Perth Riverside Segway Tour

REVIEW · PERTH

Perth Riverside Segway Tour

  • 4.966 reviews
  • 1 hour
  • From $69
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Operated by Segway Tours WA · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Segways make Perth feel like a movie. This 1-hour riverside ride takes you past the Perth Bell Tower, through Elizabeth Quay, and into John Oldham Park, so you see more than you would on foot. If it’s your first time, the training is real and the guides are supportive.

My favorite part is the glide along the Swan River: it’s a smooth, easy pace that lets you look around without constantly stopping like you do on a walk. I also like the small group setup and the radio headsets, which keep the guide’s commentary clear while you ride.

The catch is the rules. You need to meet the 45–118 kg weight range and minimum age, and pregnant riders aren’t permitted, plus mobility limits can make this a no-go.

Key highlights you’ll actually feel in your hour

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - Key highlights you’ll actually feel in your hour

  • Swan River gliding: you cover more ground than walking, with a relaxed sightseeing pace
  • Perth Bell Tower to Elizabeth Quay: you ride through the newer riverfront stretch for a modern Perth view
  • John Oldham Park waterfall and fountains: a park break with water features instead of just city streets
  • Personal radio for directions and stories: you’re hearing the guide clearly while rolling along
  • First-timer friendly instruction: guides like Harriet and Winona are specifically praised for patient coaching

Why a Perth Riverside Segway Tour is a smart use of limited time

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - Why a Perth Riverside Segway Tour is a smart use of limited time
If you only have a day (or even half a day) in Perth, you want sights, but you also want breathing room. This Perth Riverside Segway Tour is built for exactly that: it’s long enough to feel like an outing, yet short enough that you don’t lose your whole day to logistics. The payoff is how much riverfront you get to see with far less walking than most guided tours.

What makes this route especially appealing is the mix. You’re not stuck in one kind of scenery. You get urban landmarks near the Perth Bell Tower, the polished new river precinct around Elizabeth Quay, then you shift into the quieter, greener feel of John Oldham Park with its waterfall and fountains.

And yes, it’s fun in a very physical way. The Segway makes the experience feel effortless once you’re up to speed. But it still has enough “learning moments” that it doesn’t feel like a typical bus ride where you just sit and stare.

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Where the tour starts at Barrack Street Jetty

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - Where the tour starts at Barrack Street Jetty
Plan to arrive at the Shop 3, Barrack Street Jetty location. It’s on Barrack Street in Perth, and it’s across from pier 2, which makes it easier to spot once you’re in the right area.

This matters more than you’d think. A one-hour tour doesn’t waste time. If you show up late, you shorten the actual riding, and the first part of the experience is learning how to control the Segway safely.

Once you’re there, you’ll get set up with your safety gear and a guided training and assessment before you roll out. This is one reason the tour works well for first-timers: you’re not thrown into traffic or forced to figure it out mid-ride.

Training and safety: how the guides turn nerves into control

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - Training and safety: how the guides turn nerves into control
The tour includes rider training and assessment plus all safety equipment, so you’re not just handed a vehicle and hoped for the best. Your guide will teach you how to start, stop, and maneuver, and you’ll practice long enough to feel steady.

The reviews consistently point to a theme: the guides take nervousness seriously. People mention being new, feeling apprehensive, and still getting comfortable. Names that come up include Harriet, Winona, Jill, Erin, Leanne, Dave, Rusty, and Adam—and the common thread is clear instruction plus encouragement.

You also get personal radio communication. That’s a big deal. When you’re moving, it’s easy to miss directions or skip key context. With the headset, you can keep listening as the guide talks about what you’re seeing and Perth’s history and current events.

One consideration: the activity isn’t recommended for people with mobility or motor control issues, and there are strict requirements for age and weight. If you’re unsure about balance or coordination, this is the moment to decide honestly. The Segway is stable, but the tour still involves riding a path and reacting quickly when needed.

Perth Bell Tower and the modern riverfront shift toward Elizabeth Quay

Your ride begins with big-city landmark energy. You’ll go past the Perth Bell Tower, which gives you a clear sense of where you are in the city. It’s the kind of stop that instantly helps you orient yourself—like getting the first clue before the full story starts.

Then the tour heads into the newer riverfront atmosphere around Elizabeth Quay. The tour description calls it a new development, and from a rider’s perspective, you’ll feel that modern planning in how the area flows. The route is designed for sightseeing on the move, not for slow pedestrian wandering.

What I like about this section is that it’s not just pretty buildings. You’re traveling along the Swan River corridor, which means every few minutes you get a change of angle—between skyline views and the water’s edge. That’s hard to replicate on foot unless you’re willing to walk a lot.

Also, you’re getting guided context as you ride. The guide doesn’t just point and shrug. Expect history, local stories, and what’s happening in Perth right now. That makes the experience feel less like a highlight montage and more like a guided walk that simply happens at Segway speed.

John Oldham Park: where the hour adds a breath of water and green

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - John Oldham Park: where the hour adds a breath of water and green
After the cityfront parts, the tour shifts into John Oldham Park. This is where the experience stops being only about landmarks and starts being about atmosphere. The park is specifically called out for its stunning waterfall and fountains, which gives you that classic Perth “river meets green space” experience.

