Sofia by electric scooter feels instantly right for a first evening. This guided ride links big sights with long green paths, so you get your bearings fast without spending the whole night on foot—especially once the lights come up in the park.
I like the small-group feel (it maxes at 3 riders), which makes it easier to ask questions and keep the pace comfortable. I also love that you get helmets and reflective vests, which helps you feel safer and more visible for an evening tour.
One possible drawback: you must be able to ride a bicycle, and the tour is weather dependent since it runs outdoors at night. If you’re not comfortable on two wheels, you’ll probably hate the experience.
In This Review
- Key highlights you’ll actually feel on the ride
- A Night Scooter Tour That Gets You Oriented Fast
- Meet Lubomir, Get Safety Gear, and Ride Like a Local
- Crystal Garden and City Garden: Sofia’s Early Icons
- Alexander Nevsky Square to National Assembly Square
- Knyazheska Garden, Soviet-Era Views, and Eagle’s Bridge
- Borisova Gradina After Dark: A Full-Size Park Loop
- St. Sedmochislenitsi Church and the Final Stroll Toward Shishman Street
- Price, What’s Included, and Who Gets the Best Value
- Practical Tips for Riding an Electric Scooter in Sofia
- Should You Book This Sofia Scooter Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Sofia on an Electric Scooter guided tour?
- What does the tour cost, and what language is it in?
- Where is the meeting point, and where does it end?
- Is a driving license required?
- Do I need to be able to ride a bicycle?
- What’s included in the price?
- What are the age requirements?
- What if the tour can’t run due to poor weather?
Key highlights you’ll actually feel on the ride

- A licensed English guide with a flexible route that can shift based on what you want to see (fashion, architecture, or just the stories)
- Night-focused Sofia with special stops in the dark, including Borisova Gradina Park and a church-side garden
- Major landmarks with short, useful time blocks, so you see a lot without feeling rushed
- A full park loop ride through Borisova Gradina rather than just a quick stop at one corner
- Safety gear included: helmets, reflective vests, plus clear safety instructions up front
- A cozy group size (maximum 3 travelers), which often makes the whole tour feel personal
A Night Scooter Tour That Gets You Oriented Fast
Sofia can feel big when you’re only there for a day or two. This tour solves that problem by building an evening route that connects the historic core to the city’s best-known park. You start in the center and end up gliding through Borisova Gradina, so your “first impressions” happen in the right order.
The timing also matters. It’s designed for nighttime when monuments and fountains look different, and the park gets its own mood. You’re not just chasing photos. You’re getting a guided walkthrough of what you’re seeing and why it matters.
And it’s active without being exhausting. You cover ground on an electric scooter, but you still get moments to stop and look up at buildings and monuments as the guide explains what they are and what to notice.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Sofia
Meet Lubomir, Get Safety Gear, and Ride Like a Local

The tour is led by an English-speaking licensed guide. In the reviews, the guide is consistently called Lubo (also referenced as Lubomir), and the vibe is friendly and easygoing—like you’re riding with someone who likes Sofia and wants you to enjoy it.
Before you roll, you get safety instructions. You also get the practical stuff you need: a helmet and a reflective vest. That combination makes a big difference for an evening ride, because visibility and comfort feel more “taken care of” from the start.
Group size is small (maximum 3 travelers), and that changes how the tour feels. You’re not stuck in a big line. The guide can respond when you ask for something specific, and you’ll often move at a pace that fits real people rather than a rigid schedule.
Quick “can I do this?” checklist from the tour rules:
- You must be 18 or older
- You don’t need a driving license
- You can ride a scooter only if you can ride a bicycle
Crystal Garden and City Garden: Sofia’s Early Icons

