Segway Guided Tour

REVIEW · FLORENCE

Segway Guided Tour

  • 5.011 reviews
  • From $100
Book on Viator →

Operated by My Green Tour · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 5.0 (11)Price from$100Operated byMy Green TourBook viaViator

A Segway makes Florence feel faster. This guided loop is a fun, efficient way to see major Renaissance landmarks without wearing out your feet, and I especially like the mix of big-name sights plus the photo breaks that keep things from feeling rushed. I also love that the route takes in famous power centers and viewpoints in just about 90 minutes. One consideration: you really do need good weather, and you’ll want to be comfortable standing and balancing for a short stretch while you ride.

The tour meets in a central area (Via dei Servi 33r) and returns you back to the same spot, so you’re not stuck navigating on your own afterward. With a maximum of 2 travelers, it stays calm and lets the guide pace the stops to your comfort, including time for pictures.

If you’re traveling with teens, this is the kind of activity that often lands better than another museum line. And if you just want a practical, story-led way to connect Florence’s art and politics, the guide does that with straightforward narration (mine was Vincento).

Key Things I’d Watch For on This Florence Segway Tour

Segway Guided Tour - Key Things I’d Watch For on This Florence Segway Tour

  • Small group, max 2 travelers: easier pacing and more room to ask questions.
  • Smart stop selection: Medici power, major squares, and bridge crossings all in one run.
  • Photo time built in: you get pauses at the sights instead of a constant roll-by.
  • Piazzale Michelangelo: you finish with the classic panoramic payoff.
  • Weather matters: the experience depends on good conditions.
  • Mobile ticket: less hassle once you’re in Florence.

Why This Segway Tour Works So Well in Florence

Segway Guided Tour - Why This Segway Tour Works So Well in Florence
Florence has a lot going on at once. You’ll see palaces, bridges, plazas, and church-adjacent streets all packed together, which is great for walking—until your legs start bargaining with you. A Segway guided tour is a sweet middle ground: you still cover the city’s most important areas, but you don’t lose the day to constant uphill starts and tight corners.

What makes this one feel especially practical is the rhythm. You don’t just zip from one landmark to the next with no context. You glide, stop, listen, and then glide again. That loop helps you connect what you’re seeing to why it mattered: Medici influence, civic life in the squares, and the way bridges and viewpoints shape the city experience.

The other big win is that the tour is short. At around 1 hour 30 minutes, it’s easy to fit into an afternoon plan without turning your schedule upside down. And because it ends back where it starts, you can pivot afterward—gelato, a slower walk, or a planned dinner nearby—without thinking too hard.

You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Florence

Price and Logistics: Is $100 Worth It?

Segway Guided Tour - Price and Logistics: Is $100 Worth It?
A $100 price tag for a 90-minute Segway ride can feel like a splurge at first. The question is whether you’re buying something you can’t easily recreate on your own.

Here’s the value math that makes sense for many people:

  • You get a guided route that hits major sights in a tight loop.
  • You get stop-by-stop storytelling that links the buildings and squares to Florence’s past.
  • You get time for photos at key moments, rather than squeezing pictures in while moving.
  • The group stays tiny (up to 2 travelers), which often makes the experience feel more personal than the big-group tours.

If you’re the type who hates wasting time figuring out logistics, this can be worth it. If you love roaming freely with a map and audio guide, you might feel less urgency to pay. But if you want a “see the highlights with context” day—without the fatigue—this price often feels like paying for convenience plus structure.

Also, this runs at 4:00 pm, which is a nice slot for many travelers. It gives you time in the morning for museums or markets, and then you can switch to something active and fun in the afternoon.

Meeting at Via dei Servi and Getting Oriented Fast

Segway Guided Tour - Meeting at Via dei Servi and Getting Oriented Fast
The meeting point is Via dei Servi, 33r, 50122 Firenze FI, Italy, and the tour ends back at that same location. That round-trip setup is underrated. Florence can be disorienting if you’re bouncing between crowded streets, so returning to your starting point helps you keep the rest of your day simple.

It’s also listed as near public transportation, which matters if you’re coming in from farther neighborhoods or if you’re pairing this with other plans. And because the ticket is mobile, you’re not hunting for paper tickets while you’re trying to get everyone together.

The tour confirmation comes at booking time, and the experience depends on good weather. If the weather turns, you’ll be offered another date or a full refund, so you’re not stuck eating the cost if conditions aren’t right.

Palazzo Medici Riccardi: Where Florence’s Power Shows Up

Segway Guided Tour - Palazzo Medici Riccardi: Where Florence’s Power Shows Up
Your first stop is Palazzo Medici Riccardi, tied to the Medici family—Cosimo the Elder’s world, and the workplace connected to major artists including Donatello, Michelangelo, and Botticelli.

This is one of those stops where being guided helps. On a solo walk, you might notice the building and move on. With a guide, the palace becomes a story about influence: who had money, who sponsored art, and how a ruling family shaped what people saw and valued in Florence.

Practical note: the stop is about 15 minutes, and the tour is built for short, meaningful looks. So come ready to take in the big picture rather than expecting a full deep-dive tour of interiors. If you’re the type who wants to spend an hour inside a palace, pair this with a separate timed museum visit later. For an efficient “see it and understand it” start, this works well.

Piazza della Santissima Annunziata and the Innocenti Connection

Segway Guided Tour - Piazza della Santissima Annunziata and the Innocenti Connection
Next comes Piazza della Santissima Annunziata, which is described as a Renaissance jewel in the heart of Florence. Here, you’ll see the Spedale degli Innocenti, built by Brunelleschi.

