Place de la Concorde to the Eiffel Tower, without it turning into a stressful day of transport logistics. The main trade-off is simple: you need to be comfortable cycling for the full tour, and water isn’t included, so bring a bottle if you’re thirsty easily.
In This Review
- Key highlights to look forward to
- Paris Bike Tour on two wheels: the feel of a 3-hour city reset
- Where you start and how the ride flows from Dupleix (Line 6)
- Place de la Concorde: getting oriented with Paris in one iconic spot
- Napoleon’s Tomb: why history stops feeling abstract
- The Eiffel Tower stop: a classic view with less scrambling
- The Louvre Museum: seeing the icon without making it a whole day
- The guides: live Dutch or English storytelling that keeps momentum
- Price and value: why $51 can work for busy itineraries
- What you should bring (and what to leave at home)
- Small-group vibe and listening comfort during a moving tour
- Weather and timing: rain or shine, so plan like a local
- Who should book this Paris Bike Tour
- Quick decision: should you book it
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris Bike Tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- What languages are available for the tour guide?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is water included?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- What are the age and riding requirements?
- What should I bring, and what can’t I bring?
Key highlights to look forward to

- Concorde first: get oriented fast with Place de la Concorde and its place in French history
- Napoleon’s Tomb stop: see the resting place tied to France’s most famous leader
- Eiffel Tower viewpoints: enjoy landmark moments that feel close, not distant
- Louvre Museum area: take in one of the world’s biggest art symbols from a bike perspective
- Danish speaking Dutch or English guide: live commentary in Dutch or English
- Cycle with a small-group feel: reviews often describe groups around 8 people, which helps the ride stay friendly
Paris Bike Tour on two wheels: the feel of a 3-hour city reset

If Paris feels overwhelming, this style of tour can be a lifesaver. In just three hours, you’re moving by bike through the kinds of places you’d normally spend all day trying to stitch together with buses and metro transfers.
What makes it work is the format. The route is built as a bike-friendly circuit, and the guide isn’t just pointing at buildings. You get stories and context tied to the sights on the route, so you leave with a mental map instead of a list of photos.
Also, the practical setup helps. You get a bike and helmet, and you start at a metro-accessible spot (Dupleix on line 6), so you’re not guessing how to get in position.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Paris
Where you start and how the ride flows from Dupleix (Line 6)

Your meeting point is near Dupleix Metro station on line 6. Since the tour ends back at the meeting point, you don’t have to worry about finishing in a random neighborhood with no clear exit plan.
You should expect the first part of the tour to feel like a quick gear-up moment. Bikes are provided, helmets too, and your guide will set expectations for safe riding with the group. If you’re new to riding in traffic, pay attention early—good habits form fast once you’re rolling.
Then the pace settles into steady sightseeing. Because it’s a short, 3-hour experience, the guide’s job is to keep stops efficient so you actually see the main monuments listed in the highlights.
Place de la Concorde: getting oriented with Paris in one iconic spot

Place de la Concorde is one of those squares that instantly signals you’re in the heart of Paris. It’s a centerpiece of French history, and seeing it by bike gives you scale in a way you don’t always get from photos.
Here’s why this stop matters for your trip: it anchors your understanding of Paris’s big storylines. When you’re moving around later, you’ll recognize the geometry of the city more easily—what areas connect, where major avenues lead, and how grand squares fit into the grid.
You can also think of it as your warm-up for the rest of the route. Once you’ve got Concorde in view, the ride stops that follow feel less random and more like a deliberate loop through landmark Paris.
Napoleon’s Tomb: why history stops feeling abstract

After Concorde, you head to Napoléon’s Tomb, the resting place of France’s legendary leader. This is the kind of sight that benefits from a guide’s framing, because the monument isn’t just about what it looks like—it’s about what it represents.
With a live local guide, you’re not just staring at stone. You’re getting the story behind why this place sits where it does in the French memory. That matters, because Napoleon’s influence shows up everywhere in Paris, from political symbolism to architecture choices.
On a bike tour, you also get a calmer rhythm. Instead of trying to pack the site into a rushed walk between lines, you arrive as part of an ongoing route. That tends to make the history feel more connected to the city around it.
The Eiffel Tower stop: a classic view with less scrambling

Even if you’ve seen the Eiffel Tower a dozen times in photos, experiencing it in person still hits. The tour includes the Eiffel Tower as one of the highlighted moments, and the bike route helps you reach viewpoints that feel practical rather than complicated.
What I like about this stop on a bike tour is that it fits the day. You’re not waiting forever for a ticket window described elsewhere in your plans. Instead, the Eiffel Tower becomes one of several landmark stops, letting you spread your attention and energy across the ride.
Also, expect your guide to help you make the most of photo moments. The tour is built around photo ops, and the guide’s commentary adds meaning to what you’re capturing, not just a pretty skyline.
If you’re traveling with friends or family, this is a good monument to aim for because it keeps everyone engaged. People may argue about museums, but almost nobody resists an Eiffel Tower moment.
The Louvre Museum: seeing the icon without making it a whole day

The Louvre Museum is the kind of place that can swallow a whole vacation if you let it. This tour gives you a different approach: you get the landmark experience as part of a broader sightseeing loop.
From a bike perspective, the Louvre works well because you’re not only focused on inside-the-museum expectations. You’re seeing how the building anchors the surrounding area and how it connects to the bigger city story.
This is a smart move for first-timers. If it’s your first trip, you might not want to commit an entire day to museum logistics. A short bike tour gives you familiarity with the space so that when you do come back later (and you probably will), you know what direction everything is in.
The guides: live Dutch or English storytelling that keeps momentum

