Segway Anyway is a smart way to see Valencia without grinding your legs for a full day. You’ll cover the Old Town, glide into Turia Gardens, and finish at the futuristic City of Arts and Sciences, all in about two hours with an English-speaking guide. You also get a short practice session first, so you’re not thrown into traffic blind.
What I like most is how smoothly the tour mixes famous stops with real context. Guides such as Eugene, Erica, Santiago, Sima, Yuri, Simon, and Eugeni are all names you could get, and the common thread is clear instructions plus stories you can actually use to plan your next hours. Second, the Segway itself is the value driver: you see a lot with far less walking than you’d expect for a route this wide.
One thing to keep in mind: it’s a group ride. When the group swells to around ten riders, the experience can feel a bit less personal, since the guide has a harder time watching everyone in the back.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Starting Point by Valencia Cathedral: How the 2-Hour Loop Works
- Segway Training That Gets You Rolling (If You Follow Directions)
- Old Town on Two Wheels: Plaza de la Virgen and the Basilica
- Turia Gardens Glide: A Calmer Slice of Valencia
- Palau de la Música: Music Culture Meets Modern Design
- Gulliver Park Whimsy: A Visual Reset Before the Sci-Fi City
- City of Arts and Sciences: Hemisfèric to Oceanogràfic
- Price and Value: What $47 Buys You in Real Terms
- Group Tour Reality: Fun Social Energy, But Watch Group Size
- What You Get to Use After the Ride
- Who This Segway Tour Fits Best
- Should You Book the Segway Group Sightseeing Tour of Valencia?
- FAQ
- Where do I meet for the Segway tour?
- How long is the Segway Group Sightseeing Tour of Valencia?
- What languages is the tour guide available in?
- What are the main sights on the route?
- What’s included in the price?
- Who is the tour not suitable for?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- You start near Valencia Cathedral and ride the city in a tight, efficient loop.
- Brief training happens first, and it’s designed to get first-timers comfortable fast.
- Old Town stops are specific, including Plaza de la Virgen and the Basilica of the Virgin.
- Turia Gardens is a big highlight for smoother riding and calmer views.
- Palau de la Música adds culture beyond sightseeing photos.
- You roll into the future at the City of Arts and Sciences, including the Hemisfèric, Science Museum, and Oceanogràfic.
Starting Point by Valencia Cathedral: How the 2-Hour Loop Works

This is a 2-hour Segway group sightseeing tour in Valencia’s Valencian Community, priced at $47 per person. The meeting point is a bike shop marked SegwayAnyway starting point, near Valencia Cathedral. That location matters because it puts you close to the city’s historic core right away, instead of wasting time commuting out to a separate starting area.
In practice, the tour is built like a quick cross-section of Valencia. You begin in the older streets (easy to understand once you’re on the move), then you transition to green space along the Turia Park area, and finally you reach the City of Arts and Sciences, where the architecture changes the mood completely. In other words, you get “old-to-new” in one sitting.
The timing also helps. If you’re on a short trip, this is one of those experiences that gives you a map in your head. You’ll know where things are, which streets connect, and where you’d want to return later on foot.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Valencia.
Segway Training That Gets You Rolling (If You Follow Directions)

Before the sightseeing starts, you’ll do a brief Segway training session. This is a big deal because a Segway tour can go one of two ways: either you get comfortable quickly and enjoy the ride, or you spend the whole time worrying about balance. Here, the training is part of the included experience, and it’s set up for both first-timers and people who already ride.
You should expect instruction on basic control, braking, turning, and how to move as a group. It also means you’ll learn the rhythm of the tour early, so you’re not guessing when you switch from one area to the next.
A practical tip: if you’re even slightly nervous about balancing, tell the guide right at the start. The guides (including Eugene, Simon, and Sima in past groups) are known for taking time to make sure people can handle the Segway before rolling out. That attitude changes the whole tone of the ride.
If you have motion sickness, this tour may not be for you. Segways are still vehicles, and the motion plus sightseeing can be a rough combo for some people.
Old Town on Two Wheels: Plaza de la Virgen and the Basilica

