Beverly Hills Segway Tour

One of the quickest ways to see Beverly Hills. This Segway tour bundles a short 30-minute orientation with guided narration, so you can go from beginner to cruising fast—passing famous addresses, photo spots, and Hollywood-story landmarks along Wilshire Boulevard and Rodeo Drive. It also runs at multiple departure times during the day, which helps you fit it into your LA schedule.

I especially like how the route mixes classic Beverly Hills glamour with real place details—like Greystone Mansion’s TV and movie history and the Beverly Gardens Park sign and lily pond. I also like that you get little extras that make the ride easier: bottled water and small snacks, plus time for photos as you glide past the sights.

One thing to consider: there’s no hotel pickup, and you’ll need decent fitness for stairs. Also, this is not for everyone—pregnant guests can’t participate, and riders must be at least 8 years old.

Quick hits: what makes this Beverly Hills Segway tour worth your time

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Quick hits: what makes this Beverly Hills Segway tour worth your time

  • 30-minute Segway orientation so you’re not left figuring things out on the fly
  • Celebrity-home viewing along Wilshire Blvd and Benedict Canyon Drive, plus photo stops
  • Beverly Gardens Park for the famous sign, lily pond, rose garden, and cactus garden
  • Rodeo Drive + Two Rodeo Drive for the most glamorous shopping street and European-style architecture
  • Beverly Hills Hotel area for an old-school Hollywood landmark (spa and famous chefs’ restaurants included in the vibe)
  • Small group size (max 30) helps keep things moving and less chaotic than big buses

Where You Start on La Cienega and How Training Fits In

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Where You Start on La Cienega and How Training Fits In
You meet at Another Side of Los Angeles Tours at 1080 S La Cienega Blvd #108, Los Angeles. It’s a practical setup: you handle your own way there (no hotel pickup), and the tour ends back at the meeting point—so you’re not stranded across town at the end.

The tour itself is built around a 30-minute Segway orientation and safety gear (a helmet). That matters because Beverly Hills looks easy on a map, but on the ground you still need confidence with the Segway—turning smoothly, controlling speed, and staying alert. The training is the bridge between “I’ve never done this” and “I can actually enjoy the street views.”

The tour is offered in English, and it runs rain or shine. LA weather can flip fast, so bring layers even if the morning looks perfect. You’ll also want to show up ready to move: riders should have a decent level of fitness and be able to climb stairs without assistance.

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Cruising Wilshire Boulevard: Celebrity Homes, Greystone Mansion, and Big Views

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Cruising Wilshire Boulevard: Celebrity Homes, Greystone Mansion, and Big Views
Once you’re up and rolling, your guide gives a rundown on Beverly Hills history and what you’re seeing. Then the tour starts doing what walking can’t: it lets you cover a lot of ground while still taking in details.

A highlight is cruising along Wilshire Boulevard and Benedict Canyon Drive for views of extravagant homes that are tied to celebrity life. It’s the kind of street where the architecture does a lot of talking. And because you’re on a Segway, you can slow down at the points that feel photogenic instead of trying to negotiate traffic lights and parking-lot spacing like you would on foot.

You’ll also glide past The Beverly Hills Hotel and The Beverly Hilton, both famous for having hosted celebrities over the decades. They’re more than just buildings here—they’re part of the neighborhood’s brand of glamour.

One of the most fun stops on this stretch is Greystone Mansion, which has been a popular TV and movie shooting location. This is a great moment to listen closely, because once you know that piece of context, you start noticing why the setting looks the way it does. You’ll often find that those Hollywood-story details make the whole ride feel more than sightseeing.

Photo pauses are built into the flow, and you’ll get bottled water and small snacks during the tour—little things that keep energy up for a full 2 hours without turning it into a “hangry” situation.

Beverly Hills City Blocks to Beverly Gardens Park: The Sign, the Lily Pond, and Gardens

After the celebrity-home stretch, the tour shifts into a quieter kind of Beverly Hills: the Beverly Gardens Park area. This is a nearly two-mile green space stretching from Wilshire Boulevard toward North Doheny Drive, and it’s one of the best breathing breaks you can build into an LA sightseeing day.

