REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour
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Paris on a Segway feels oddly perfect. You get the freedom of two wheels plus a plan, moving past the big hits of central Paris with built-in photo moments and guide talk. The private setup keeps the pace smooth, and your Segway helps you cover ground faster than walking.
I love how practical the route feels. You pass by major landmarks like the Eiffel Tower area, Pont Alexandre III, the Louvre zone, and the Seine, without the usual day-long logistics stress. I also like that the guide organizes short stops for photos, so you’re not guessing where to park yourself for the best angles.
One thing to consider before you fall in love with the idea: it’s not for everyone. You need to be between 88 and 260 pounds, and pregnant women aren’t permitted on the tour, plus you’ll want to be comfortable riding a Segway safely.
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan for
- Segway Freedom in Paris: What 90 Minutes Really Gets You
- Meeting at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais: Your Fast Start
- From Les Invalides to Army Museum: A Courtyard-to-Courtyard Feel
- Pont Alexandre III, Grand and Petit palais, and the Grand Avenue Energy
- Champs-Élysées, Place de la Concorde, and the Louvre Area: Speed with Photo Structure
- Seine River Break Time and Musée d’Orsay: Let the Ride Reset
- Parc du Champs de Mars and Eiffel Tower Finale: The Best Payoff for Momentum
- Price and Value: $88 for a Segway, Helmet, and a Full City Loop
- Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Feel Uncomfortable)
- What You Learn Along the Route (Beyond Seeing the Sights)
- Should You Book This 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour in Paris?
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris 1.5-hour private Segway tour?
- Where is the meeting point for the tour?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Is the tour private or shared?
- What language is the tour guide?
- Are there weight requirements to ride a Segway?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key things I’d plan for

- Private group pacing: You’re not squeezed into a crowd, and you can keep questions coming as you move.
- Photo stops are part of the plan: The guide structures where you pause, so your pictures don’t turn into a scramble.
- Big landmarks in 90 minutes: You cover more than you would on foot, with frequent quick views.
- Seine River break built in: You get a breather and a change of scenery during the ride.
- Helmet + guide included: Safety gear is provided, and you’re not figuring out navigation alone.
- Central start point (75007): Meeting at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais keeps you close to the action.
Segway Freedom in Paris: What 90 Minutes Really Gets You

A Segway tour works in Paris for one simple reason: distance adds up fast. In 90 minutes, you can hit far more than a walking route would allow, especially when you’re bouncing between postcard zones like the Eiffel Tower area, the Seine corridor, and the Louvre side of the city.
What makes this format smart is that you’re not just riding past views. Your guide gives commentary as you pass sights, then organizes stops for photos. Those tiny pauses matter. Without them, you’d spend time hunting for a safe place to stop or repositioning your phone while traffic and pedestrians keep flowing. Here, the stops are built into the flow.
Also, the tour is structured as a private group, so the vibe is easier on your nerves. You’re not playing tag with strangers who want to go left while you want to go right. It’s the difference between hurried sightseeing and actually enjoying the ride.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Paris
Meeting at 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais: Your Fast Start

You’ll meet at 101 Avenue de la Bourdonnais, 75007. That matters because you’re starting right in the core of the action, not commuting across town first. You’ll spend time getting set up with the Segway, then you’ll roll into central Paris right away.
The tour includes a safety helmet and a professional guide, which keeps things straightforward. The weight range is specifically listed for safety, so if you’re outside that window you’ll need to skip this one. (More on who should ride later.)
One more practical note: the tour runs in English, and it may be operated by a multilingual guide. That’s good if you’re comfortable with English narration and want your guide to adjust naturally to what your group asks.
From Les Invalides to Army Museum: A Courtyard-to-Courtyard Feel

Early in the route, you pass Les Invalides and the Army Museum, Paris. This part of the day is useful because it gets you out of the “just point-and-snap” mode. These are built-up, monumental areas where your Segway helps you move smoothly between viewpoints.
Because the timing between stops is short, think of this stretch as a “first impressions” set. You’re not meant to linger for an hour inside a museum. Instead, you’re getting the big exterior moments and learning how the area fits into the city’s layout before you continue.
What to watch for: keep an eye on how your guide positions you. On a Segway tour, the best angles often come from where you pause, not just what you’re facing. If you want photos, treat those short stops like they’re the whole point—because they basically are.
Pont Alexandre III, Grand and Petit palais, and the Grand Avenue Energy

Next up is Pont Alexandre III and the route carries on toward the grand classic sights. The highlights specifically mention passing Pont Alexandre III plus Grand and Petit palais, and you’ll also pass through the Champs-Élysées zone and toward Concorde.
Pont Alexandre III is one of those Paris spots where “standing still” suddenly feels worth it. The bridge area gives you broad views and strong lines, and a Segway ride helps you reposition without turning it into a slow, crowded wait. The guide’s job here is to help you see what’s worth filming and what’s just background.
Then you’ll sweep into the wider Paris boulevards—this is where the Segway shines. Champs-Élysées and nearby monumental stretches are ideal for quick passes because you’re getting that sense of scale. You’re seeing how Paris lines up from one landmark to the next.
Possible drawback to keep in mind: most of these segments are short. Several stops are listed as only a few minutes, so if you want a long soak at one exact viewpoint, this tour won’t feel built for that. It’s designed for momentum and variety.
Champs-Élysées, Place de la Concorde, and the Louvre Area: Speed with Photo Structure

