REVIEW · FLORENCE
Florence: Electric Scooter Tour with Guide
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Electric scooters make Florence feel modern. This guided ride takes you through historic streets with a professional storyteller and a brand-new electric scooter, so you can cover more ground without feeling rushed. You’ll also get set up with the best kind of city view: the dramatic stretch along Lungarno.
I like the way the guide connects streets and buildings to what you came to see in Florence in the first place: the Renaissance origin story and how that legacy still shows up today. Guides like Dmitri and Eduardo get especially strong mentions, and you can see why when the history stays clear and personal, not a lecture. One caution: the pacing and surface can vary, and in at least one case scooter riders were placed at the end of an e-bike group, which can make the ride rougher and reduce time for the commentary.
In This Review
- Key Points
- Why an Electric Scooter Works So Well in Florence
- Meeting at Eataly and Getting Set Up Fast
- Historic Streets With Renaissance-to-Now Stories
- Lungarno Views and the Piazzale Michelangelo Moment
- Comfort, Safety, and the Bike-and-Scooter Mix Issue
- Price and Value for $81 in 1.5 Hours
- Weather Rules and What Happens When It Rains
- Who Should Book This Scooter Tour (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Florence Electric Scooter Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Florence electric scooter tour?
- What’s included in the price?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- What languages are available for the guide?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- Is this tour suitable for mobility impairments?
Key Points

- Brand-new electric scooters: You’re riding a modern machine, not a clunky rental.
- Guided Renaissance storytelling: Your guide ties monuments to the bigger Florence story, then brings it to the present.
- Lungarno views on a scooter: You get skyline and river views without turning your day into a long walking grind.
- Comfort breaks via luggage drop: There’s a free luggage deposit service, so you’re not stuck sightseeing with bags.
- Weather-sensitive plan: Bad weather means the scooter tour is replaced by a walking tour.
- Watch the group mix: If the route timing gets shared with bikes, the experience can feel less smooth for scooters.
Why an Electric Scooter Works So Well in Florence

Florence is compact, but it’s also full of tiny streets, sudden turns, and places where stopping for photos kills your momentum. An electric scooter is a practical answer. In about 1.5 hours, you can get from major sights to scenic viewpoints without spending half the tour just moving.
The real win here is perspective. On a scooter, the city feels like it’s at your speed. You’re not stuck behind slow crowds, and you’re not trying to sprint between viewpoints with sore legs. Instead, you glide through the rhythm of Florence: piazzas, bridges, and narrow lanes, in the kind of route where your eyes keep catching new details.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Florence
- The Best tour in Florence: Renaissance & Medici Tales – guided by a STORYTELLER
★ 5.0 · 12,316 reviews
Meeting at Eataly and Getting Set Up Fast

You’ll meet the team in front of the Eataly bar. That’s an easy reference point if you’re already doing Florence logistics around the center, and it helps keep the start simple.
The tour includes a free luggage deposit service, which matters more than it sounds. If you’re carrying bags, it changes the whole feel of a city day. Dropping them before you ride lets you focus on moving and looking, not managing your stuff at every stop.
Once you’re on the scooter, you’re not just taking pictures. The guide’s role kicks in right away, using the ride to connect what you see with the Florence story you came for. That’s how the scooter time turns into something more than just transportation.
Historic Streets With Renaissance-to-Now Stories

The core promise is a guided tour through historic Florence, built around the city as the birthplace of the Renaissance. That’s not just a slogan. The guide shares stories that connect architecture and art to the people and ideas that shaped Florence, then carries that thread forward toward today.
You can expect a route that’s designed for what Florence does best: famous landmarks plus the in-between streets where the city’s character shows up. The tour description highlights piazzas, bridges, and narrow alleys, which is basically the Florence “greatest hits” formula—just experienced from a scooter seat instead of on foot.
This is also where guide quality matters. Some guides are especially good at keeping the story understandable while still feeling specific to the neighborhood you’re riding through. In the strongest experiences, names like Dmitri and Eduardo come up for a reason: they’re not just reciting facts. They’re connecting what you see to why it matters.
Lungarno Views and the Piazzale Michelangelo Moment

