Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour

REVIEW · BARCELONA

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour

  • 4.628 reviews
  • 2 - 3 hours
  • From $51
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Operated by Barcelona Scooter Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Barcelona looks different when you move.

This e-scooter and bike tour turns big-city sights into a smooth, fun circuit, with panoramic viewpoints and built-in photo moments. You cruise through the city’s main “wow” zones, then pause just long enough to take good shots and hear simple, story-style context.

Two things I really like about this experience: the small-group setup keeps it relaxed, and the guide’s approach makes each stop feel easy to digest, not like a lecture. You also get time to grab photos and videos so you leave with memories that actually look like you were paying attention.

One possible drawback: it’s not for everyone. You must be at least 16 for an e-scooter ride, and it’s not suitable for wheelchair users (and it isn’t recommended for pregnant travelers).

Key points at a glance

  • Panoramic photo stops designed for quick, high-impact pictures
  • Simple, fun storytelling that explains what you’re seeing without weighing you down
  • Multilingual guides (English, Spanish, French, Italian, Arabic)
  • Choice of e-scooter or bike, so you can match your comfort level
  • A practical 2–3 hour route that covers major highlights efficiently
  • Included media time (photos/videos) to help you remember the best angles

Starting at Plaça de la Mercè: Gear Up and Hit the Best Starting Angle

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Starting at Plaça de la Mercè: Gear Up and Hit the Best Starting Angle
Your day begins at Plaça de la Mercè, 8, right in front of the Basilica of La Mercè. That’s a smart start point because it gets you out toward several of Barcelona’s postcard zones without wasting time figuring out routes on your own.

Before you roll, you’ll get a helmet and a safety explanation, plus detailed instructions for using the vehicle. That matters more than people expect. E-scooters and bikes feel easy once you’re comfortable, but you want the first minutes to be calm, not stressful. The tour is designed for safe and smooth movement through the city, and the guide keeps the flow organized.

You’ll also get a free water bottle, which sounds minor until you’re combining sun, motion, and photo stops. Barcelona’s coast and viewpoints can work up a thirst fast, even in mild weather.

If you’re the type who hates spending your whole trip in line-ups and waiting rooms, this format is a breath of fresh air. You’re out in the open, moving between highlights, and learning as you go.

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

El Cap de Barcelona and the Columbus Monument: Two Fast, Big-Wow Stops

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - El Cap de Barcelona and the Columbus Monument: Two Fast, Big-Wow Stops
Early on, you’ll visit El Cap de Barcelona for a photo stop plus a guided tour. This is one of those “stand here, look up, get the shot” moments, and it’s a great way to start because it sets the tone: you’ll be stopping frequently, but never stuck for too long.

Next comes the Columbus Monument. It’s another classic viewpoint-and-photo moment, and the guided element helps you understand what you’re looking at without turning it into a long history lesson. For a first time in Barcelona, this pair of stops helps you get your bearings fast.

The practical advantage here is timing. Since the tour is only 2–3 hours, early highlights are the best use of your limited time. If you’ve got one day with capped energy, this route gives you major sights in a compact loop.

Possible consideration: if you’re hoping for lots of quiet time or slow wandering, this is more of a “ride, stop, photo, move” rhythm. The goal is efficiency with breaks—so you should be ready to ride and regroup.

Montjuïc and the Cactus Park Break: Panoramic Views Without the Fuss

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Montjuïc and the Cactus Park Break: Panoramic Views Without the Fuss
Then you hit Montjuïc, which is the tour’s “switch to viewpoint mode.” You’ll get break time, a photo stop, sightseeing, and a guided tour here, plus scenic views along the way.

This is where the tour really earns its keep. Rolling uphill or along higher ground gives you angles you can’t easily reach on foot in the same timeframe. The guide keeps it light and fun, with stories that make each stop make sense fast, while you take advantage of the photo moment.

Montjuïc also connects to the tour’s mention of the cactus park. Even if you don’t spend a long standalone session there, passing through an area like that adds a welcome change of scenery from monuments and city streets. It’s a reminder that Barcelona isn’t only architecture—there’s an outdoor, Mediterranean-feel side too.

What I’d watch for: this portion can be the most “active.” You’ll want comfortable riding posture and a willingness to pause quickly, because the best views tend to be short windows for photos.

If you like your Barcelona days to feel like you’re collecting snapshots in real time, Montjuïc is the payoff stop. It’s the point where the tour feels like it’s doing something special, not just ticking names off a list.

