LA by e-bike feels like a cheat code. This full-day small-group ride strings together some of LA’s biggest neighborhoods and beaches, with electric assist to help you keep moving through hills.
What I love most is the mix of celebrity-home sightseeing with real context, not just photo ops. I also like the guided walking time on the Greystone Mansion grounds and gardens, which breaks up the riding with something slower and more beautiful.
The trade-off: it’s a long day. You’re on the bike for hours over 32 miles, and while the e-bike helps, you still need moderate fitness and solid shoes.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- A Full-Day Westside Route That Covers Too Much (In a Good Way)
- West Hollywood to Beverly Hills: Celebrity Homes Plus Greystone Gardens
- Bel Air, Brentwood, UCLA, and the Hills You’ll Actually Feel
- Santa Monica Pier and Route 66: A Coast Shift You Can’t Fake
- Venice Beach Boardwalk: Skate Park Views, Muscle Beach, and Canals
- Studios and Marina del Rey: Movie-Making Meets Salt Air
- Price and Effort: Is $214 Worth It?
- What to Expect On the Bike (So You Don’t Get Surprised)
- Who Should Book This and Who Should Skip It
- Should You Book This Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the tour?
- Where does the tour start?
- What time does it start?
- Is the tour on electric bikes?
- Is lunch included?
- What’s included in the price besides the bike?
- About how far do you ride?
- What fitness level do I need?
- What should I wear or bring?
- Is full cancellation possible if plans change?
Key Highlights at a Glance
- Small group, max 15 keeps the pace human and the route easier to follow
- Greystone Mansion grounds adds real walking time beyond street-level photo stops
- 30+ celebrity homes plus stories tied to Westside history and pop culture
- Route 66 and coast stops let you feel LA’s “day and night” vibe in one run
- Venice hits hard: boardwalk views, skate park sights, Muscle Beach, and canals
- Studios and scenery mix with Culver City film spots and Marina del Rey harbor views
A Full-Day Westside Route That Covers Too Much (In a Good Way)
This is the kind of LA tour that helps you get oriented fast. You start on the West Hollywood side, then work your way across Beverly Hills, Bel Air, Westwood, and Brentwood before the day tilts toward the ocean. It’s built for people who want big variety without spending your whole trip stuck in traffic.
The format matters. With a maximum group size of 15, you’re not constantly waiting, squeezing through crowds, or losing the guide. And the bike setup—helmet and safety vest included, plus bottled water—makes it feel like a well-run outing instead of a chaotic hop-on ride.
You’re looking at about five hours on the clock, starting at 10:00 am, and you end back at the meeting point on Santa Monica Blvd in West Hollywood. The tour is designed so you’re moving most of the time, which is exactly what helps you cover so much LA in one day.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Los Angeles
West Hollywood to Beverly Hills: Celebrity Homes Plus Greystone Gardens

Early on, you get the glitzy, familiar LA feeling—then you get the details behind it. The stops include the Pacific Design Center, the Beverly Hills Hotel area, and the kind of street-level views that let you understand why Beverly Hills looks the way it does.
A big value point here is that it’s not only driving-by sightseeing. You get a guided walking tour of the Greystone Mansion grounds and gardens in Beverly Hills. Even if you’re not a mansion person, the gardens and grounds give your brain a break from road noise and constant pedaling. It also adds a sense of place that you won’t get from just seeing gates and fences.
This is also where the “30+ celebrity homes” idea becomes more than marketing. You’ll ride past homes and learn who lived where, along with story context that makes the architecture and location feel connected to LA’s film and TV era. If you’re the type who loves hearing how neighborhoods got shaped—by money, media, and Hollywood glamour—this portion delivers.
Bel Air, Brentwood, UCLA, and the Hills You’ll Actually Feel

Once you push past Beverly Hills into Bel Air and Brentwood, the tour gets more about contrasts. You’ll go through swankier pockets of LA and also get familiar with more specific neighborhood reference points, like UCLA and the Brentwood Village area.
There are some names and landmarks that help you “map” the city in your head. Seeing UCLA up close gives you an anchor for Westwood, not just a dot on a map. In Brentwood, there’s a stop around Bundy Drive connected to the well-known trial story people reference when they talk about LA history.
Now, the real-world thing: the route includes a few hills. The tour doesn’t pretend it’s flat, and your feet will notice even with pedal assist. You’ll feel the difference if you choose a non-electric style bike. The e-bike option is strongly recommended right on check-in, because the goal is to keep you enjoying the ride instead of wrestling it.
Santa Monica Pier and Route 66: A Coast Shift You Can’t Fake
Then comes the moment LA flips from neighborhoods to ocean energy. The ride includes a stop by the Santa Monica Pier, plus time where you can take in the coast vibe without sitting in gridlock. Electric bikes help here because you’re not doing a “vacation stroll” pace—you’re still riding, but you’re getting to enjoy the change in scenery.
The tour also references Route 66, which is a fun way to add a classic Americana layer to LA day-to-day life. You’re not just seeing LA as a set of celebrity photos—you’re also seeing it through the lens of famous roads and travel lore.
One practical tip: plan your mindset for transition stops. When you’re biking hard for a stretch, short photo stops and repositioning add time. If your priority is beaches, tell your guide early and be clear about what you want most. The tour is paced to fit a lot in, so the best outcomes come when you communicate your must-sees.
Venice Beach Boardwalk: Skate Park Views, Muscle Beach, and Canals

