REVIEW · BARCELONA
Barcelona: Gaudi Guided Segway Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Robot City Barcelona · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Gaudi on a Segway feels unreal. This 3-hour ride strings together barri-hopping routes from Barceloneta to Eixample, with Gaudi monuments you can actually see up close. You’ll get Segway training up front so you’re not stressed when the sightseeing starts.
I also love the built-in mix of classic sights and street-level moments, like the photo stop by Passeig de Gràcia and the chance to spot modern art along the way. The main drawback is that it’s not for everyone: it isn’t suitable for kids under 14 or for pregnant women, and there’s no transfer to/from the office.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Watch For
- How This 3-Hour Gaudi Segway Tour Actually Works
- From Barceloneta Central Beach to Parc de la Ciutadella: Start With Views and Breathing Room
- Eixample and Passeig de Gràcia: Where Gaudi’s World Gets Specific
- Casa Batlló and Casa Milà (La Pedrera): How to See Gaudi Without the Standing Line Chaos
- The Passeig de Gràcia Photo Stop (Plus Souvenirs)
- Guides Matter: Training, Humor, and Photo Help You’ll Appreciate
- Price and Value: Why $81 for 3 Hours Can Make Sense
- Practical Stuff You’ll Want to Plan For
- What you need to bring
- What’s provided
- What’s not allowed
- Who should consider skipping
- Who This Segway Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book the Barcelona Gaudi Guided Segway Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Barcelona Gaudi Segway Tour?
- Where does the tour start?
- What’s included in the price?
- Do I need previous Segway experience?
- What languages are available for the live guide?
- Is transfer to and from the office included?
- Is the tour suitable for children or pregnant travelers?
- What should I bring and what’s not allowed?
Key Things I’d Watch For

- Fast-start Segway training before you roll into traffic-adjacent scenery
- Private guiding through Eixample and Old Town at a human pace
- Gaudi highlights on-route, including Casa Batlló and Casa Milà (La Pedrera)
- Modern art stops, including Fundacio Tapies, plus artwork you’ll notice along the way
- Passeig de Gràcia photo time to slow down for memories and souvenirs
- Weather-ready gear, with helmets plus ponchos/sweatshirts provided as needed
How This 3-Hour Gaudi Segway Tour Actually Works

This tour is designed for one thing: getting you from place to place in Barcelona without the constant stops, waiting, and stair-climbing that can turn a sightseeing day into a workout. In about 3 hours, you’ll ride a Segway through key areas tied to Gaudi’s Barcelona, with a route that connects the harbor area, parkland, and the city’s famous avenues.
The best part for most people is that you’re not thrown on a Segway cold. You’ll do training before the tour begins, along with helmets, and you’ll have storage for personal belongings. That matters because Barcelona isn’t a flat cartoon. You’ll be learning balance while also learning the rhythm of the route.
And because it’s a private setup through Eixample and Old Town, your guide can adjust how long you pause, where you take photos, and how you move through busier stretches. If you prefer “see the highlights, but don’t rush,” that’s your sweet spot.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Barcelona
From Barceloneta Central Beach to Parc de la Ciutadella: Start With Views and Breathing Room

You begin at Carrer de Rull, 2 in Ciutat Vella (08002 Barcelona). From there, the tour starts at Barceloneta Central Beach, which is a smart opening. Instead of jumping straight into the densest Gaudi streets, you get a harbor-facing start where the atmosphere helps you settle in.
After the Segway introduction, you roll onward toward Parc de la Ciutadella. This stop is more than just a “park break.” It’s a chance to ride with fewer visual distractions and more open space, which makes it easier to get comfortable on the platform. The route description also frames Parc de la Ciutadella as a green oasis, and that’s exactly the value here: a calmer stretch so your brain can switch gears from beach energy to city sightseeing.
Along the way, you’ll also spot modern-day art. That detail is easy to overlook in a normal checklist tour, but it’s one reason the experience feels more like moving through Barcelona as it is now, not only as it appears in postcard photos. The guide helps you connect what you’re seeing with the city’s evolving look.
Eixample and Passeig de Gràcia: Where Gaudi’s World Gets Specific

After the park, the route brings you across toward Passeig de Gràcia and the surrounding Eixample district. This is where the tour turns from “great ride” into “great architecture day.”
You’ll pass by or get views connected to several named stops, including Fundacio Tapies. That’s a useful anchor for your understanding of the neighborhood. Eixample is known for its modernist buildings, but it’s also a living cultural area. Seeing something like Fundacio Tapies helps you remember that this isn’t only about stone and style; it’s about art and institutions continuing to shape the streets.
As you head along the Passeig de Gràcia corridor, the guide points out modernist houses and Gaudi’s main constructions. The tour’s route is built to help you keep your bearings. On foot, Passeig de Gràcia can feel like you’re constantly scanning upward while dodging crowds. On a Segway, you can cover ground while still slowing down at the key moments.
Casa Batlló and Casa Milà (La Pedrera): How to See Gaudi Without the Standing Line Chaos
Two of the most famous names on the route are Casa Batlló and Casa Milà, often called La Pedrera. You’ll see Gaudi’s unique monuments during the ride. The advantage of riding here is simple: you’re not limited to the perimeter of the building or stuck trying to spot details from one angle.
On a Segway, you can choose your moment to stop and look, especially because this tour includes guide-led pacing. If you’re a person who likes architecture but hates feeling rushed, this format helps. You’re getting the sense of Gaudi’s vision while also keeping movement smooth.
Important reality check: the tour is about sightseeing and ride-through views, not about going inside buildings (nothing in the provided details says entrances are part of the experience). So your goal is to observe the façades, street presence, and how the architecture shapes the avenue around it. If that’s your priority, you’ll get a lot out of the time you spend here.
The Passeig de Gràcia Photo Stop (Plus Souvenirs)

