REVIEW · BARCELONA
Barcelona: Montjuïc Guided Segway Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Euro Segway · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A calm ride beats a steep climb on Montjuïc. This guided Barcelona Segway tour mixes panoramic viewpoints, fortress history, and Olympic-era sights, all in a smooth 2–3 hour route you can actually enjoy on foot-light legs. I especially like how you start near the Gothic Quarter and quickly get to big city views without a full-day grind. One heads-up: it’s not a fit if you’re pregnant, under 16, or outside the weight limits listed by the operator.
What I like most is the balance of nature plus city structure. You’ll bounce between parks and miradors, then pivot into major landmarks like Montjuïc Castle and the MNAC National Museum area, where Barcelona’s “old + new” story shows up in architecture. The only drawback to plan around is that you’re riding on a Segway, so you’ll want comfortable shoes and you’ll need to follow the safety rules closely at the start.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- Why Montjuïc Works Best on a Segway
- Getting Oriented: The Starting Point and First Minutes
- From Old Port Energy to Old-Wall Details
- Parks, Miradors, and the “Slow Down” Parts of the Ride
- Olympic-Era Icons on a Hilltop Loop
- Montjuïc Castle: The Fortress Moment You Came For
- MNAC Area: Art Meets the Hill’s Big View
- Value and Who This Tour Fits Best
- Weather, Timing, and Simple Planning Notes
- Should You Book the Barcelona Montjuïc Segway Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Barcelona: Montjuïc Guided Segway Tour?
- Where do you meet for the tour?
- What’s included in the price?
- What languages are available for the guide?
- Is the tour suitable for children or teenagers?
- Are there limits on who can ride?
- Does the tour run in rainy weather?
Key highlights at a glance
- Panoramic views over the ports, Old Port area, and the Gothic Quarter
- Montjuïc Castle stop with a fortress feel and high viewpoints
- Parks and miradors that break up the ride with photo time and fresh air
- Olympic landmarks around the Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium and Palau Sant Jordi
- MNAC National Museum area to connect art with the hill’s changing 21st-century story
Why Montjuïc Works Best on a Segway

Montjuïc is one of those places where Barcelona gets dramatic fast: you gain height, you see more coastline, and the city’s shape makes more sense. The trick is getting there without turning it into a sweat-fest. On this tour, the Segway helps you cover a lot of ground while still feeling like you’re outdoors the whole time.
The route is designed like a loop through different “Barcelona personalities.” You move from the dense, old-town feel near the Gothic Quarter toward the seaside, then up into nature-heavy parks. After the hill viewpoints and the fortress, you come back down with Olympic-era landmarks and museum-area sights. It’s a smart mix: you get the views without needing to plan multiple buses or taxis.
Also, the tour includes the practical stuff that makes the experience smoother: helmets, raincoats if the weather turns, and a small bottle of water. You also get a Segway driving lesson and test drive before you start covering major sights, so you’re not learning while you’re trying to steer around viewpoints and photo stops.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Barcelona
Getting Oriented: The Starting Point and First Minutes

You meet at Carrer del Correu Vell, 6 (08002 Barcelona). From there, the tour threads toward the waterfront and into the mountain. The first part matters, because once you’re comfortable on the Segway, the rest of the hill feels relaxed instead of stressful.
You’ll begin with a safety briefing and then get your driving lesson and test drive. The tour is guided in Spanish, English, French, and Russian, so you can pick a language that fits your group. If you’re the type who likes to understand what’s coming next, this format helps: the guide sets the rhythm early and you’ll know how the ride and photo stops work.
Practical tips before you go:
- Wear comfortable shoes you can walk in if you need to steady yourself at viewpoints.
- Bring your passport or ID card.
- If it’s hot, plan to hydrate early because you’re doing more outdoors than you might expect for a “just riding” tour.
And yes, there’s a rule: intoxication isn’t allowed. It’s for your safety and the comfort of the group.
From Old Port Energy to Old-Wall Details

The tour’s early path gives you instant contrast. You start around the Gothic Quarter area, then you pass the seaside of the Old Port. That shift is useful because it sets the stage for why Montjuïc views are so iconic: you’re looking back at a city that wraps around water.
After the initial orientation, you hit photo and guided segments focused on the hill’s built-in story. One standout stop is the Roman Wall, where you get a quick guided explanation and a photo moment. Even if you only know Barcelona as Gaudí and modern design, these older stone elements help you see that the city’s layering goes way back.
You’ll also get a brief look around El Cap de Barcelona, which is the kind of viewpoint-stop that’s short but satisfying. The goal here isn’t to linger all day; it’s to help you learn where you are so later, when you’re higher up, the city layout makes sense.
Parks, Miradors, and the “Slow Down” Parts of the Ride