Your first stop is Crystal Garden, where you’ll get a short intro and safety briefing before the sightseeing starts in earnest. This is a strong opener because it sets the tone: city storytelling paired with a real place to look at.
You’ll spend about 15 minutes here, with free admission. The guide shares stories tied to the Big head monument and one of Sofia’s charming water fountains. That matters because even if you’ve seen monuments before, learning the local quirks turns them from objects into details you’ll remember later.
Next comes City Garden, around 20 minutes. This is Sofia’s oldest public green space, and you’ll feel it the moment you’re surrounded by buildings that frame the park. The route is timed so you can take in the bigger surroundings while still enjoying the calm of the garden.
Expect the guide to point out notable nearby architecture, including the National Theatre with its fountains, the former Royal Palace, and the National Bank. These aren’t just random backdrops. They show how the city’s identity was shaped around this green pocket.
A small consideration: both of these stops are short. That’s not a problem—just know you’re getting a guided “hit list” overview rather than a long wandering session.
Alexander Nevsky Square to National Assembly Square

Then you move to Patriarchal Cathedral St. Alexander Nevsky, with stops built around the square itself. This is about 15 minutes, and it’s a classic Sofia anchor.
In the Alexander Nevsky area, you’ll find much more than the cathedral. The guide points out the VIth century Saint Sofia Basilica that gave the city its name, the Monument of the Unknown Soldier, and Sofia’s kilometre zero. It’s one of those places where the history layers on top of the landmarks, and the guide helps you keep it straight.
From there, you roll to National Assembly Square for about 10 minutes. This stop is all about government-era monuments and “what the city chose to celebrate.” You’ll see the Monument of the King Liberator, the Academy of Sciences, and one of the best-known hotels in town.
Why these two squares work well back-to-back: they show Sofia’s balance of spiritual heritage, national memory, and civic identity. You go from one kind of “center” to another—without turning the ride into a long backtrack.
Potential drawback: if you hate looking at big plazas and monuments (instead of small streets), this portion might feel more like orientation than discovery. But if you want a practical sense of where everything is, it’s a smart use of time.
Knyazheska Garden, Soviet-Era Views, and Eagle’s Bridge

After the official core, the route starts shifting toward the park system. You’ll stop at Knyazheska Garden for about 10 minutes. This area has an unusual story: it was once home to the Sofia Zoo, and now it’s mostly known for the controversial Soviet Army Monument.
You’ll also hear how local youth use the space—people come here for skating and BMX. That detail adds a different layer to the landmark, because it shows the park as a living place, not just a history lesson.
Then the tour includes Eagle’s Bridge. The guide explains it as a symbolic Eastern gate of the city. In practice, it’s a nice mental marker: you’re leaving the densest center and heading into Sofia’s most famous park zone.
Even if you’ve never heard of Eagle’s Bridge before, this kind of transition is valuable. It helps you understand Sofia’s geography as you ride, not just as you read.
Borisova Gradina After Dark: A Full-Size Park Loop

This is the heart of the experience. Borisova Gradina Park is Sofia’s biggest and most famous green space, and on this tour you ride through the whole park. The time here is about 1 hour, and it’s set up for nighttime watching.
The best part is that the park doesn’t feel like one stop. It’s a chain of small surprises along the way. In the darkness, you’ll explore areas such as:
- Lillies Pond
- The Obelisk
- The National Tennis Center
- The Rose Garden at the National Stadium
- A tiny Observatori of Sofia University
You’ll feel how the park changes as you move—open spaces, monuments, sports facilities, and quieter corners. The guide also uses this time to share lesser-known context so you’re not just spotting names on signs.
This portion is where the scooter earns its keep. Walking the same route for a full hour at night would be slower and more tiring. Riding means you can cover distance while still taking in details at the right moments.
One thing to keep in mind: because it’s nighttime and outdoors, the weather matters. On a cold or rainy evening, you’ll want to dress for it and stay attentive.
St. Sedmochislenitsi Church and the Final Stroll Toward Shishman Street