You’ll have a chance to enjoy the water features as part of the guided loop. Even if you’ve seen plenty of city parks before, the fact that the highlight here is water-driven—waterfall and fountains—adds a different visual texture than the river promenade alone.

This is also the part of the tour that makes the 1-hour duration feel balanced. You get enough time to enjoy the change in setting without rushing through it like a checkpoint race.

If you’re the type who likes photos, bring your camera. The tour guidance specifically suggests it, and in this park section you’ll likely want at least a few shots where you’re capturing both water and the riverfront surroundings.

The Elizabeth Quay suspension bridge: the loop that ties it together

A great sightseeing trick is building a route so you get a “return view” of the same area. This tour does exactly that by looping back across the Elizabeth Quay suspension bridge to the starting point.

That bridge moment matters because it changes how you experience the space. Roads and footpaths can feel similar over time, but a bridge gives you height, a wider view, and that in-between feeling of travel. You’re still in the city, but the viewpoint makes the riverfront read differently.

It also helps the hour feel complete. You’re not just going out to see a few spots and turning around. You get a planned circuit, and the final crossing gives you a satisfying sense of closure—like you rode the whole story arc rather than just sampling scenes.

Price and value: is $69 per person worth it?

Perth Riverside Segway Tour - Price and value: is $69 per person worth it?
At $69 per person for a 1-hour tour, you’re paying for more than transportation. You’re paying for three things that are hard to DIY safely:

  • Instruction and assessment so you learn control quickly
  • Safety equipment handled for you
  • A live guide with radio so the experience includes context, not just movement

If you were to compare it to a guided walking tour, the big difference is coverage. You get more riverfront and landmark variety in less time, without the constant stopping and starting that slows walking groups down.

It’s also a small group experience—limited to 10 participants. That small size tends to improve the flow of instruction and reduces the awkward waiting that can happen in bigger groups.

So who does this value really serve? People with limited time, first-timers who want the coaching, and anyone who wants Perth’s riverfront view without spending hours moving on foot.

Who should book this Segway tour, and who should skip it

This is one of those activities that fits a lot of people, but it has clear boundaries.

You’ll likely love it if:

  • You want a fun, guided way to see Perth’s riverfront quickly
  • You enjoy both city sights and park moments
  • You’re curious about trying something new with instruction that gets you up to speed

You should think twice if:

  • You have mobility or motor control issues (the tour says it’s not recommended)
  • You’re outside the required limits: at least 12 years old and within the weight range (45–118 kg)
  • You’re pregnant (pregnancy isn’t permitted due to the risk of falling)

There’s also an alcohol-free rule. This is an activity where balance matters, so the guidance is straightforward: don’t participate if you’ve been drinking.

Finally, if you’re traveling with kids: unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed, and anyone under 18 must be with a parent or guardian. That’s worth planning for early.

Practical tips to make your hour smoother

You get one hour. Small choices can make it feel effortless or annoying, so here’s what I’d do.

Wear flat, covered footwear. The tour specifically suggests this because it helps with stability and foot comfort. Dress for the weather too—Perth can shift conditions quickly, and you’ll be outside the whole time.

Arrive ready with a camera plan. You’ll likely want photos in the Elizabeth Quay stretch and again at John Oldham Park with the waterfall and fountains.

If you’re nervous, good. That’s normal. The guides are repeatedly praised for being supportive with first-timers and even people who were apprehensive at the start. Tell your guide you’re new so they can watch your first few minutes closely.

And listen carefully during the training. The radio helps, but your biggest success factor is simple: follow instructions, practice the control basics, and don’t try to rush ahead.

Should you book the Perth Riverside Segway Tour?

I’d book it if you want a short, high-reward way to see Perth’s Swan River and key riverfront areas without spending half your day walking. The combination of Perth Bell Tower, Elizabeth Quay, and John Oldham Park makes the route feel varied. Add patient coaching that’s been specifically praised (including guides like Harriet, Winona, and Jill), and it becomes a comfortable “try it” activity rather than a risky stunt.

Skip it if the tour rules clash with your situation—especially around pregnancy, mobility, or the weight/age limits. Also, be honest about balance and coordination. If you know you might struggle, no sightseeing view is worth forcing an uncomfortable ride.

If you match the requirements and you want a fun, guided loop with real Perth riverfront views, this is an easy yes.

FAQ

How long is the Perth Riverside Segway Tour?

The tour duration is 1 hour.

What does the tour cost?

It costs $69 per person.

Where is the meeting point?

You meet at Shop 3, Barrack Street Jetty, Barrack Street, Perth 6000, across from pier 2.

How many people are in each group?

The tour is limited to a small group, with up to 10 participants.

Is rider training and safety equipment included?

Yes. The experience includes rider training and assessment, an experienced guide, personal radio communication, and all safety equipment.

What are the age requirements?

Participants must be at least 12 years old. Unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed, and anyone under 18 must be accompanied by a parent or guardian.

Are there weight limits?

Yes. Participants must weigh at least 45 kg and no more than 118 kg.

Can pregnant women join the tour?

No. Pregnant women aren’t permitted on the tour due to the risk of falling.

No. It is not recommended for anyone with mobility or motor control issues.

Can I cancel for a refund, and can I pay later?

Yes. It offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and it also includes a reserve now & pay later option.

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