Venice is where the tour becomes loud—in the best way. You’ll ride through the Venice Beach Boardwalk, and you’ll see the edgy skate park area where skateboarding has a long-standing identity in the U.S. There’s also Muscle Beach in the mix, so you get both the performance and the people-watching feel that makes Venice memorable.
What I like about Venice on an e-bike is you can cover the breadth without getting stuck in “I walked three blocks and now I’m tired” mode. You’re moving along the coast and along the Venice corridor, so you feel the stretch instead of bouncing between isolated spots.
And then the tour adds a quieter, more surprising angle: Venice Canals. That contrast matters. After boardwalk energy, the canals give you a different visual and a calmer pace to take photos and reset.
If you’re expecting this to feel like a slow beach day, set expectations up front: it’s sightseeing by bike. You’ll have time for views and stops, but not unlimited beach lounging. If you want more time near the water, the best strategy is to choose what you’ll trade off elsewhere and let your guide know.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Los Angeles
Studios and Marina del Rey: Movie-Making Meets Salt Air

After Venice, the tour keeps expanding your “LA map” with harbor and movie-making stops. You pedal past the beautiful Marina del Rey harbor—one of those LA settings that feels open and bright after the dense stretch of Westside neighborhoods.
The route also hits Culver City with studio-related sights like Culver Studios (tied to stories like The Wizard of Oz) and Sony Studios (associated with Jeopardy!). These are the kinds of stops that connect LA’s present-day fame machine to what people actually do there—production, stages, and the work behind the scenes.
There’s also a cluster of celebrity-history storytelling as you ride. Stops include famous-residence lore such as Michael Jackson’s home where he died, Walt Disney’s palace, and Elvis Presley’s compound, plus a “scandal and intrigue” style home tied to early oil drilling history in Southern California. Even if you don’t recognize every reference, the guide’s job is to tie it together so the names don’t float in space.
Price and Effort: Is $214 Worth It?
Let’s talk value honestly. At $214 per person for about five hours, this isn’t a budget activity. It is strong value if you want a lot of LA in one day with safety, gear, and interpretation included.
Here’s what you’re paying for, beyond the novelty of an electric bike:
- A trained guide who’s CPR/First Aid certified
- Helmet and safety vest
- Bottled water and free WiFi at the bike shop
- Onsite storage for your bags while you’re out
- A small group size (max 15), which makes timing and navigation more comfortable
- Guided components like Greystone Mansion grounds and gardens, not just “roll by and go”
Lunch is the main add-on: $15. The tour stops on Venice Beach halfway through so you can grab lunch (cash or card OK). Also plan for tips. Guides accept cash or payment apps, and gratuity is typically 15% to 20% based on satisfaction.
As for effort, you’ll get exercise, but it’s controlled. The route is 32 miles (51.5 km) and includes hills. The e-bike option is what turns this from a grind into a ride you’ll remember for the sights, not for sore legs.
One last value note: the pacing reduces the “LA traffic tax.” Biking this route helps you avoid long, stop-and-go time that can eat an entire half-day by car.
What to Expect On the Bike (So You Don’t Get Surprised)

This tour is set up for people with moderate physical fitness and a willingness to ride for hours. You should have good balance and be comfortable biking in busy city areas. The instructions also say you’ll encounter a few hills, and that an intermediate fitness level is recommended.
There are a few details that really matter on day-of:
- Closed-toe shoes are required
- You’ll want comfortable clothing since you’ll spend a lot of time in the saddle (think padded shorts)
- Your guide will manage safety through the group, but you still need to follow instructions and stay alert
- You’ll likely be stopping more than you expect at certain story/photo points, especially early in the celebrity-home stretch
If you’re worried about hills, upgrade to the pedal-assist electric bike during check-in. It’s not only about convenience—it changes whether the day feels fun or just exhausting.
Who Should Book This and Who Should Skip It
This tour is a great fit if you want:
- A big overview of LA across multiple neighborhoods in one day
- A mix of celebrity homes, beaches, and studios
- A sightseeing format that keeps you from losing hours to traffic
It’s also solid if you’re traveling solo, a couple, or bringing teens. The tour is recommended for kids age 6 and up, as long as they can bike on their own. Reviews also show families doing it with confidence when they choose electric assist.
You might want to think twice if:
- You want a leisurely beach day with long unhurried lounging
- You dislike biking for hours, even with help
- You’re prone to motion discomfort or have balance limits that make city cycling stressful
Should You Book This Tour?
I’d book it if your LA trip includes only a few days and you want the city to make sense fast. The strongest reason to go is the combination: neighborhoods + landmark gardens at Greystone + major beach areas like Venice and Santa Monica + studio culture, all in one organized run.
Skip it if you’re looking for a slow, couch-to-coffee itinerary. This is an active day—about 32 miles and plenty of stops—so go in ready for effort, and use the e-bike if you want the day to feel like sightseeing, not suffering.
FAQ
How long is the tour?
It runs about five hours.
Where does the tour start?
The meeting point is 7740 Santa Monica Blvd, West Hollywood, CA 90046.
What time does it start?
It starts at 10:00 am.
Is the tour on electric bikes?
The tour is described as an electric bike sightseeing tour, and an e-bike upgrade is recommended due to hills.
Is lunch included?
Lunch is not included. There’s a $15 lunch stop on Venice Beach halfway through the tour.
What’s included in the price besides the bike?
You get an expert guide (CPR/First Aid certified), helmet and safety vest, bottled water, free onsite bag storage, and free WiFi at the bike shop.
About how far do you ride?
The tour covers 32 miles (51.5 km) across West Hollywood, Beverly Hills, Bel Air, Westwood, Brentwood, Santa Monica, Venice, Marina del Rey, and Culver City.
What fitness level do I need?
A moderate fitness level is recommended. There are a few hills, and intermediate cycling fitness is suggested.
What should I wear or bring?
Wear closed-toe shoes. You’ll be on the bike most of the day, so comfortable riding clothing helps.
Is full cancellation possible if plans change?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. The experience requires good weather, and if it’s canceled for poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.






