The famous Beverly Hills sign is right there, so you’re not scrambling to find it or squeezing it into a separate drive-by. You’ll also see the park’s lily pond, plus a rose garden and cactus garden at the heart of the space.

Why this stop works on a Segway tour: it gives you a visual change of pace. Beverly Hills can feel like a parade of facades and luxury storefronts. A garden park brings texture—plants, paths, water, and calmer light—so your photos don’t all look like the same kind of backdrop.

Possible drawback? If you’re the type who likes to linger and explore on your own, this kind of park stop may feel more like a quick highlight than a long walk-through. The tour is designed for time efficiency, not an all-day park detour.

Rodeo Drive Time: From Window Shopping to Two Rodeo Drive’s European-Look Streetscape

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Rodeo Drive Time: From Window Shopping to Two Rodeo Drive’s European-Look Streetscape
Then you hit the part everyone maps in their head: Rodeo Drive. This is the two-mile stretch that defines Beverly Hills’ glamour, with luxury shops, high-end dining, and hotels that have attracted stars from both Golden Age Hollywood and modern fame.

Segway tours are great here because you can keep moving along the street while still taking in the details—things like the shopfront rhythm, the building styles, and the overall “this is the address everyone recognizes” feeling.

Right along the Rodeo Drive area, you’ll also see Two Rodeo Drive, described as a luxury shopping space with high-end boutiques and designer stores. It stands out for the styling: cobbled bricks, classic European-style architecture, and wrought iron lamps. If you like architecture that looks like it was copied from a postcard of Europe, this is your kind of stop.

One practical note: Rodeo Drive is popular. Even if you’re not trying to shop, it can be busy around peak times. I’d plan to come with a camera mindset—take your photos, enjoy the street look, and don’t expect a quiet stroll. The Segway format helps because you’re not stuck in the same walking bottlenecks for every block.

Beverly Hills Hotel Area: Old Hollywood Glam in Real Life

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Beverly Hills Hotel Area: Old Hollywood Glam in Real Life
Your route passes by The Beverly Hills Hotel, which has real staying power as an American landmark. It was established in 1912, even before the City of Beverly Hills was officially formed, and it’s long been associated with celebrity residents and visitors.

What makes this stop more than photo fodder is the “everyday legend” feel. Reviews and tour writeups often mention guides who point out context as you ride, and that’s exactly what you want here. When you understand the hotel’s age and status, the building becomes more than a backdrop. It becomes a piece of Beverly Hills identity.

You’ll also get a sense of the kind of lifestyle this neighborhood sells: world-class spa and restaurants are part of the hotel’s overall experience. Even if you don’t go in, seeing the property up close gives you a grounded idea of why people talk about this address like it’s a destination.

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The Beverly Center and the Oscars Neighborhood: Shopping + Movie-Industry Proximity

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - The Beverly Center and the Oscars Neighborhood: Shopping + Movie-Industry Proximity
The tour continues with the Beverly Center, a large, multi-floor shopping mall in the Beverly Hills / West Hollywood edge zone. It’s described as a monolithic structure with eight floors, plus restaurants and luxury retailers. It’s also positioned between major streets, which is part of why it feels like a hub.

Then comes the most “LA beyond luxury shopping” moment: a stop near the organization behind the Oscars. The Academy headquarters is described as a central spot for roughly 6,000 motion picture professionals, and the area ties into the world of theater and film events.

There’s also mention of construction related to the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. At the same time, the Samuel Goldwyn Theater is described as using state-of-the-art projection and offering programming like public events and members-only screenings throughout the year. In plain terms: this is an address where Hollywood power lives, and you’ll get to see the vibe from the street even if some parts are affected by ongoing projects.

If you’re coming to LA for movies, this stop gives you a nice balance. You get glamour first, then a direct connection to the film industry’s institutional side.

How to Get the Most from a 2-Hour Route (Without Rushing Photos)

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - How to Get the Most from a 2-Hour Route (Without Rushing Photos)
This tour is about time efficiency. In about 2 hours, you’re set up with training, then guided past a string of iconic addresses and landmarks—Wilshire, Greystone Mansion, City Hall area, Beverly Gardens Park, Rodeo Drive, and back again.