One of the most practical moments comes near the end of the core architecture stretch: you’ll take a short stop next to Passeig de Gràcia where you can take photos and buy some souvenirs.
That might sound minor, but it’s actually a big help. Most guided tours tell you the best photo spot and then keep moving. Here, the tour explicitly gives you time to do what you came for: take pictures where the light and the angle work, not where you ended up. And if you want a small Gaudi-themed memory, this is a natural place to pick it up.
If you’re traveling as a couple or with friends, this is also the moment where you’ll get your cleanest shots, because the guide can manage your timing while you switch roles between photographer and subject.
Guides Matter: Training, Humor, and Photo Help You’ll Appreciate
This is a tour where the guide’s personality really counts. The experience is highly rated, and the guide-led aspects show up clearly in the way the tour runs.
In particular, names like Ronny and Anton show up in the guide stories. What stands out isn’t just that they provide facts—it’s that they keep the information understandable and fun, with a sense of humor that prevents the ride from turning into a lecture.
There’s also a photo-and-video element that can be a pleasant surprise. One guide experience mentions tolle Fotos und Videos (great photos and videos). So while the tour isn’t described as a professional photoshoot service, it is worth expecting that your guide will help you capture memories, especially during the stop near Passeig de Gràcia.
And because you start with Segway training, you’re not just learning the vehicle—you’re learning how your guide expects you to move. That reduces awkwardness and helps you focus on what matters: the city.
Price and Value: Why $81 for 3 Hours Can Make Sense
At $81 per person for 3 hours, this tour sits in the “pay for convenience” category. You’re not only paying for a guide—you’re also paying for the vehicle setup and the safety basics: helmets, Segway training, and weather gear like ponchos/sweatshirts when needed.
When you compare it to doing Gaudi sights the hard way (taxis, buses, long walks, and waiting in busy areas), this can work out as good value if you want a guided route with less effort. It’s especially good for people who want to see the highlights but don’t want to spend their entire day figuring out the best way to connect neighborhoods.
One more value point: free WiFi in the tour office and storage for personal belongings. Those sound small, but they matter when you’re carrying a day bag and want to quickly handle maps, tickets for later, or messaging home without hunting for a café.
What’s not included is transfer to/from the office. So the price assumes you can get to Carrer de Rull on your own. If you’re relying on taxis from far away, factor that into your day budget.
Practical Stuff You’ll Want to Plan For
Here’s what you can count on, plus what you should personally prepare.
What you need to bring
- A passport or ID card
That’s the only required document listed, but it’s also the kind of thing you don’t want to scramble for on arrival day.
What’s provided
- Helmet
- Segway training before the tour
- Storage for personal belongings
- Ponchos/sweatshirts based on the weather
- Free WiFi in the tour office
This weather-gear detail is genuinely helpful in Barcelona, because you can get sudden changes in conditions. If you hate getting soaked or chilled mid-sightseeing, this is a quiet win.
What’s not allowed
- Alcohol and drugs
And it’s smart to keep your bag simple. You’ll enjoy the ride more when you’re not juggling extra items.
Who should consider skipping
This tour is not suitable for children under 14 and not for pregnant women. Segway safety and comfort are central here, so don’t treat it like a gentle casual activity. If that doesn’t work for your group, it’s better to choose a walking or seated alternative.
Who This Segway Tour Is Best For
I’d steer you toward this tour if you:
- want a Gaudi-focused day without building a route yourself
- like architecture but don’t want to spend hours walking between stops
- prefer guided explanations with a lighter tone (the guide experiences suggest humor and engagement)
- value photo moments, especially near Passeig de Gràcia
- want to mix Old Town, Eixample, and a park/harbor start in one go
I’d also say it’s a great “first Barcelona” tour if you want orientation. The route covers different vibes: beach arrival, Parc de la Ciutadella calm, and the high-drama modernist corridor of Passeig de Gràcia.
If you already know exactly what buildings you want and you’re happy navigating on your own, you might not need the paid convenience. But if you’d rather spend the time watching details than planning them, this tour fits.
Should You Book the Barcelona Gaudi Guided Segway Tour?
I’d book it if you want a structured, guided way to see Gaudi’s most famous streets and buildings in a short window, with Segway training that makes you feel capable instead of awkward. The biggest strengths are the ride format, the guide energy (names like Ronny and Anton pop up for a reason), and the way the route pairs Gaudi with modern art stops like Fundacio Tapies.
Skip it if you can’t do Segways for safety or comfort reasons, or if you hate the idea of getting to the meeting point by yourself. Also, if your top priority is going inside Casa Batlló or La Pedrera, this tour is likely not the right fit based on the details provided.
If you’re flexible and you like the idea of trading long walks for a smooth city glide, this is one of the more fun ways to experience Barcelona’s Gaudi-era streets without turning the day into a slog.
FAQ
How long is the Barcelona Gaudi Segway Tour?
It runs for 3 hours.
Where does the tour start?
The meeting point is Carrer de Rull, 2, Ciutat Vella, 08002 Barcelona.
What’s included in the price?
The tour includes an experienced guide, Segway training, helmets, free WiFi in the tour office, storage for personal belongings, and ponchos/sweatshirts according to the weather.
Do I need previous Segway experience?
No. You get training before the tour starts.
What languages are available for the live guide?
The live tour guide is available in English, German, French, Spanish, Russian, and Portuguese.
Is transfer to and from the office included?
No. Transfer is not included.
Is the tour suitable for children or pregnant travelers?
It’s not suitable for children under 14 and not suitable for pregnant women.
What should I bring and what’s not allowed?
Bring a passport or ID card. Alcohol and drugs are not allowed.






