Once training is done, you head into Valencia’s Historic Old Town, gliding through streets that feel made for walking tours—just faster. Your route includes standout landmarks such as Plaza de la Virgen and the Basilica of the Virgin.
What I like about this portion is that the stops aren’t random. Plaza de la Virgen is the kind of place you can use as a reference point for the rest of your visit. When you know exactly where it is in relation to the Cathedral area, it becomes easier to plan a route later without backtracking.
At the Basilica of the Virgin, you get a sense of why this area matters culturally and architecturally. Even if you don’t go inside (the tour is mainly sightseeing by ride and brief stops), the exterior setting is a useful introduction to what you’ll see in the surrounding streets.
Expect slower, more controlled riding here compared to the park sections. It’s still fun, but it feels more like “guided city wandering” than a fast glide.
Turia Gardens Glide: A Calmer Slice of Valencia
Then the tour shifts into Turia Gardens (Turia Park), one of Spain’s largest urban parks. This is where the Segway really feels different from walking. The path riding tends to be smoother, and the pace is more relaxed.
You’ll ride through green paths with Mediterranean flora and views that give your brain a break after the Old Town streets. For me, this is one of the best parts of the itinerary because it changes the feel of the city. Valencia stops being only stone and history and becomes more airy, open, and walkable in a different way.
This is also where you’ll likely start noticing what the guide is good at: choosing viewpoints and directing your attention. When someone points out what to look for—where the park opens up, what direction the water or gardens run, or which areas are best for photos—it makes the ride feel “guided,” not just transportation.
Palau de la Música: Music Culture Meets Modern Design
After the park, you visit Palau de la Música, Valencia’s modern concert hall. It’s described as a stunning venue surrounded by landscaped gardens and fountains, and that setting is part of the experience. Even if you’re not attending a concert, seeing the exterior and the surrounding garden layout helps you understand why music matters here beyond concerts and tickets.
This stop adds a layer that many “top sights only” tours miss. Instead of another quick photo and move on, Palau de la Música gives you a contrast: modern architecture, designed spaces, and a cultural reason for why people gather in that area.
What you’ll get most out of this segment is the guide’s story. Past guides (like Santiago and Erica) have been noted for balancing practical context with humor and Q&A. If you ask a question here—how the venue fits into Valencia’s cultural calendar—you’ll likely get a straight, useful answer.
Gulliver Park Whimsy: A Visual Reset Before the Sci-Fi City

Next comes Gulliver Park, inspired by Gulliver’s Travels, featuring a giant playground sculpture. This stop is playful by design, and that matters because it breaks up the “big monuments” rhythm.
Why it’s worth your time: Valencia can feel like two different cities—the older streets and the futuristic complex. Gulliver Park acts as the bridge. It’s the visual reset between those worlds, and it’s also a nice reminder that public spaces here aren’t only for adults and museums.
Even if you’re traveling without kids, the giant sculpture is the kind of thing you’ll remember. It’s also a great moment to pause, regroup, and reset your senses before the final stretch.
City of Arts and Sciences: Hemisfèric to Oceanogràfic

Finally, you ride into the City of Arts and Sciences, Valencia’s futuristic landmark complex. This area includes major buildings such as the Hemisfèric, the Science Museum, and Oceanogràfic.
This is the part of the tour that makes it feel like a “full-scope” visit. You’re not just touching one famous street—you’re experiencing the architectural shift that defines modern Valencia. The buildings here are built for spectacle, and even if you don’t go inside on this tour, seeing the scale from the Segway adds context fast.
A practical way to make the most of this segment: watch for where the buildings sit relative to the paths and open spaces. The City of Arts and Sciences is huge, and after your ride you’ll be better at choosing which area to return to first—whether you’re more science-focused or more ocean-themed.
And remember: the tour includes a guided overview plus the promise of recommendations. That matters here because you’ll likely want to decide what to do next, and a good guide can point you toward the best match for your interests and time.
Price and Value: What $47 Buys You in Real Terms