A big reason these tours score well is the guide. This one runs with a live tour guide in Dutch and English, and the whole point is to avoid dull lectures and turn famous stops into something you can actually remember.
In the feedback, guide names like Toby, Karina, Sonia, Justin, Ellen, and Victor show up with praise for being friendly, funny, and engaged. A couple of comments also point out that guides keep things moving at a good pace, which matters when you only have three hours.
One more practical benefit from the guide role: safety. Reviews specifically mention attention to group safety and even reminders about common pickpocket risks in Paris. If you’re the kind of person who thinks security is only needed in stations, the guide’s reminders can change your habits for the rest of the day.
Finally, the local charm is the real value. The guide isn’t just reciting dates. You’re getting the kind of city storytelling that makes you feel like you’re traveling with someone who actually lives there.
Price and value: why $51 can work for busy itineraries

At $51 per person for a 3-hour guided ride, the value depends on how you like to travel.
If you hate wasting time figuring out routes, bike tours are a good bargain. You’re paying for three things at once: the bike and helmet, a trained guide, and a route design that connects major landmarks into one smooth loop.
It also helps that the starting point is tied to a major transit line. You’re not paying a premium just to get dropped somewhere inconvenient. And because the tour loops back to the meeting point, your day stays easier to plan.
The one thing to keep in mind is that $51 doesn’t buy you everything you might do at each monument. This is a sightseeing ride with landmark moments—not a museum-entry day plan. If your ideal Paris day is mostly walking through ticketed interiors, consider pairing this with one or two focused museum visits.
What you should bring (and what to leave at home)

This tour gives you a bike and helmet, so you can travel light. Still, you should bring what you’ll need to ride comfortably and get through the local checkpoints.
Bring:
- Passport or ID card
- Comfortable shoes
- Credit card
- Weather-appropriate clothing (Paris weather loves surprises)
Not allowed:
- Luggage or large bags
- Weapons or sharp objects
Also, consider water. Water isn’t included, and if you’re riding during warm or sunny weather, you’ll appreciate having a bottle on hand.
Small-group vibe and listening comfort during a moving tour
One practical highlight from reviews is the sense of a relatively small group. A few comments mention groups around 8 people, and that size tends to improve everything: you can hear instructions better, the guide can watch everyone’s comfort level, and you don’t get stuck watching other riders struggle to rejoin.
People also call out audio comfort. Some reviews mention wireless or personal sound support so you can hear the guide more clearly while moving. Even if audio details aren’t identical every day, the key idea is the same: you should be able to keep up with the storytelling without shouting across the street.
If you’re hard of hearing or just don’t do well with outdoor noise, this is the kind of tour where your ability to follow directions really matters. Don’t be shy about asking your guide how to make it easier to hear.
Weather and timing: rain or shine, so plan like a local
This tour operates rain or shine. That’s a good sign if you hate waiting for perfect weather. Paris can be unpredictable, and bike tours that still run mean you won’t lose your day to drizzle.
The practical flip side is that you should dress for wet conditions. Bring weather-appropriate clothing and expect that streets can be slippery after rain. If your shoes get soaked easily, consider bringing a backup layer or wearing something that dries fast.
Timing also matters. The tour is 3 hours, and it’s designed to give you landmark coverage without turning it into an all-day project. If you’re trying to fit this between other activities, give yourself a little buffer so you arrive unhurried.
Who should book this Paris Bike Tour
This is a strong fit if:
- You want iconic Paris landmarks in a short window
- You like the idea of bike-friendly sightseeing with a guide
- You’d rather learn the city through stories than through apps and random walks
- You enjoy photo stops with context attached
It’s also a great choice for repeat visitors—because even if you’ve seen Paris before, you’ll likely notice new connections when you ride through the city’s major historical and cultural anchors.
Not ideal if:
- You’re not comfortable riding a bike for the full tour length
- You need to bring large luggage or bulky items
- You expect a museum-entry-focused day
Quick decision: should you book it
Yes, if you want a fast, practical way to see major Paris highlights while getting local storytelling in Dutch or English. At $51 for 3 hours with the bike and helmet included, it’s one of those experiences that can simplify your whole itinerary.
Book it especially if you’re the kind of traveler who likes your days to feel organized. This tour gives you a clear start at Dupleix (line 6), an efficient route through Concorde, Napoleon’s Tomb, the Eiffel Tower, and the Louvre, and then it returns you right where you began.
Pass if you’re only interested in indoor museum time or you don’t want to ride. Comfort on the bike is the main requirement, and that’s the line everything else depends on.
FAQ
How long is the Paris Bike Tour?
The tour lasts 3 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
It costs $51 per person.
Where do I meet for the tour?
The closest Metro station is Dupleix on line 6.
What languages are available for the tour guide?
You can take the tour with a live guide in Dutch or English.
What’s included in the price?
The tour includes a bike and helmet, plus a Dutch speaking tour guide.
Is water included?
No, water is not included.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes, the tour operates rain or shine.
What are the age and riding requirements?
All participants over 12 must be able to ride a bike. All participants under 18 must be accompanied by an adult.
What should I bring, and what can’t I bring?
Bring your passport or ID card, comfortable shoes, a credit card, and weather-appropriate clothing. Luggage or large bags are not allowed, and weapons or sharp objects are not allowed.
If you want, tell me your travel month and your comfort level with cycling, and I’ll help you decide if this is the right timing and pace for your Paris day.

