Barceloneta Beach to W Barcelona: From Streets to Sea Air

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Barceloneta Beach to W Barcelona: From Streets to Sea Air
After the viewpoint energy, the route shifts to the water. You’ll stop at Barceloneta Beach with photo stop time and a guided tour. Then you’ll head toward W Barcelona, including another break time and photo stop, plus scenic views on the way.

This section is built for mood. Barcelona’s beach promenade vibe is different from inland streets, and the ride keeps you moving through the transition. You get that coastal sense of space, with the Mediterranean feel showing up in the lighting and the open air.

The guide’s role here is practical: short, easy facts and local stories that match what you’re seeing right now. That’s the best kind of commentary—stuff you can actually use while you’re standing there, not something that only makes sense later when you’re back at your hotel.

Small consideration: beach areas can feel busier than quiet parks and viewpoints. The tour is a small group, which helps, but you’ll still be riding in an area with more foot traffic. If you’re someone who hates crowds, keep expectations realistic: you’re there for the view and the coastal moment, not for a private beach fantasy.

In a tight trip, this beach-to-hotel stretch is a smart balance. It keeps the day from turning into pure stone-and-statue sightseeing.

Vila Olímpica, Olympic Port Feel, and Arc de Triomf: The City’s Geometric Moments

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Vila Olímpica, Olympic Port Feel, and Arc de Triomf: The City’s Geometric Moments
Next you’ll pass through the Vila Olímpica area with a photo stop and guided tour. Nearby, the tour’s outline points to the Olympic port feel, and this part of the route gives you a more modern Barcelona perspective than the monument-heavy sections.

Then comes Arc de Triomf, another photo stop and guided tour. This is one of those sites where your camera naturally wants to level up. The structure is designed for strong straight-on shots, which is exactly what a guided ride setup helps you do. You arrive at the right spot, pause long enough, and don’t waste your time hunting for the angle.

Why this segment works: it breaks the day into distinct chapters. You’re not bouncing randomly across town. You’re moving from sea energy to a more structured, urban view set, and the stops keep the story coherent.

Possible drawback: the pace can feel a touch brisk here if you’re the type who likes to linger at architecture. The tour does include break time at some points, but the overall plan is built around seeing a lot in a short window. If you want slow photography, plan for extra time after the tour ends.

Parc de la Ciutadella and the Catalan Parliament Area: Green Space Meets Civic Barcelona

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Parc de la Ciutadella and the Catalan Parliament Area: Green Space Meets Civic Barcelona
After the grand structures, the tour shifts to Parc de la Ciutadella. You’ll have break time and a photo stop, plus guided tour and sightseeing. This is a big quality-of-life change during a short excursion. Instead of going nonstop from one monument to another, you get a green pause that helps you reset.

Then you’ll stop at the Parliament of Catalonia for a guided tour. It’s not every scooter tour that layers in civic sites like this, and that’s a big reason this route feels more “complete” than strictly postcard-only itineraries. You see different sides of Barcelona’s identity, not just the famous landmarks.

The value here is how the guide connects the dots. You’re not just riding past buildings; you’re being told what the stop represents and why it matters in the city’s layout and everyday life. The tour’s info style is designed to stay light and fun, so you can enjoy the atmosphere and the movement without feeling overloaded.

Small note on expectations: this part balances walking-in-place moments with riding time. You won’t be doing long guided treks, but you’ll get enough context to understand what you’re looking at during the photo windows.

Barcelona Zoo Stop and the Ride Back: A Relaxed Finish That Still Feels Purposeful

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Barcelona Zoo Stop and the Ride Back: A Relaxed Finish That Still Feels Purposeful
The itinerary includes Barcelona Zoo with a guided tour, plus another scheduled break time and photo stop earlier for Sagrada Familia. That mix of iconic landmark plus a zoo stop is interesting because it makes the route feel human. It’s not only buildings for selfies; it’s also a glimpse into daily life and family-friendly Barcelona spaces.

Sagrada Familia gets break time and a photo stop, then you head toward Arc de Triomf and later Parc de la Ciutadella and onward to the Parliament area and the zoo stop. The overall pattern means you don’t end the tour feeling like you burned your best energy at the first sights.

Finally, you ride back to Plaça de la Mercè, 8, completing the loop. That wrap-up is practical: you end near your starting point, so you don’t have the stress of locating transportation or reorienting from a far-off drop-off.

