Best of Athens Segway Tour

REVIEW · ATHENS

Best of Athens Segway Tour

  • 4.9127 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $112
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Operated by Athens City Segway Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.9 (127)Duration3 hoursPrice from$112Operated byAthens City Segway ToursBook viaGetYourGuide

Catching Athens highlights without sore feet. In just 3 hours, you’ll learn to ride a Segway and roll past a standout mix of ancient landmarks and modern Athens, from Kerameikos to the Presidential Guard ceremony. I especially like how the route hits big-picture Athens fast, without making you choose between history and getting around comfortably. One watch-out: this tour keeps you outside archaeological sites, so you won’t get inside ruins or museums.

The trade-off is actually pretty smart for a short visit. You’ll get lots of photo stops, sweeping city views from the outside (including the Acropolis approach), and a structured ride that helps you understand where things fit in the story of the city—without adding extra ticket lines.

Key things that make this Athens Segway tour worth it

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Key things that make this Athens Segway tour worth it

  • 30-minute Segway training before you head out, so first-timers can feel steady fast
  • Kerameikos to Agora-style route that maps how ancient Athens flowed
  • Mars Hill and Acropolis entrance drive-bys, built for easy viewing and great photos
  • Panathinaikon Stadium and Zappeion area time, tied to the modern Olympic story
  • Changing of the Presidential Guard (Tsolias) with a photo chance near the guards
  • Outside-only viewing of archaeological areas, which keeps the day efficient

First you master the Segway, then Athens feels doable

Best of Athens Segway Tour - First you master the Segway, then Athens feels doable
Your tour starts with a 30-minute training session. You’ll practice the basics until riding feels intuitive—enough that you can focus on the city instead of balancing your body every second.

Guides are part of the equation. In the past, people have specifically praised guides like Menelaos for patient instruction, and Demi for helping the group stay comfortable. Others like Georgia and Stelios (and several similarly named guides) are repeatedly described as attentive during the ride and quick to help if someone feels wobbly.

A Segway isn’t just a novelty here. In Athens—where you can lose time to crowds, steep walks, and heat—you’re buying efficiency. You’ll likely feel that most on the long stretches between major viewpoints.

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

How the Kerameikos area sets the tone for the whole day

Best of Athens Segway Tour - How the Kerameikos area sets the tone for the whole day
Early on, you’ll work your way through the Keramikos area. This isn’t just a landmark stop; it’s a mood-setter because it connects you to ancient Athens from the start.

Kerameikos is described as both an ancient cemetery and an entrance to the city in antiquity. That matters because it gives context for why the route moves the way it does—like you’re walking along an old approach road, not just collecting photos.

You’ll usually get time for a photo stop and a guided look at what you’re seeing before moving on. The Segway makes it easier to keep the flow, especially if you’re starting in the heat or you’d rather save your legs for later.

Ancient Agora and the Roman Athens loop—why it works from the outside

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Ancient Agora and the Roman Athens loop—why it works from the outside
After the Kerameikos area, the route follows an ancient-style path toward the Agora area. This is the heart of ancient Athens, and the stop is framed as the place that connects Greek and Roman layers of the city.

One of the smart parts of this tour is that it doesn’t demand you “buy everything” up front. Instead, it helps you visually understand where major sections of the ancient city were, even though you won’t enter archaeological sites.

The tour also frames this as both ancient and Roman agora space. That helps you make sense of why the city’s monumental feel changes as you move around—Greek civic focus giving way to Roman grandeur.

If you’re the type who gets overwhelmed by too many ruins and not enough orientation, this is exactly the kind of tour that clears the fog. You’ll leave with a mental map you can build on later with a separate site visit if you want to go deeper.

Mars Hill and the Acropolis entrance drive-bys: views without the climb

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Mars Hill and the Acropolis entrance drive-bys: views without the climb
One of the big selling points is the Mars Hill (Areopagus) segment. You drive over it, then continue toward the entrance area of the Acropolis without getting stuck in a long uphill slog.

From a Segway, the viewpoint is different than what you get from the ticket lines or a one-way stair climb. You can take photos while you’re moving between vantage points, and you’re not paying a fatigue tax every time the route tilts upward.

The tour specifically highlights an exterior viewpoint of the Acropolis from your unique angle. That means you’re seeing the icon of Athens in a way that feels integrated with the rest of your day—rather than a single isolated block you have to “survive” on foot.

The limitation is important: you’re not going into archaeological areas. If you want hands-on time in specific buildings, you’ll still need separate tickets and time on another day. But as an overview and a photo-driven orientation lap, this works well.

Pnyka Hill panoramas and the road past Zeus and Hadrian

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Pnyka Hill panoramas and the road past Zeus and Hadrian
After the Acropolis approach, you’ll head up Pnyka Hill for panoramic views. The tour description is focused on avoiding tired feet, which is exactly what you want here—because this is the kind of area where walking can feel like it’s all steps and no payoff.

There’s also mention of a terraced side area associated with democracy origins. Whether you’re deeply into classical Athens or just curious, the value is that the tour points to what each stretch was tied to, instead of leaving you guessing.

From there, you’ll move through a pedestrian street area around the Acropolis hill toward the Roman part of the city. The route references the Temple of Zeus and the gate of Andrian (Hadrian’s Gate), so you get a clear “then-and-now” contrast in the same ride.

And yes, you’ll also get time that’s described as easing your mind like kings and queens do, tied to the national gardens experience. In practice, that kind of pause matters. It breaks up the big monuments with something calmer and more livable.