Once you’re fully on the hill, the tour shifts into nature mode. You pass through park areas and you’re given multiple mirador moments where you can stop, look, and take pictures.
A key scenic stop is around the square of Hotel Miramar, plus a look at the cable car station built for the 1929 Universal Exposition. Even if you never ride the cable car yourself, this is a neat way to connect the hill’s history to a specific moment in Barcelona’s growth. It’s also a good mental marker: you know you’re moving through Montjuïc’s major zones, not just “passing through.”
Then comes a set of viewpoints that feel designed for photography. You’ll see Mirador de Colom, with the city stretching outward and the coastline setting the scene. You’ll also spend time at Parc de Montjuïc and multiple Mirador points like Mirador de Miramar. The pattern is consistent: a guided note, a short stop, and time to frame the view.
A practical note: these miradors are where you’ll want your camera ready, but not rushed. The tour gives guided time, then allows you to enjoy the view. If you’re traveling solo, this structure is great because you won’t be stuck guessing which angle is best.
Olympic-Era Icons on a Hilltop Loop
Here’s one reason this tour feels special: it doesn’t only show “classic Barcelona.” It also points to the city’s transformation into the 21st century, using Olympic-era buildings as visible proof.
On the way down and across, you’ll reach the sights around Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium and Palau Sant Jordi. These aren’t generic landmarks; they’re part of how Montjuïc was reshaped for major events and how Barcelona uses architecture to express a future-facing identity. The guide’s commentary helps connect what you’re seeing with the bigger idea of the city reinventing itself.
You’ll also pass by other prominent Olympic-area features, including an Anella Olimpica stop, plus views connected to communication and modern structures such as the Montjuïc Communications Tower. Even in brief photo stops, these points make the tour feel like more than a scenic ride. You’re reading the hill as a timeline.
If you like photography with context, this portion is where the tour earns its keep. A regular walk can get you photos, but it won’t usually connect the dots between stadiums, design choices, and what Barcelona was trying to project.
Montjuïc Castle: The Fortress Moment You Came For

The big anchor moment is Montjuïc Castle, positioned high on the hill. You’ll have a dedicated stop with a photo moment and guided context. This is the part that gives the tour its “wow” factor: the sense of height, the feel of fortification, and the panoramic sweep that stretches across the city.
You’ll also notice you’re not just looking at Barcelona; you’re looking at Barcelona’s geography—ports, coastline, and the urban grid—compressed into one view. The castle area is where the Segway really changes the experience. You get the payoff without exhausting yourself climbing and repositioning.
One more thing: because you’re riding earlier through parks and viewpoints, the castle doesn’t feel like a random stop. It feels like the end of the hill’s “natural climb” storyline, where suddenly the city turns into defense, walls, and strategic placement.
MNAC Area: Art Meets the Hill’s Big View

On the way back toward the downtown return, you’ll visit the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya (MNAC) area. The tour includes a photo stop and guided time here, which matters because it frames the museum as more than a building you see from the outside.
MNAC’s setting makes a lot of sense after you’ve been on Montjuïc: you’ve been collecting views, learning the hill’s layout, and noticing how Barcelona reuses space. Then you arrive at a spot connected to art and national cultural identity, and the story of the hill feels complete.
Even if you’re not planning a full museum visit, this is still a valuable stop. You get context that ties the museum area into the wider theme: Barcelona is changing, but it’s changing on top of layers—seaside, hills, old walls, and modern architecture.
Value and Who This Tour Fits Best

At about $76 per person for 2–3 hours, the real value is not the price alone. It’s what the time buys you. With a Segway, you can cover a lot of viewpoints and major landmarks without stacking multiple transport plans or spending the day doing stairs.
This is a good fit if:
- you want major sights with a guided structure
- you like photo stops with explanations, not just sightseeing
- you want hilltop views but don’t want to lose half a day to walking
It may be less ideal if:
- you’re sensitive to riding and need a fully car-free walking experience
- you can’t or don’t want to follow the safety briefing and practice portion
- you’re in a group that wants to wander for long stretches with no structure
The operator also offers a private group option, and that can be a big deal if your priority is a calmer pace. Even when the tour is guided, private groups usually reduce wait time at stops, which keeps the ride feeling fluid rather than chopped up by traffic around other groups.
Weather, Timing, and Simple Planning Notes

The tour lasts 2–3 hours, with starting times depending on availability. Montjuïc can shift fast with sun and wind, so it’s smart that rain gear is included. If it’s overcast, the viewpoints can still work well for photos; if it’s bright and hot, you’ll want to keep moving efficiently and use the water.
You’ll spend time outdoors throughout the route, so plan your clothing accordingly. Bring ID, wear comfortable shoes, and keep your expectations realistic: some stops are short photo moments by design, not long sits.
And if you’re aiming to connect this with other Barcelona plans that same day, this tour is a strong mid-morning or afternoon anchor because it ends back at the starting point on Carrer del Correu Vell, 6.
Should You Book the Barcelona Montjuïc Segway Tour?

I think you should book this tour if you want the best of Montjuïc without treating it like a fitness challenge. The combination of panoramic viewpoints, a real fortress stop, Olympic-era landmarks, and a guided visit in the MNAC area is a rare package. You get a clean story of Barcelona’s layers: seaside and old streets below, then nature and architecture high above.
Skip it if you don’t want to ride a Segway, if you’re outside the listed height/weight suitability range, or if pregnancy makes the activity a no-go for your situation. Also, if you want hours of free wandering at every spot, this route is more structured than that.
If your travel style is efficient and curious, this is a strong value way to experience Montjuïc in one go, with enough guidance to make the sights feel connected instead of random.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Barcelona: Montjuïc Guided Segway Tour?
The tour lasts 2–3 hours. Starting times vary based on availability.
Where do you meet for the tour?
You meet at Carrer del Correu Vell, 6, 08002 Barcelona, Spain and the tour ends back at the same meeting point.
What’s included in the price?
It includes a Segway driving lesson and test drive, a live guide, helmets, raincoats if needed, and a small bottle of water.
What languages are available for the guide?
The live guide is available in Spanish, English, French, and Russian.
Is the tour suitable for children or teenagers?
No. It isn’t suitable for children under 16 years.
Are there limits on who can ride?
Yes. It isn’t suitable for pregnant women, and there are weight limits of under 77 lbs (35 kg) or over 275 lbs (125 kg).
Does the tour run in rainy weather?
Raincoats are provided, so the tour is set up to continue even if it rains.






