This stop is a great reminder that Renaissance Florence wasn’t only about palaces and political speeches. It also involved social institutions and big civic projects. Seeing Brunelleschi’s work in this context helps you understand why Florence’s architects and patrons were treated like rock stars: their choices shaped public life, not just private wealth.

The scheduled time is again about 15 minutes, so the goal is to get a clean overview and a few solid visual anchors. If you love architectural details, you might want to take a little extra time on your own right after the Segway segment ends. The tour gives you the starting points so you know what to look for next.

Ponte Vecchio: Crossing Florence’s Most Famous Bridge

Segway Guided Tour - Ponte Vecchio: Crossing Florence’s Most Famous Bridge
Then you glide to Ponte Vecchio, called the oldest bridge in Florence. This is one of those iconic spots where even a brief stop feels like a reset for your whole trip. The bridge is a practical crossing and a symbol of how Florence layers generations on top of each other.

The Segway format helps here. Walking across can be crowded and slow, and you can lose your sense of space. Riding up, pausing, and then taking your time for photos makes the experience feel smoother, and you can still enjoy the views without fighting the busiest foot traffic.

The stop is about 15 minutes, so don’t expect a long hangout. Instead, use it smart:

  • Take a few photos facing each direction.
  • Look for how the bridge connects the surrounding streets.
  • Then move on while the whole scene still feels fresh.

This is one of the places where the guide’s storytelling can turn a photo op into a real sense of place.

Ponte Santa Trinita and the Art of Comparing Bridges

Segway Guided Tour - Ponte Santa Trinita and the Art of Comparing Bridges
After Ponte Vecchio, you head to Ponte Santa Trinita, described as the bridge after the old one. Another 15-minute stop keeps the pace moving, but it also gives you something useful: comparison.

Even if you don’t study bridge engineering, you can see how Florence’s river crossings influence how neighborhoods connect and how people move. That matters because Florence is a city where movement is part of the story. Bridges aren’t just routes; they’re social and visual links.

This stop also sets you up for what’s next. By the time you reach the viewpoint, you’ll already have a mental map of where the city’s main axes and landmarks sit.

Piazzale Michelangelo: Your Panoramic Finish

Segway Guided Tour - Piazzale Michelangelo: Your Panoramic Finish
The final sight on the route is Piazzale Michelangelo, with about 20 minutes allotted. If you’ve ever seen Florence postcards, you know the view: the city spreads out in layers, and you get the kind of perspective that makes it easier to understand how everything fits.

This is the panoramic payoff that makes the whole tour click. After palaces, squares, and bridges, the viewpoint helps you step back and process what you saw. You stop running from one landmark to the next and start seeing the “map” of Florence in your head.

Because the tour begins at 4:00 pm, the timing can be especially nice for softer afternoon light. I’d still keep expectations flexible: the experience depends on good weather, and you’ll want clear visibility to get the full benefit.

Storytelling That Actually Improves How You See the Sights

One thing that stood out in the experience is how the guide keeps Florence understandable. On my run, the guide was Vincenzo, and the tone was practical and engaging rather than overly academic.

That matters because Florence’s landmarks can feel like separate boxes if you only look at them individually. Good storytelling stitches them together. You learn why a palace matters, why a square became important, and how the bridge crossings relate to the city’s layout and civic life.

And importantly, the guide doesn’t yank the group forward on a constant meter. There’s enough time for photos, and the pace feels designed for real people, not just for a bus schedule.

If you’re doing Florence for the first time, this kind of narration can save you from wandering the same streets twice while still feeling like you missed the point.

Who This Tour Is Best For

This Segway tour tends to fit a few types of travelers extremely well:

  • Families with teens: it’s active, modern, and not just “stand and look.” One family experience highlighted it worked perfectly for two teenagers, and that rings true when an activity includes both movement and stops for context.
  • Couples who want highlights without exhausting walking: you still see the big names—Medici, the bridges, and the viewpoint—without spending the entire afternoon on cobblestones.
  • First-timers who want structure: if Florence overwhelms you, a guided loop gives you a framework you can build on after.
  • People who hate racing through sights: the tiny group size (max 2) helps keep the experience comfortable.

If you’re an experienced walker and you prefer complete freedom, you might find it less necessary. But if you want a fun, efficient afternoon with enough context to make the city feel connected, this tour is a strong match.

Should You Book This Segway Tour in Florence?

If your goal is to see Florence’s most recognizable landmarks with a guide’s storytelling, and you want to do it in a manageable 90-minute window, I think it’s a solid booking choice. The small group size (up to 2 travelers) and the built-in photo stops are especially appealing if you value comfort and attention.

I’d only hesitate if you know you’re uncomfortable with balancing on a Segway or you’re traveling during a time when Florence weather might be unpredictable. Since the experience needs good conditions, plan as if the day could shift, and keep your schedule flexible.

For many travelers, the best part is simple: it turns a “see the highlights” plan into something you actually look forward to doing.

FAQ

What sights does the Segway tour cover in Florence?

You’ll visit Palazzo Medici Riccardi, Piazza della Santissima Annunziata (including the Spedale degli Innocenti by Brunelleschi), Ponte Vecchio, Ponte Santa Trinita, and Piazzale Michelangelo.

How long is the tour and what time does it start?

The tour is about 1 hour 30 minutes and it starts at 4:00 pm.

Where does the tour start?

It meets at Via dei Servi, 33r, 50122 Firenze FI, Italy, and ends back at the same meeting point.

What’s the group size?

This tour/activity has a maximum of 2 travelers, so it stays small.

Do I need a paper ticket?

No. It uses a mobile ticket.

What happens if the weather is bad or I cancel?

The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. Cancellation is free up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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

Scroll to Top

Explore Florence

The galleries, the Duomo, the Tuscan hills, and every way to walk into them.