Zappeion and Panathinaikon Stadium: the modern Olympic stop

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Zappeion and Panathinaikon Stadium: the modern Olympic stop
A highlight built into the route is the Zappion mansion area and the Panathinaikon Stadium. This is where the tour shifts from ancient Athens to the modern story that uses the city as a stage.

You’ll travel through the Zappio district, with a focus on where the first modern Olympic Games took place. That connection is useful because Athens isn’t only ruins. It’s also a living city that keeps reusing its own symbols.

The Segway format helps here because stadium zones and grand building districts can eat time on foot. Instead, you cover more ground while still having moments to look, pause, and take pictures.

If you’ve been to a major stadium event before, you’ll probably appreciate the setting more. If you haven’t, don’t worry—this stop is explained in a way that aims to be accessible, not academic.

Watching the Changing of the Guard (Tsolias) in Athens

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Watching the Changing of the Guard (Tsolias) in Athens
If your schedule allows it, don’t treat the Changing of the Presidential Guard as a quick photo stop. The tour frames Tsolias as a sure highlight, and many people enjoy it because it’s visual, ceremonial, and immediately understandable.

The uniform is described as unique and meaningful, and you’ll have time to watch. Importantly, you also get a chance to take a picture next to the guards right before heading back.

One practical reason this works on a Segway day: it breaks up the “walk from one ruin to the next” rhythm. You get something different in the middle of the monuments-and-vistas pattern.

Finishing through Monastiraki and Thiseio, then rolling back

On the back half, you’ll pass through Monastiraki and Thiseio. These are the neighborhoods that help the day feel like Athens, not just a sightseeing checklist.

The pace stays tour-friendly, with short ride segments and photo stops along the way. You’re essentially turning your overview into a “now I understand where I am in the city” finish.

Then you return to the starting point area—commonly back to Eschinou 9, depending on which meeting option you booked. That matters because it keeps the day from splitting into complicated end-of-tour transportation.

Price and value: why $112 makes sense for a short Athens visit

Best of Athens Segway Tour - Price and value: why $112 makes sense for a short Athens visit
At $112 per person for about 3 hours, the key question is: are you buying savings in time and energy? For most people, the answer is yes—especially if you want to see major Athens anchors without turning the day into a sore-foot grind.

Your ticket includes Segway training, a helmet, and a guide. What it doesn’t include is entry into archaeological sites or a guided tour inside those places. So you’re paying for movement, context, and efficient sight coverage, not for museum access.

That pricing logic is why this tour is often a strong first-day choice. It helps you decide what you want to go back to after you see the whole city picture.

Also, it’s a good fit if your itinerary is tight. If you’ve only got a morning or early afternoon and you’re still trying to understand Athens geography—this is the kind of format that gives you momentum.

Who this Athens Segway tour is for (and who should skip it)

This tour is a strong match if you want an overview that mixes ancient and modern Athens in one ride. It’s also a nice option if you’ve already spent time on foot (maybe up around the Acropolis) and you’re trying to avoid repeating that effort.

It’s not the right choice if you need access inside archaeological sites. The tour does not enter archaeological sites, so you’ll miss out on interior ruins and museum-style time.

There are also clear rider limits. The minimum age is 10, and riders under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. The tour notes that riders must be able to climb and descend stairs without assistance. Weight matters too: Segways aren’t suitable for guests under 100 pounds or over 300 pounds, and the activity notes also flag 275 pounds (125 kg) as the upper limit.

Pregnancy is listed as not recommended. And unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed.

If you meet the limits, you’re in good shape. People have praised the patience and support during the learning phase, including adjustments for comfort and pacing.

Should you book the Best of Athens Segway Tour?

Book it if you want an efficient highlights circuit that teaches you where Athens’ major sites fit together—without exhausting your legs. The Kerameikos-to-Agora logic, the Mars Hill and Acropolis exterior views, the Panathinaikon Stadium stop, and the Tsolias Changing of the Guard add up to a day that feels like more than a ride.

Skip it (or plan a separate day for deeper access) if your top priority is entering archaeological sites. This tour is built for outside viewing, photo moments, and context, not ticket-based interior exploration.

If you want the smartest “first look” at Athens in a limited window, this one is hard to beat.

FAQ

How long is the Best of Athens Segway Tour?

It runs for 3 hours.

Where is the meeting point?

The meeting point may vary depending on the option booked. Two listed options are Eschinou 9 (Athens City Segway Tours) and National Garden, Athens.

Do I need to know how to ride a Segway before I go?

No. You get Segway training at the start, including a 30-minute training session to help you get comfortable.

Does the tour enter archaeological sites?

No. This tour does not enter any archaeological sites.

What sights are included on the tour?

You’ll see Kerameikos, the Ancient Agora area from the route, Mars Hill and the entrance area of the Acropolis (from the outside), Panathinaikon Stadium via the Zappion district, and the Changing of the Presidential Guard (Tsolias).

What’s included in the price?

Included: Segway training, helmet, and a guide.

What costs extra?

Entry and guided tour of archaeological sites are not included.

What are the age and weight requirements?

Minimum age is 10, and riders under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. The tour also lists weight limits: Segways aren’t suitable for guests under 100 pounds or over 300 pounds, and the activity notes state 275 pounds (125 kg) as an upper limit.

What languages are the guides available in?

Live guides are listed in English, Hebrew, Russian, Ukrainian, and Spanish.

Is free cancellation available?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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