Historic Downtown Savannah: Guided Segway Tour

Glide through Savannah’s secrets fast. This guided Segway tour turns the downtown squares into a storybook, with radio receivers so you hear the guide clearly, and with stops tied to big films like Forrest Gump and Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. One key consideration: you need to fit the age and weight rules (minimum 16, recommended 100–260 pounds), and you’ll spend a bit of time learning the Segway before you roll into the streets.

I like how the tour is built for short time windows. In about 60 minutes (or 90 with a bonus stop), you cover a lot of ground without the “constant stopping to walk” problem that comes with traditional tours. You also get helmet and a bottle of water, which keeps the whole experience practical, not just scenic.

Savannah’s famous details do the heavy lifting here, especially the Spanish moss over live oaks and the ironwork you spot along the way. Expect a mix of antebellum architecture, monuments, war cannons, and fountains in the squares, plus darker stories like haunted houses and a cemetery stop where a significant figure is buried. And since the route includes a lot of movie filming lore, it helps you see the city as more than just pretty blocks.

Key Things I’d Prioritize on This Segway Tour

Historic Downtown Savannah: Guided Segway Tour - Key Things I’d Prioritize on This Segway Tour

  • Radio narration with individual receivers so you can keep up even when the group rolls ahead.
  • A short Segway training block before you hit downtown streets, which matters if you’re new to this.
  • Movie-set storytelling tied to Forrest Gump and Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, not just generic trivia.
  • Haunted Savannah moments, including pass-bys of haunted homes and a cemetery stop with a notable grave.
  • The square-to-square design that lets you photograph Spanish moss, ironwork, and historic architecture without marathon walking.
  • The 90-minute option adds a bonus stop, giving you extra payoff if you have time and don’t want to rush.

Starting at 502 E Broughton Street: Training, Helmets, and a Quick Confidence Boost

Historic Downtown Savannah: Guided Segway Tour - Starting at 502 E Broughton Street: Training, Helmets, and a Quick Confidence Boost
You meet the guide at 502 E Broughton Street in Savannah, and the Segway training starts 15 minutes before your tour time. That timing is useful because it gets the learning curve out of the way before you’re dealing with traffic, crowds, and turns.

Before you glide off, you’ll be fitted with a helmet and given a radio with a receiver so you can hear the guide. The tour runs in a small group capped at 10 participants, which helps with spacing while everyone finds their balance.

If you’ve never ridden a Segway, don’t assume you’ll be perfect on the first minute. Multiple guides in the experience lineup—people like Mick, Mark, Ray, and Gregg—are praised for patience while riders get comfortable. In plain terms: you want a tour that gives you enough support early, and this one is set up to do that.

You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Savannah

Why the Radio Receivers Change Everything in Downtown Savannah

Historic Downtown Savannah: Guided Segway Tour - Why the Radio Receivers Change Everything in Downtown Savannah
Savannah’s historic streets can get noisy fast—cars, foot traffic, and the simple fact that groups spread out as you move. That’s where the individual audio headset earns its keep.

You’ll get your narration through the radio receiver, which makes the tour feel more like a guided walk than a “follow the leader” shuffle. Reviews consistently point to guides being easy to hear, and that matters because half the fun here is the story: Union troops, Sherman’s stay, haunted lore, and movie locations.

If you’re the type who likes to stop and look at architecture while still hearing the explanation, this format helps. You can keep an eye on the street while staying plugged into the guide’s script.

The Movie-Lover Route: Forrest Gump, Hollywood Secrets, and Filming Locations

Historic Downtown Savannah: Guided Segway Tour - The Movie-Lover Route: Forrest Gump, Hollywood Secrets, and Filming Locations
One of the strongest reasons to book this Segway tour is how it mixes Savannah’s look with pop culture you already recognize.

You’ll ride to locations connected to big scenes from Forrest Gump—including the bench where Forrest Gump shared his box of chocolates. The tour also recreates the famous bus scene spirit, then adds local context and Hollywood secrets along the way. That’s the kind of storytelling that makes photographs feel like scenes, not just snapshots.

The route also connects with other movies filmed in Savannah, including Something to Talk About and The Conspirator. When your guide points out why a street or building works for a camera, you start seeing filming logic behind the pretty facades.

The best part is that this doesn’t feel like a random scavenger hunt. It’s threaded into the larger Savannah narrative—history, architecture, and the darker side of town—so the movie stops don’t feel tacked on.

Sherman’s March and the Union Soldier Storylines You Can Actually See

Savannah’s Civil War stories are everywhere, but the challenge is always the same: it’s hard to connect the facts to the real spaces. This tour helps you do that.

You’ll pass places where Union soldiers fought, and you’ll see the home where General William T. Sherman stayed while in Savannah on his march to the sea. Even if you’re not a hardcore history person, these stops give your brain a map. You start picturing troop movement and strategy rather than memorizing dates.

The Segway format helps here because it keeps you moving between points of interest without burning your energy. You get the benefit of seeing key areas while still being able to listen to the guide’s explanation at a steady pace.

One practical note: you are gliding around downtown streets, so it can feel a little different than quiet museum-style touring. If you’re anxious about traffic, it’s worth knowing this is designed with safety training first—some riders describe feeling nervous at the start, then quickly settling in with patient coaching.

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: Mercer-Williams House and Mr. Jim Williams

If you’ve read (or watched) Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, this tour is made for your kind of curiosity.

You’ll visit the Mercer-Williams home, the one tied to the famous book and later the movie. Then the guide connects you to the true story of Mr. Jim Williams, tying the legend to what actually happened in Savannah.

This is where the Segway tour shines over a basic drive-by. You’re not just looking at the exterior; you’re also learning how the location became part of a bigger cultural story. That’s how “tour stops” turn into real understanding.

