REVIEW · CITY TOURS
Rome: City Highlights Tour by Electric Golf Cart
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Biga Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Rome from a golf cart beats getting lost. This 2.5-hour small-group tour is a fun, efficient way to see Rome’s big hitters without turning every street into a workout. You’ll ride in an open electric cart, get guidance in English through earpiece headsets, and enjoy photo stops as your driver guide talks you through what you’re actually looking at.
I especially like the route’s mix: Trevi Fountain and the Spanish Steps in the same run as Piazza Navona’s Bernini fountains, so you get the flow of the city fast. The main thing to watch is that the tour ends with stories and photos outside the Colosseum, and entry tickets are not included, so you may want a separate visit if you’re after the inside experience.
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan for
- Electric Golf Carts: The Smart Way to See Rome Fast
- Getting Oriented: Pantheon Start and Piazza Colonna Photos
- Via del Corso to Trevi Fountain: Rome’s Grand Photo Corridor
- Spanish Steps and Piazza del Popolo: Views Without the Shuffle
- Piazza Navona and Largo di Torre Argentina: Squares With Stories
- Piazza Venezia to the Colosseum Finish: What You’ll Learn From the Outside
- Gelato, Water, and Earpieces: Small Perks That Make the Tour Flow
- Group Size, Carts, and Walking: The Practical Bits
- Price and Value at $104 for 2.5 Hours
- Who This Tour Suits Best
- Should You Book This Rome City Highlights Electric Golf Cart Tour?
- FAQ
- Is entrance to the Colosseum included?
- What food and drinks are included?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Do I need hotel pick-up or drop-off?
- How big is the group and how do the carts work?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
- Is there a minimum age for children?
Key things I’d plan for

- Open-air electric carts help you feel like you’re in the city, not stuck on a bus
- Up to 14 people in small groups (7 seats per cart) with earpieces so you don’t miss the guide
- Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps, Piazza Navona, and the Colosseum area in one smooth 2.5-hour loop
- Complimentary gelato + water keep the energy up without hunting for a café right away
- Cart stops are close, not perfect: you may walk a short distance for certain viewpoints
Electric Golf Carts: The Smart Way to See Rome Fast

Rome’s top sights are spread out, and walking them all in one go can turn your day into a leg-focused punishment. This electric golf cart tour solves that. You move quickly between neighborhoods, but you still get real street-level views from an open cart.
The other big win is the way the tour is guided. You’re not just being driven past landmarks. With earpieces, you can hear the driver guide clearly, even when traffic or crowds make it hard to talk. It’s the kind of setup that works great if you want facts, but also want an easy pace.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Rome
Getting Oriented: Pantheon Start and Piazza Colonna Photos

The tour starts at Via Monterone, 19, near the Pantheon area, in an office you’ll find by looking for the glass doors. The road there forms an L shape, and the meeting spot sits on the section next to Via di Torre Argentina. If you like starting your Rome day with a clear plan, this location is handy because you’re already in the center of the action.
From there, you’ll hit a photo stop at the Pantheon and get a guided look around the surrounding area. Even if you’ve never studied ancient Rome, the guide’s commentary helps you place what you’re seeing in the right story. Then the cart rolls onward toward Piazza Colonna, where you’ll get another photo stop and guided sightseeing along the way.
A practical note: photo stops mean you’ll get time to look, take pictures, and reset your bearings. This is ideal for your first visit, when you’re trying to understand where things sit relative to each other.
Via del Corso to Trevi Fountain: Rome’s Grand Photo Corridor

Next comes Via del Corso and then the Trevi Fountain. This stretch is a classic Rome corridor—busy, dramatic, and very photogenic. The cart helps you move through it faster than you could by walking, and you don’t have to fight your way through crowds for every stop.
At Trevi, you’ll have a guided photo stop with the chance to see it close up. This fountain is famous for a reason, but the best value of the stop is what your guide adds around it—where it fits in the city’s visual language, and what to notice when you’re actually standing there.
One small caution: Trevi can be crowded. Even with a cart stopping nearby, you’ll still feel the buzz. So go in with the mindset that this is a photo-and-people-watching moment as much as it is a monument moment.
Spanish Steps and Piazza del Popolo: Views Without the Shuffle

From Trevi, you’ll head to the Spanish Steps. This area is all about elevation and angles, and it’s one of those places where just seeing the right view can feel like you did more planning than you actually did. You’ll get time for the visit and guided sightseeing before moving on.
Then the route continues toward Piazza del Popolo for a photo stop and guided context. Even when you’re not going inside anything, these stops teach you how Rome arranges its stages—big squares, clear sightlines, and buildings that work as backdrops.
The big advantage here is that you’re not walking between steps and squares in heat, uphill climbs, or stop-and-start street chaos. You’re just moving, stopping, looking, and then moving again.
Piazza Navona and Largo di Torre Argentina: Squares With Stories

The tour’s next highlight is Piazza Navona, a square that feels like it was built for lingering. You’ll have a photo stop and guided sightseeing here, with Bernini’s fountains mentioned as part of what you’ll see. That matters because Piazza Navona is easy to treat as just a scenic stop—until someone tells you what to look for.
After that, you’ll stop at Largo di Torre Argentina for a photo stop and guided tour. This is the kind of spot where Rome’s layers show up fast: a dramatic urban setting paired with a deeper past. Even if you only glance around for a few minutes, the guide’s framing helps you connect the space to the bigger city timeline.
At the end of this sequence, you’ll also get time for a break at a local café for local snacks. Since additional food and drink aren’t listed as included, treat this as a chance to reset rather than a meal plan.
Piazza Venezia to the Colosseum Finish: What You’ll Learn From the Outside