If you want a clean way to plan the rest of your day, this tour is a strong first or mid-trip activity. It gives you a street-level map of how Barcelona moves, and it helps you decide what to return to later on foot.

e-Scooter vs Bike: Choosing What Feels Natural in Barcelona

You can choose an electric scooter or a bike. That choice affects comfort more than most people think.

An e-scooter tends to feel best if you want effortless motion between stops. You’ll still need focus, and you should be ready for the quick-start learning curve that comes with balancing and braking. Also, there’s a hard requirement: you need to be at least 16 to ride an e-scooter.

A bike is a good alternative if you prefer a more classic feel and want to move at a steadier pace with more physical involvement. The tour still includes helmets, safety instructions, and guided stops, so you’re not figuring it out alone.

Either way, you’ll get time to snap pics at the most photogenic spots, and the guide keeps you on track. For many people, the biggest win is not just the ride—it’s the fact that you arrive at the right places without getting lost or stuck in transit gaps.

If you’re unsure, pick what you already feel comfortable controlling. A tour like this is at its best when you can enjoy the stops without constantly thinking about the vehicle.

Price and Value: What $51 Buys in a 2–3 Hour Barcelona Loop

Barcelona: e-scooter and Bike tour - Price and Value: What $51 Buys in a 2–3 Hour Barcelona Loop
At around $51 per person for 2–3 hours, the value comes from the bundle. You’re paying for more than transportation. You’re getting a local guide, helmet, water, vehicle instructions, multiple guided stops, and dedicated photo/video time.

That matters because Barcelona sightseeing can be expensive in the “time you lose” way. Paying for a guided ride can save you from juggling taxis, long walks between far-apart sights, or spending your limited vacation hours trying to connect dots on your own.

Also, the small group setup makes the tour feel coordinated. You’re not stuck in a crowd waiting for a guide to regroup everyone. That keeps the rhythm pleasant, which is huge when you’re moving through viewpoints, beach areas, and busy streets.

One more detail that boosts value: the tour includes photos and videos so you don’t have to rely only on your phone battery and shaky hands during motion stops.

If you’re on a short timeline, this tour is a strong “first impressions” experience. If you have more days in Barcelona, you can use it to decide what to return to for deeper exploring.

Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Should Skip It)

This is a great pick if you want a fun, efficient way to cover major Barcelona sights without spending your whole trip walking. It’s especially good for first-timers, because the route includes big-name highlights and panoramic views that help you understand the city’s layout quickly.

It’s also a good fit if you like outdoors time mixed with culture. You’ll move through historic streets, beachside promenades, and green parks, with the guide calling out what matters as you go.

Skip it if any of these apply:

  • You’re pregnant (not suitable)
  • You use a wheelchair (not suitable)
  • You want to drink alcohol during the activity (alcohol and drugs aren’t allowed)

And remember the e-scooter minimum age: 16+.

If you’re traveling with a group, the tour also offers private or small-group options, which can be handy if you want a more tailored pace and fewer waiting moments.

Should You Book the Barcelona E-Scooter and Bike Tour?

Yes, if you want a guided way to see the city’s biggest hits in a short window, with the bonus of panoramic photo stops and easy, story-style explanations. This is the kind of tour that helps you feel oriented—streets, sea, viewpoints, and parks—without turning your day into a marathon.

If you hate riding in busy areas or you need lots of quiet time at each landmark, consider adding extra hours to explore on your own after the tour ends. But as a planned, organized chunk of time—especially for first-timers—this one makes sense.

You’ll likely leave with two things: a bunch of photos that actually show Barcelona well, and a mental map of where you want to go next.

FAQ

How long is the Barcelona e-scooter and bike tour?

The tour runs for 2–3 hours.

Where does the tour start?

You meet at Plaça de la Mercè, 8, in front of the Basilica of La Mercè.

Do I get to choose between an e-scooter and a bike?

Yes. You can choose an electric scooter or a bike.

What age do I need to ride an e-scooter?

You need to be at least 16 years old to ride an e-scooter.

What languages are the guides available in?

Guides are available in English, Spanish, French, Italian, and Arabic.

Is the tour suitable for wheelchair users or pregnant travelers?

No. It’s not suitable for wheelchair users and it’s not suitable for pregnant women.

Are alcohol or drugs allowed during the tour?

No. Alcohol and drugs are not allowed.

Can I get a full refund if I cancel?

Yes. There is free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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