One of the most memorable pieces of this ride is the Lungarno area. The Lungarno gives you Florence’s signature blend: river views, bridges, and that sense of the city stretching along the water.
Even if you’ve already seen photos of Florence’s viewpoints, being up close changes everything. From a scooter, you get motion plus scenery. The city doesn’t feel staged. It feels like you’re traveling through it in real time.
A standout viewpoint specifically mentioned from one of the experiences is Piazzale Michelangelo. If that stop is part of your route (it has been in past runs), you’ll understand why people chase that viewpoint: it’s one of the best ways to see how Florence layers rooftops, domes, and hills. On a scooter, it’s also easier to reach than if you were starting the day with only walking energy.
Comfort, Safety, and the Bike-and-Scooter Mix Issue
Electric scooters are fun, but Florence isn’t a parking lot. The ride surface and road feel can change block to block, and that’s especially important when you’re mixing different vehicle types or riding through more crowded areas.
Here’s the key caution: at least one experience reported that scooter riders were tagged on at the end of an e-bike tour that cost less. That route was considered more bike-friendly than scooter-friendly, and it made the ride feel more jolty. The result? Some people spent extra attention just keeping up and avoiding members of the public, which meant they missed more of the commentary.
So what should you do with that information?
- If you care most about the stories, arrive ready to ride smoothly and listen first, then grab photos when the guide pauses.
- If you’re sensitive to bumpy road feel, treat the scooter ride as slightly weather-and-route dependent. It’s not a private road test track.
The tour is also explicitly not suitable for people with mobility impairments, so it’s best to keep that in mind early.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Florence
Price and Value for $81 in 1.5 Hours
At $81 per person for a 1.5-hour guided ride, this isn’t the cheapest way to see Florence. It is, however, strong value for what you actually get.
You’re paying for three concrete items:
- Electric scooter rental
- A guided tour from a professional guide
- A free luggage deposit service
That’s a good trade when you want the “see a lot” effect without spending your legs. And the time matters. Florence is one of those cities where the best sights are spread out just enough that shorter tours can be a practical start, especially if you’re planning a big day afterward.
There’s also language support: your guide can run the tour in Italian, English, Spanish, French, German, or Russian. If you’ve ever tried to learn Florence’s story secondhand from a phone audio track, you’ll know why a live guide can be worth the price.
The only price-related caution is experience consistency. If the route gets adjusted because of group logistics, the scooter benefit can shrink a little. Still, even then, it tends to remain a fun way to move through central Florence faster than walking alone.
Weather Rules and What Happens When It Rains
This tour follows a simple weather rule: it won’t take place in bad weather. If conditions are unfavorable, the experience automatically turns into a walking tour.
That’s an advantage if you hate last-minute scrambling. You’ll still get the guide and the Florence route idea, just with different transport. It also means you should pack in a way that works for walking—because the plan can change quickly when the sky decides to cooperate poorly.
Who Should Book This Scooter Tour (and Who Should Skip It)
This tour is a great fit if you want Florence with energy. It’s especially good for:
- People who want to get oriented fast and see a lot in 90 minutes
- Anyone who likes mixing iconic sights with street-level character
- Families or groups who need an activity that’s fun but still educational
It’s also a decent choice if you’re traveling with teens. One experience notes the tour worked well as a way to keep a teenager engaged with the city’s context and architecture. That’s often the real challenge in Florence: making the story matter to real people, not just buildings.
You should skip it if you have mobility impairments, since it’s not suitable for that. And if you’re extremely sensitive to rougher road feel, you might prefer a pure walking or purely guided-in-one-area tour, so you’re never trying to balance listening while riding through crowded streets.
Should You Book This Florence Electric Scooter Tour?
Book it if your priority is a fun, efficient way to cover central Florence with guided Renaissance storytelling and scenery along Lungarno. The luggage deposit and the scooter format make this feel like a low-friction way to start your day—or even to break up a longer sightseeing plan.
Hold off or plan carefully if your top goal is a perfectly smooth, uninterrupted narration. A small but real concern is the vehicle-group mix, where scooter riders can end up with a route that feels better for bikes. If that happens, your attention shifts from the guide to the ride.
My practical advice: if you can, choose a time when you expect good weather and you’re comfortable riding for the full 1.5 hours. If you’re flexible, this tour is a strong way to see Florence from a viewpoint that feels fun and local—one that’s fast enough to dodge crowds, but guided enough to stay meaningful.
FAQ
How long is the Florence electric scooter tour?
The guided tour lasts 1.5 hours.
What’s included in the price?
The tour includes electric scooter rental, a 1.5-hour guided tour with a professional guide, and a free luggage deposit service.
Where do I meet the guide?
Meet the team in front of the Eataly bar.
What languages are available for the guide?
The guide can conduct the tour in Italian, English, Spanish, French, German, and Russian.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
The tour will not take place in bad weather. If conditions are unfavorable, it automatically turns into a walking tour.
Is this tour suitable for mobility impairments?
No. The tour is not suitable for people with mobility impairments.
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