REVIEW · VALENCIA
Valencia: 1 Hour Segway Tour at Night
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Segway Trip Valencia · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Streetlights turn Valencia into a moving postcard. A one-hour Segway ride at night is a smart way to see the city’s big sights when they’re lit up, and I love how the guide connects Valencia myths and legends to real places. I also love the night lighting effect on stone and arches. The main consideration: this tour isn’t suitable for people with mobility impairments.
I’d call this a “quick night intro” to Valencia rather than a long, slow sightseeing day. With a private group capped at 7 people and live guidance in English and Spanish, you should get more attention than on larger tours, and you’ll have helmet use included.
You’ll meet at Segway Trip Valencia on 6th Naquera Street, behind Serranos Towers. There’s no hotel pickup, so plan to get there on your own and be ready to enjoy about 60 minutes of night riding and storytelling.
In This Review
- Key things I’d watch for
- Why a 1-Hour Segway at Night Works So Well in Valencia
- Meeting Point on Naquera Street, Behind the Serranos Towers
- Before You Roll: Helmets, Guide, and the Private-Group Feel
- Plaza de la Virgen After Dark: Legends in the City’s Heart
- Valencia Cathedral Lit Up: When the Myths Feel Closer
- Torres de Serranos: The Night Look of Valencia’s Gate
- Price and Value: Is $65 for One Hour Worth It?
- Who Should Choose This Night Segway Tour (and Who Should Skip It)
- Tips to Get Better Nights Photos and Better Stories
- Should You Book This Valencia Night Segway Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Valencia night Segway tour?
- What does the tour cost?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- What languages are offered by the live guide?
- Is the tour private?
- What’s included in the price?
- Are food and drinks included?
- Is the tour suitable for people with mobility impairments?
- What are the cancellation and payment options?
Key things I’d watch for

- 1 hour, big sights without turning your evening into a half-day project
- Plaza de la Virgen myths told while the square looks totally different after dark
- Valencia Cathedral at night with legends that change the way you look at the facade
- Torres de Serranos by lamplight for that classic gate-at-night feeling
- Small private group (max 7) so the pace stays manageable
- Helmet + local guide + live entertainment are built into the experience
Why a 1-Hour Segway at Night Works So Well in Valencia

Valencia has a way of looking almost theatrical after dark. Once the lampposts kick in, the city’s stonework, arches, and towers lose the harsh daytime glare and pick up a warmer tone. On a Segway, that lighting shift matters because you’re moving smoothly from one viewpoint to the next. You’re not stuck with the stop-and-go rhythm of slow walking, but you also aren’t racing so fast that nothing sinks in.
This tour is also a clean time bargain. For $65 per person, you’re paying for a guided night route plus the Segway setup (including helmet use) and live narration. One hour isn’t long, but it’s long enough to hit several landmark areas that people actually want to see in Valencia: Plaza de la Virgen, Valencia Cathedral, and Torres de Serranos.
The “night legends” angle is what turns this from just transportation into something more memorable. The tour isn’t only about sightseeing; it’s about how the city’s stories can change your perception when those same buildings look different under streetlights.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Valencia
Meeting Point on Naquera Street, Behind the Serranos Towers
The meeting point is Segway Trip Valencia, 6th Naquera Street in Valencia, behind Serranos Towers. That’s a helpful detail because it puts you near one of the city’s most recognizable landmarks right from the start. If you arrive a little early, you’ll already be oriented to where the ride is headed.
Because there’s no hotel pickup or drop-off, treat this like a self-managed evening plan. You’ll want to factor in getting there on time (and still having the energy to ride). This is especially important with a one-hour experience—late arrivals can compress the whole tour.
You’ll also want to know you’re in a small group setting. The tour is listed as private, with a maximum of 7 people per booking. That usually means the guide can keep things organized and you’re less likely to feel like one face in the crowd.
Before You Roll: Helmets, Guide, and the Private-Group Feel