At $47 per person, you’re paying for more than a ride. You’re getting:
- an expert guide
- Segway training
- a bottle of water
- a city map
- personalized recommendations on what to do after
The value angle is simple: this tour compresses a lot of distance into two hours with minimal walking. If you’re comparing this to spending a day piecing together transit and separate walking routes, the time savings is the real currency. You also leave with practical info: where to eat, where to stroll next, and what areas make sense for repeat visits.
Also, the guide is part of the pricing. The best tours don’t just show landmarks; they help you connect them. With guides known for humor and taking time with questions (Eugene, Yuri, Sima, Simon, and others), the ride can feel like a guided planning session disguised as sightseeing.
Group Tour Reality: Fun Social Energy, But Watch Group Size

This is a group tour, which is half the charm and half the trade-off. I like the social side—meeting people who are also trying to make the most of Valencia in limited time. But if your group lands at the larger end (around ten riders), it can feel harder for the guide to give personal attention to everyone, especially toward the back.
So here’s how to manage it:
- Be close to the front during the ride when possible.
- Ask questions early, not when you’re waiting for the guide to reach you.
- Use the guide’s recommendations while the guide is still fresh and accessible.
If you prefer a quieter, more intimate pace, you might look for a smaller group option elsewhere. But if you’re comfortable sharing space and want a structured overview, this group format works.
What You Get to Use After the Ride
You’ll finish with two small extras that make the tour last longer in your plans.
First, you get a city map designed for follow-up exploring. That’s helpful because Valencia’s layout can be easier to navigate once you’ve already seen the key reference points.
Second, there’s an optional add-on: 24-hour access to an e-scooter or bicycle, paid at the store. That’s the kind of extension that can turn a short visit into a more flexible one. You already know where the main attractions are, so you can choose your own route without repeating the guided loop.
If you’re the type who likes to wander on your own but still wants a strong starting orientation, this two-step approach is a good fit.
Who This Segway Tour Fits Best
This tour is a strong match if you:
- want to see both Old Town and the City of Arts and Sciences in one go
- prefer less walking while still getting landmark-to-landmark context
- enjoy guided commentary and short photo-stop moments
- want a plan for what to do after two hours
It’s not suitable for:
- children under 10
- wheelchair users
- visually impaired people
- children under 50 lbs (23 kg)
- people over 243 lbs (110 kg)
- anyone with motion sickness
If you’re in that “okay with a moving vehicle” category and you don’t mind being in a group, this is a practical way to sample Valencia’s range.
Should You Book the Segway Group Sightseeing Tour of Valencia?
I’d book it if you want a fast, fun orientation to Valencia that hits both historic and modern highlights. The mix of Plaza de la Virgen, Turia Gardens, Palau de la Música, Gulliver Park, and the City of Arts and Sciences is exactly what makes a Segway tour worth it: you get variety without needing a full day of walking.
Skip it if you’re sensitive to motion, need accessible equipment, or strongly prefer small group attention. And if you’re traveling with a bigger group of your own, remember the tour group can be large enough to reduce individual guidance toward the back.
If you can handle the Segway comfortably, this is a solid value at $47—especially because it ends with a map, water, and recommendations you can actually use.
FAQ
Where do I meet for the Segway tour?
You’ll meet at the bike shop marked with the sign SegwayAnyway starting point, near Valencia Cathedral.
How long is the Segway Group Sightseeing Tour of Valencia?
The tour runs for 2 hours.
What languages is the tour guide available in?
The live tour guide is English.
What are the main sights on the route?
You’ll ride through the Historic Old Town (including Plaza de la Virgen and the Basilica of the Virgin), through Turia Gardens, to Palau de la Música, past Gulliver Park, and on to the City of Arts and Sciences (Hemisfèric, Science Museum, and Oceanogràfic).
What’s included in the price?
Included are an expert guide, Segway training, a bottle of water, a city map, and personalized insider recommendations.
Who is the tour not suitable for?
It’s not suitable for children under 10, wheelchair users, visually impaired people, children under 50 lbs (23 kg), people over 243 lbs (110 kg), or anyone with motion sickness.
Can I cancel for free?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.



