If you like local characters and the human side of history, this section is likely to be a highlight.

Haunted Homes and the Cemetery Stop: Savannah’s Darker Stories on Wheels

Savannah is known as one of the most haunted cities in America, and this tour leans into that reputation. You’ll ride past haunted homes and hear stories about their ghostly residents.

The tone here tends to be more than spooky background noise. The guide uses the city’s physical clues—homes, neighborhoods, and burial places—to make the legends feel tied to real locations rather than generic folklore.

You’ll also continue past a cemetery. Your guide will point out which significant historic figure is buried there. The name isn’t listed in the tour data you provided, so don’t count on it being an obvious “must-know” target before you go—this is one of those moments where the guide’s narration becomes the whole point.

If you enjoy ghost stories but still want solid context around the setting, this tour hits a good balance: eerie content without losing the downtown sightseeing purpose.

Spanish Moss, Ironwork, and the Squares: What You’ll Notice While Rolling

The postcards are real here, and the Segway helps you see why without feeling worn out.

As you move through downtown, you’ll pass Spanish moss hanging from majestic live oaks. You’ll also notice ironwork throughout the city—things like iron street signs, banisters, and even a wrought iron sunflower door.

The tour also includes the squares’ visual anchors: monuments, war cannons, and fountains. These details matter because Savannah’s charm isn’t only the big landmarks. It’s the small, ornate touches—ironwork scrolls, stonework patterns, and the way the squares are laid out for foot traffic.

It’s also easier to keep taking in details because the Segway reduces the nonstop walking load. You can glance left and right, listen to the narration, and still feel like you’re actively sightseeing rather than dragging yourself from stop to stop.

The 60-Minute vs 90-Minute Tour: When the Bonus Stop Is Worth It

You can choose a tour duration of either 60 or 90 minutes. The 90-minute option includes a bonus stop, which is the main difference in planning terms.

If your schedule is tight and you want the highlights fast, the 60-minute version should work well. But if you don’t want to feel like you’re being rushed through the movie spots, haunted moments, and key architecture all in one hour, the extra time can be a relief.

Also, longer tours tend to be easier on your attention. With more minutes, the guide can spend a bit more time on transitions and connections between themes—Civil War to pop culture to eerie legends—without everything feeling like a sprint.

Price and Value: Is $55 a Good Deal for Savannah’s Highlights?

At $55 per person, this tour sits in a mid-range category for experiences in downtown tourist zones. The value comes from what’s included and how long it lasts.

You’re not just paying for a Segway rental. Your ticket includes:

  • Guided tour with individual audio
  • Helmet and pre-tour safety training
  • A bottle of water

That matters because the biggest cost in a “do it on your own” plan would be your time and attention. Here, someone else handles the pacing, the safe start, and the storytelling thread. For many people, the biggest win is not speed—it’s interpretation. Savannah’s sites can look similar if you don’t have context. This tour gives you that context while you move.

The small group size (limited to 10) also supports the experience. It’s easier to learn, easier to hear the guide, and easier for the guide to keep an eye on riders who are still getting comfortable.

One small real-world consideration: one rider suggested adding rearview/side mirrors. The tour data doesn’t mention mirrors, so if you’re very road-focused, it’s smart to go in knowing your setup may be basic by bike standards.

Who Should Book This Segway Tour (and Who Might Want a Different Plan)

This tour is a great fit if you want:

  • A quick orientation to Historic Savannah with minimal walking strain
  • Movie-location storytelling alongside Civil War and ghost lore
  • A guide who uses humor and patient instruction during the training phase

Guides like Jason (engaging instructions), Ray (careful with nervous riders), and Gregg (supportive and funny) show up repeatedly in the positive feedback pattern. The vibe you want is a guide who helps first-timers feel steady, and this tour is built around that.

It may not be the best match if:

  • You don’t fit the minimum age (16) or weight guidance (100–260 pounds)
  • You’re uncomfortable with basic Segway handling and prefer purely stationary sightseeing
  • You need a slow, long-stay pace at each site. With a 60–90 minute runtime, you’re moving between stops.

Should You Book? My Practical Verdict for Most People

If you like Savannah’s look and you want to understand it faster than a self-guided stroll, I’d book this. The combination of radio-guided narration, movie-linked stops, and the mix of Civil War, haunted lore, and classic squares creates a tour that feels purposeful, not random.

Pick the 90-minute option if you want more breathing room for the bonus stop and you’re the kind of person who likes hearing the story before the photos. Choose the 60-minute version if you’re tight on time but still want the main highlights.

Just be honest about the Segway side: wear closed-toe shoes, dress comfortably, and plan to spend a little time learning before you roll into downtown streets. If you do that, you’ll likely end up with the best kind of Savannah souvenir: not just pictures, but a clearer sense of what you’re looking at.

FAQ

Where is the meeting point for the Savannah Segway tour?

You meet your guide at 502 E Broughton Street, Savannah, GA 31401. Segway training begins 15 minutes before your tour starts.

How long is the tour?

The tour runs either 60 or 90 minutes, depending on the option you book. The 90-minute tour includes a bonus stop.

What’s included in the ticket price?

The tour includes a guided Segway ride, personal audio headset (radio receiver), helmet, a bottle of water, and pre-tour Segway safety training.

Is there an age or weight limit?

Riders must be at least 16 years old. The recommended minimum weight is 100 pounds and the recommended maximum is 260 pounds.

What should I wear or bring?

Wear comfortable clothes and closed-toe shoes. The tour recommends closed-toe shoes, and you’ll want something that stays secure while you learn the Segway.

Is the tour guide English-speaking?

Yes. The live tour guide is provided in English.

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