Included in the price are a local guide and helmet use. That’s the practical side covered, and it’s one less thing you have to plan after a long travel day.
The guide provides live storytelling in either Spanish or English. The tour info also notes it may be operated by a multi-lingual guide, so depending on your group mix, you might hear more than one language during the evening. In practice, this is the kind of tour where the guide’s voice matters; you’re counting on narration to make the night stops meaningful.
The tour also lists live entertainment as part of what’s included. The exact format isn’t spelled out in the details you shared, so I’d go in expecting some kind of extra on-the-spot flair during the experience rather than only a talking-head narration.
Plaza de la Virgen After Dark: Legends in the City’s Heart
Plaza de la Virgen is one of those places where Valencia feels like it’s been there forever. At night, under hundreds of streetlights, that feeling gets more dramatic. The lamppost glow changes the look of the square and the buildings around it, and the tour uses that moment to bring in myths and legends connected with the area.
What I like about this kind of stop is the way it reframes what you see. During the day, you can walk past architecture and just clock what it looks like. At night, when the guide ties stories to specific corners and facades, you start noticing details you’d normally miss—like how shadows fall and how the stone picks up color under light.
This is also a smart stop for first-time visitors. If you’re only in Valencia for a short window, catching the square after dark with context helps you understand what people love about the city. And because it’s a Segway ride, you can stay oriented while the guide keeps the story moving.
Valencia Cathedral Lit Up: When the Myths Feel Closer
Seeing Valencia Cathedral at night is an easy win. The tour leans into that by emphasizing how its appearance changes under lamppost lighting. That matters for two reasons.
First, night lighting reduces the daytime glare and makes the building look more dimensional. Second, legends told while you’re viewing the cathedral from a moving-but-controlled vantage point can feel more vivid. You’re not just reading about the place later. You’re experiencing it while the guide connects the myth to what you see in front of you.
This is also where guide quality can really show. One of the clearest themes from named guides associated with this tour is that people strongly appreciate guides who bring personality and pacing to the storytelling. Names mentioned include Sebas, David, and Sonya—each linked to a strong, friendly, or memorable guide experience. That’s a good sign for the storytelling focus of this tour.
Still, there’s a balance to keep in mind. One person’s experience described a guide who lacked passion and treated it like finishing a last group. You can’t control guide assignment, but it’s a good reminder that the tour’s value depends heavily on the storytelling quality. If you’re choosing between activities, prioritize this only if you like a narrative component, not just the photos.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Valencia
Torres de Serranos: The Night Look of Valencia’s Gate
Torres de Serranos is the sort of monument you recognize instantly, and it becomes even more striking after dark. The tour specifically calls out that this tower changes its appearance at night, which makes sense when you’re surrounded by streetlight glow and the surrounding spaces become quieter.
This stop works well because it gives your night ride a clear “anchor.” You can think of the ride as moving between landmark story stops, but the tower provides a fixed reference point—like a visual punctuation mark. When a guide ties myths and legends to a place like Torres de Serranos, the tower stops being just a historic structure and starts feeling like part of Valencia’s living folklore.
Also, it’s convenient: the meeting point is behind the Serranos Towers, so you’re not far from where the tour’s big visual moment can start. Even if you’re arriving on your own, you’ll have a good sense of what you’re aiming for.
Price and Value: Is $65 for One Hour Worth It?
At $65 per person for a 1-hour night Segway tour, this isn’t the cheapest way to see Valencia. But it is a focused way to buy back your time and simplify your planning.
Here’s where the value comes from:
- Guided narration in English or Spanish tied to major landmarks
- Helmet use included, so you’re not hunting for gear
- Segway experience (the core activity)
- Multiple key stops tied to legends, not just one photo-op
- Small private group (max 7), which often improves the experience compared with big mass tours
If your goal is a long, detailed walking tour, $65 for one hour might feel short. But if your goal is a high-impact night introduction—especially after a daytime schedule—this price often makes sense. You get a compact hit of Valencia’s most famous areas plus a story-focused guide.
The main reason people feel good about tours like this is that they leave the evening with a mental map. You understand where Plaza de la Virgen sits relative to the Cathedral and the Torres de Serranos area. Even if you return later to explore more slowly, you’ll have a clearer sense of direction.
Who Should Choose This Night Segway Tour (and Who Should Skip It)
This fits best if you:
- Want an easy, guided way to see Valencia’s top monuments after dark
- Like the idea of myths and legends told in connection with real places
- Prefer a smaller group and private-guide attention (max 7)
- Are okay with a one-hour time window that moves at an evening-tour pace
It’s not suitable for people with mobility impairments, since the activity involves Segway riding.
If you’re traveling with kids or family, it’s worth considering whether everyone is comfortable with the Segway concept. The tour info does not spell out age requirements, so you’d need to confirm specifics with the provider. If the thought of learning a new way to move around makes you anxious, a traditional walking night tour might be a better match.
Tips to Get Better Nights Photos and Better Stories
A Segway night tour rewards the people who show up ready to pay attention. Since you’ll be riding while the guide talks, you’ll get the most out of it if you treat it like a guided route, not a long photo session.
Here are a few practical moves:
- Plan to wear something comfortable enough for an active hour, because you’ll be riding and turning around while listening.
- Bring a charged phone or camera so you can grab shots when the guide points out the landmark. Night shots can take a bit longer, so don’t expect instant results.
- Go in with one mindset: listen first, then look. The legends are part of the value.
If you’re English-speaking, double-check the language you’ll get when you book. The tour offers Spanish and English live guidance, but it may be multi-lingual with the group composition.
Should You Book This Valencia Night Segway Tour?
Yes, if you want a short, guided night experience that hits Plaza de la Virgen, Valencia Cathedral, and Torres de Serranos with a legends-and-myths storyline. The combination of night lighting + guided myth explanations is the reason this tour feels different from a generic sightseeing ride.
I’d skip it if you:
- Need an activity suitable for mobility impairments
- Prefer long, slow exploration where you can linger
- Don’t care about guided storytelling and want only architecture photos
If you’re the type who enjoys seeing a city from a slightly different angle—literally and through stories—this one-hour Segway plan is a solid way to make your Valencia evening count.
FAQ
How long is the Valencia night Segway tour?
The duration is 1 hour.
What does the tour cost?
The price is $65 per person.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet at Segway Trip Valencia, 6th Naquera Street Valencia, behind Serranos Towers.
Is hotel pickup included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
What languages are offered by the live guide?
The live tour guide is available in Spanish and English.
Is the tour private?
Yes. It’s listed as a private group, with a maximum of 7 people per booking.
What’s included in the price?
Included are a local guide, use of a helmet, and live entertainment.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
Is the tour suitable for people with mobility impairments?
No. It’s listed as not suitable for people with mobility impairments.
What are the cancellation and payment options?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now and pay later.






