After the main park section, the tour pauses at Sveti Sedmochislenitsi Church and its surrounding garden for about 5 minutes. The point here is atmosphere. The guide frames the place as one of the spots in Sofia where you notice beauty in the dark, and you’ll hear a curious story tied to the church—something not everyone in town knows.
Then you head to a small street area that the guide treats as a local night starting point: Shishman street. The comparison given is that it’s like Sofia’s version of a Champs-Élysées-style promenade, where the nightlife begins once you arrive.
Even though it’s brief, it works as a satisfying “landing zone” after the park. You go from quiet darkness and monuments to the energy of a street where the evening is already in motion.
Price, What’s Included, and Who Gets the Best Value

At $42.01 per person for about 2 to 2.5 hours, this sits in the range of guided activities that actually give you something practical. What you get is not just a guide’s voice. You get the scooter rental, the helmet, and the reflective vest included in the price.
That’s why the math feels fair. Many city tours charge similarly, but you’d still be paying separately for transportation or equipment. Here, your mobility is part of the package, and it’s especially useful for night sightseeing and a large park route.
It’s also small-group by design, maxing at 3 travelers. That helps value because it’s harder for the guide to treat you like part of a moving crowd.
What’s not included: insurance. That’s worth noting so you’re not surprised if you’re the kind of traveler who expects everything covered inside the tour price.
Who gets the best value:
- First-time visitors who want a fast orientation of Sofia’s key landmarks
- People who want an evening activity that combines sight stops with movement
- Travelers who like a guide who listens and adjusts to what they care about
If you want a slow, deep historical walking tour, you might find the timing too tight for that style. But if your goal is to see a lot and learn just enough to make the city feel real, this hits the target.
Practical Tips for Riding an Electric Scooter in Sofia
This tour is straightforward, but a few rules make it smoother for you.
Be honest about your balance. The tour requirement is clear: if you cannot ride a bicycle, you cannot ride an electric scooter. That’s not a “maybe.” If you’re uncertain, it’s better to decide before you show up.
Dress for night weather. The tour needs good weather, and it runs in the dark. Even when it looks fine at booking time, Sofia evenings can shift. Wear layers, and avoid anything that restricts movement.
Use the small-group advantage. Since it maxes at 3 travelers, ask questions early. If you care about architecture, streets, or fashion-style shopping areas, tell the guide. In the experience reports, Lubo/Lubomir tailors what he shows based on passions, so your input can directly shape your route.
Expect short stops, not long museum time. Each landmark comes with a set amount of time. That format keeps the ride flowing, but you’ll want to approach it like a highlight reel with context.
Should You Book This Sofia Scooter Tour?
Book it if you want an efficient, fun evening that connects Sofia’s center with its biggest park. The biggest reason to choose this tour is the way it uses scooters to make night sightseeing practical: you cover distance, you still get to look and listen, and Borisova Gradina becomes more than a single photo stop.
Skip it if you can’t confidently ride a bicycle, or if you’re the type who gets stressed in low light or on moving vehicles. Also think twice if you hate weather-based outdoor plans, since the tour depends on conditions.
For the right traveler, this is a smart value buy: guided, small-group, equipment included, and timed for the best atmosphere—especially once you’re gliding through Borisova Gradina after dark.
FAQ
How long is the Sofia on an Electric Scooter guided tour?
It runs about 2 hours to 2 hours 30 minutes.
What does the tour cost, and what language is it in?
The price is $42.01 per person, and the tour is offered in English.
Where is the meeting point, and where does it end?
You meet at Sofia Center, ul. Aksakov 11, 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria. The tour ends back at the meeting point.
Is a driving license required?
No, a driving license is not required.
Do I need to be able to ride a bicycle?
Yes. The tour notes that if you cannot ride a bicycle, you cannot ride an electric scooter.
What’s included in the price?
Included are electric scooter hire, helmets, an English-speaking licensed tour guide, and reflective vests.
What are the age requirements?
Only travelers above 18 years of age can participate.
What if the tour can’t run due to poor weather?
If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

