The route continues through Piazza Venezia with another photo stop and guided sightseeing. This is a smart transition point because it helps you understand how the central city connects toward the Colosseum area.
Finally, you end at the Colosseum. You’ll get a photo stop and guided tour-style storytelling from outside, plus tales of games and gladiators. The tour is designed to give you a meaningful sense of the monument without requiring the logistics of entering it.
Here’s the key consideration: entrance tickets are not included. So if you want to walk the floors inside the arena or use the full museum/arch views, you’ll need a separate ticket plan. The good news is that the tour still works well as a first Colosseum experience because it gives you context right when you’re standing there.
You’ll also be free to explore the Colosseum area afterward. If you want to extend your visit, this ending point is perfect for turning one guided moment into a longer self-paced exploration.
Gelato, Water, and Earpieces: Small Perks That Make the Tour Flow

This tour includes one gelato per person at a gelateria your guide likes. That’s not just a sweet bonus. It also gives you a natural reset point in the middle of a packed highlights route.
You also get one bottle of water per person. In Rome, that’s not a luxury—it’s a sanity saver, especially if you’re touring in warmer months.
And then there are the earpieces. They might sound like a minor detail, but they change how the tour feels. Instead of craning your head toward the guide or losing the thread while traffic or crowds shift around you, you can focus on the information and the views.
Group Size, Carts, and Walking: The Practical Bits

The tour is run as a small group: up to 14 participants total, with 7 seats per cart. Tours can run with up to 2 vehicles, and the carts travel together like connected train carriages so everyone is with the same guide sound feed.
Communication is handled through the earpieces, so you’re not dependent on being close enough to hear. In some cases, people who booked together may be asked to separate between the two vehicles. It’s not ideal if you’re trying to stay perfectly side-by-side, but the guide experience stays consistent.
Also, don’t assume the carts can stop directly at every monument entrance. The tour is designed to get you very close, but you may still need to walk a short distance from where the cart can safely stop. That’s normal for central Rome streets.
If you’re prone to rushing, this tour’s pace is a nice change. You get enough time at each major stop for photos and taking in the space, without turning every halt into a standstill.
Price and Value at $104 for 2.5 Hours

At $104 per person for about 2.5 hours, you’re paying for three things at once: transportation that gets you close to key sights, a guided narrative in English, and included treats.
If you tried to cobble this together on your own, you’d still spend time bouncing between places, paying for transfers, and likely spending a chunk of your day walking. Here, the cart reduces the friction, and the guide turns the stops into something more than snapshots.
What makes it feel like real value is what you get included: gelato, water, and earpiece headsets. Those small inclusions quietly add up, and they also make the tour easier to plan around. You’re not calculating every break or snack.
The tradeoff is that it’s a highlights overview, not a deep-dive. Entrance to attractions isn’t included, so you still need tickets if you want full access inside major sites like the Colosseum.
Who This Tour Suits Best
This is a great fit for:
- First-timers who want a fast orientation and a list of where to return later
- Families or mixed-age groups who need a lighter walking day
- Travelers who want to see a lot without trying to coordinate multiple bus/metro segments
- People who prefer comfort and clarity over getting stuck in navigation stress
It can be less ideal if you want to spend most of your time inside famous monuments. Since the Colosseum experience is from the outside and entry tickets aren’t included, you’ll get the story and the view—then you’ll need to decide about inside visits separately.
Wheelchair users should know the carts can get close to top monuments, but wheelchair users will be asked to leave their chair in the office where the tour meets. You’ll also need to be able to get on and off the vehicles without staff assistance.
Should You Book This Rome City Highlights Electric Golf Cart Tour?
If your goal is a short, efficient “greatest hits” Rome intro, I’d book it. The cart makes the city easier to manage, and the guide-driven stops help you understand what you’re seeing instead of just passing by famous names.
I’d only hesitate if you already know you want long inside time at major monuments, because Colosseum entrance isn’t included. In that case, you can still do this tour for context, but plan your ticketed visits alongside it.
If you can spare 2.5 hours early in your trip, you’ll come away with a clearer mental map of Rome and a stronger sense of where to spend your next day.
FAQ
Is entrance to the Colosseum included?
No. The tour ends with guided description and photos of the Colosseum from the outside. Entrance tickets to the monument are not included.
What food and drinks are included?
You get one gelato per person and one bottle of water per person. Additional food and drink are not included.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet inside the office at Via Monterone, 19. Look for the glass doors, on the section next to Via di Torre Argentina.
Do I need hotel pick-up or drop-off?
No. This tour does not include hotel pick-up or drop-off.
How big is the group and how do the carts work?
It’s a small group with up to 14 participants total and 7 seats per cart. Up to 2 vehicles may run, and the carts travel together while guests listen to the same guide through earpieces.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
The tour is described as wheelchair accessible in the sense that electric golf carts can get very close to top monuments. However, wheelchair users will be asked to leave their chair at the office at the meeting point, and guests must be able to get on and off without staff assistance.
Is there a minimum age for children?
Yes. Infants under 2 years old can’t be accepted due to safety regulations. Children ages 2 to 12 are welcome.






























