Explore Berlin on an eco-friendly Segway tour. Visit sights like the Berlin Cathedral and the East Side Gallery and hear fascinating stories from your guide. This tour combines fun with knowledge and gives you a unique perspective on Berlin.
1.5 Hours
4
Lindenstraße 28, 10969 Berlin
Ideal for beginners, spontaneous travelers, and Berlin visitors with limited time:
Our public 1.5-hour Segway tour through Berlin offers a compact overview of the capital’s most important landmarks – together with other Berlin explorers.
After a brief introduction, you’ll glide effortlessly through the city center – past historic buildings, modern hotspots, and well-known squares.
Along the way, you’ll gain fascinating insights into Berlin’s history and urban life – in a fun, efficient, and eco-friendly way.
This guided group tour is ideal for solo travelers, couples, or small groups who want to enjoy a city tour of Berlin on two wheels – easy, active, and full of fun.
A compact group tour along central landmarks in Berlin.
Ideal for beginners and tourists with limited time.
Relaxed riding fun on a Segway through the heart of the capital.
Lindenstraße 28, 10969 Berlin
Checkpoint Charlie was the name given by the Western Allies to the most famous border crossing at the Berlin Wall between East and West Berlin during the Cold War and became a symbol of the Cold War, representing the division between East and West.
The Topography of Terror is a historical open-air and indoor museum in Berlin. It is located in Niederkirchnerstraße, formerly Prinz-Albrecht-Straße, on the site of buildings that housed the Reich Security Main Office of the SS, the headquarters of the Security Police, the SD, the Einsatzgruppen and the Gestapo during the Nazi regime from 1933 to 1945.
The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Holocaust Memorial for short, in the historic center of Berlin commemorates the approximately six million Jews who were murdered under the rule of Adolf Hitler and the National Socialists.
The Brandenburg Gate is a neoclassical monument from the 18th century in Berlin. It is one of Germany's most famous landmarks and was erected on the site of a former city gate that marked the beginning of the road from Berlin to Brandenburg an der Havel, the former capital of the Margraviate of Brandenburg.
Gendarmenmarkt is a square named after the Gens d'armes cuirassier regiment that was originally based here in Berlin's Mitte district of the same name. Created during the expansion of the city in 1688, it was destroyed during the Second World War and rebuilt between 1976 and 1993.
The Reichstag building (colloquially: Reichstag; officially: Reichstag building plenary area; unofficially also Bundestag or Wallot building) on Platz der Republik in Berlin has been the seat of the German Bundestag since 1999. Since 1994, the Federal Assembly has also met here to elect the German Federal President.