To enjoy it fully, here’s how I’d approach it:

  • Arrive a few minutes early so you don’t feel rushed through orientation.
  • Think of your photos as “clusters.” Take a few quick frames at each photo pause, then move on.
  • Wear shoes you’re comfortable walking in, because you may need to climb stairs as part of meeting and moving through the area.

One thing you might feel, depending on your group: some Segway tours wait for other riders before fully setting off. It’s not the same as getting private use of the route, but the company keeps group size relatively controlled (max 30), and guides typically manage timing to keep the experience smooth.

Also: this isn’t physically demanding, but you should still be comfortable enough to stay balanced and move on and off the Segway and handle short stair moments without help.

Price and Value Check: What $169 Buys You in Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills Segway Tour - Price and Value Check: What $169 Buys You in Beverly Hills
At $169 per person for about 2 hours, the key value isn’t just “seeing famous places.” It’s what the Segway unlocks.

You’re paying for:

  • Equipment and safety gear (Segway + helmet)
  • A structured orientation so you can actually ride confidently
  • Guided narration that turns landmarks into stories
  • Photo pauses where you’re positioned for better shots
  • Bottled water and small snacks to keep energy stable

In Beverly Hills, walking all the way between the big-name spots would take far longer and often feel like you’re doing logistics instead of sightseeing. A bus can cover distance too, but a Segway ride tends to be easier for absorbing street-level detail—especially for the Rodeo Drive and Greystone Mansion kinds of sights.

Is $169 a deal? It can be, if you’re pairing it with a busy LA itinerary where every half-day matters. If you’re only passing through and want a fast “best-of” without renting a car or worrying about parking, this kind of guided Segway format can be an efficient use of time.

Who This Beverly Hills Segway Tour Is Best For (and Who Should Skip It)

This tour fits best if you want:

  • A guided Beverly Hills overview with less walking
  • A fun activity that works for couples and families
  • A route that hits both glamour (Rodeo Drive) and classic landmarks (Beverly Gardens Park, Greystone Mansion)

It’s also a strong match for first-timers because the orientation is included, and guides have a reputation for being patient with beginners while keeping more experienced riders engaged. Some guides are specifically praised for safety-minded instruction and making everyone feel comfortable—especially on the tricky parts like starting, turning, and maintaining control.

But skip or rethink it if:

  • You’re pregnant (not allowed to participate)
  • You can’t handle stairs without assistance (you need decent fitness and stair ability)
  • You need hotel pickup (there isn’t any)
  • You fall outside limits like the minimum age of 8 or the maximum weight of 250 lbs

Service animals are allowed, which is a plus if you rely on one for mobility or comfort.

Final Take: Should You Book This Beverly Hills Segway Tour?

If you want a fun, efficient way to see Beverly Hills without turning your day into a long walk, I’d book it. The combination of 30-minute training, a guided route that actually strings together the big hitters, and the small comforts like water and snacks makes it feel like more than just a novelty activity.

I’d hesitate only if you hate crowds, dislike any requirement for stair movement, or you’re looking for deep museum-level time. This is a ride-and-see tour—excellent for getting your bearings in Beverly Hills and capturing the sights you came for.

If you can show up ready to ride and you like the idea of gliding past Rodeo Drive, gardens, and movie-landmark architecture, this is one of the easiest ways to get a high-impact Beverly Hills day.

FAQ

How long is the Beverly Hills Segway Tour?

The tour lasts about 2 hours. A 30-minute Segway orientation is included.

Is hotel pickup included?

No. You meet at Another Side of Los Angeles Tours at 1080 S La Cienega Blvd #108, and the tour ends back at the meeting point.

What’s included in the tour price?

Segway and safety equipment (helmet), a 30-minute Segway orientation, bottled water and small snacks, and narration by a professional guide.

Do I need experience to ride a Segway?

You don’t need prior experience. You’ll get an included orientation and instruction before you head out.

What’s the minimum age?

Minimum age is 8 years old. Riders 8 to 17 must have a parent present to sign the waiver and participate.

What’s the maximum rider weight?

The maximum is 250 lbs (113 kg).

Are service animals allowed?

Yes, service animals are allowed.

Are tours offered in English?

Yes. The tour is offered in English.

Do tours run in the rain?

Yes. Tours operate rain or shine.

Are pregnant women allowed to participate?

No. Pregnant women are not allowed to participate.

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