This portion of the route is basically the “big icons” circuit. You pass Champs-Élysées, Place de la Concorde, and the Louvre Museum area. The goal isn’t to replace a museum visit. It’s to connect the landmarks with your own eyes and get your bearings fast.
What I like about this design is that it reduces decision fatigue. In Paris, you often spend time choosing between sights: which one today, which one tomorrow, which one needs reservations, which one is worth your energy. A route like this strings together the most recognizable zones in a way that gives you a satisfying overview in one go.
Because the guide organizes photo stops, you’re not just rushing by. You’ll get chances to stop for pictures at planned moments. If you’re traveling with family or teens, this setup is especially handy. It gives everyone something to look at and keeps the pace from turning into a museum marathon.
Seine River Break Time and Musée d’Orsay: Let the Ride Reset

Then you hit the Seine River, with break time listed at about 10 minutes, followed by Musée d’Orsay as you pass it.
This is a smart part of the tour for two reasons. First, a break stops the “constant motion” feeling. Second, the Seine zone changes the mood. Even though you’re still moving on wheels, you’re now in a different part of the city with a calmer, more reflective vibe than the heavy boulevard stretches.
For a photo stop here, I’d think about your priorities:
- Do you want classic river views?
- Do you want pictures with the landmarks framing the water?
- Or do you just want a breather and a snack-less reset before the final push?
You won’t be spending long inside buildings during this tour, so you’ll get more value by using the ride itself as your viewing experience. The break is part of that.
Parc du Champs de Mars and Eiffel Tower Finale: The Best Payoff for Momentum

As you near the end, you pass Parc du Champs de Mars and finish at the Eiffel Tower area before returning to 101 Av. de la Bourdonnais.
This ending matters. Eiffel Tower moments feel better when you’ve already seen the surrounding city pieces earlier. With the prior sights in your visual memory, the tower becomes more than a single photo. It becomes the centerpiece of a whole day’s route—boulevards, river, museum zone, and bridge lined up in your head.
If you’re going during evening light, you may get extra beauty from the setting. One guide name that’s come up is Jack, and people have praised him for leading them to exactly the places they wanted to see and for making the experience feel both fun and efficient. That kind of guiding style matters at the finish, when you want the whole loop to feel like it landed where you hoped.
Price and Value: $88 for a Segway, Helmet, and a Full City Loop

At $88 per person for a 90-minute private tour, the value depends on what you’d otherwise do with your time.
Here’s why it can be a good deal:
- Your guide is included, which turns navigation and stop timing into something effortless.
- The Segway and helmet are included, so you’re not shopping around last minute for rentals or safety gear.
- You cover many landmark zones in a short window, which is hard to replicate without pre-planning and comfort navigating the city yourself.
If you’re comparing it to hiring a private car for sightseeing, this is usually far cheaper. If you’re comparing it to walking on your own, the price can still make sense when you count time saved and the chance to see multiple iconic areas without getting stuck in transit or long detours.
The “private” part is also a value lever. A private group usually means fewer awkward pacing issues, especially if you’re with teens or you have different photo needs. It’s easier to keep everyone engaged when the schedule is shaped to your group.
Who This Segway Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Feel Uncomfortable)

This tour makes the most sense if you want an efficient overview of Paris in a short slice of time. It’s a strong choice for:
- First-timers who want the highlights without building a complicated itinerary
- Families with teens who get restless when sightseeing turns into long waits
- People who like photos but don’t want to spend the whole day figuring out where to stop
You should think twice if:
- You’re outside the listed weight range (88 to 260 pounds)
- You’re pregnant (pregnant women aren’t permitted on the tour for health-risk reasons)
- You need long museum-style time at one site. This ride is about moving between landmarks and using guided photo pauses, not deep, inside-the-building exploring.
Also, the tour requires basic comfort with riding a Segway. The helmet is provided and a guide is there, but the overall format is still active and motion-based.
What You Learn Along the Route (Beyond Seeing the Sights)
A Segway tour is half sightseeing, half guidance. Your guide provides commentary as you pass the sights, so the landmarks connect into a story you can remember after the ride ends.
I like tours that do this because it changes the experience from random sightseeing into something you can reference later. When you later walk past Pont Alexandre III or see the Louvre exterior from another angle, you’ll have context for where you are in the city’s layout.
And because you’re stopping for photos at planned moments, you’re less likely to waste time. That matters when daylight fades, crowds swell, or everyone’s energy dips.
Should You Book This 1.5-Hour Private Segway Tour in Paris?
I’d book it if your goal is simple: see a lot of Paris highlights in a short time, with a private guide and photo stops that keep things fun. The fact that the route loops through Eiffel Tower area, Pont Alexandre III, Louvre zone, and the Seine makes it ideal as a “day one” or “time-crunched” experience.
I’d skip it if you want to linger at a single site for long, or if the weight/health limits don’t work for you. This is a structured ride, not a choose-your-own-adventure wandering day.
If you’re deciding, ask yourself one question: do you want Paris to feel efficient and guided for 90 minutes? If yes, this tour has a clear purpose—and it’s built to deliver that payoff.
FAQ
How long is the Paris 1.5-hour private Segway tour?
The duration is 90 minutes.
Where is the meeting point for the tour?
The meeting point is 101 Avenue Bourdonnais, 75007.
What’s included in the tour price?
The tour includes a professional guide, a Segway, and a safety helmet.
Is the tour private or shared?
It’s listed as a private group.
What language is the tour guide?
The tour is in English (live tour guide). It may also be operated by a multilingual guide.
Are there weight requirements to ride a Segway?
Yes. Guests must be between 88 pounds and 260 pounds.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
































