REVIEW · DENVER
Original eBike Tour – Best of Denver – guided Bike Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Electric Cruiser Bike Tours · Bookable on Viator
Denver is flat enough for a bike day, even with stops. I love how this guided eBike loop packs big-city sights into a smooth two hours. You start by Empower Field at Mile High, then roll through downtown anchors, RiNo street art, and a brewery finish without the long walk between them.
What I like most is the easy pacing. The ride is designed for most people, and the guide takes care of helmet fit and bike speed setup so you’re not wrestling the controls. I also like the route’s mix of sports, rail, art, and performing arts—Denver in a single afternoon without feeling like you missed the “real” neighborhoods.
One possible drawback: each listed stop is brief, so you’ll get the highlights rather than deep time at any one place. If you’re the type who wants to linger, plan to come back on your own later.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you ride
- Denver by eBike: how you cover more without exhausting legs
- Empower Field at Mile High and Confluence Park: Broncos pride plus Denver’s start
- RiNo murals, Coors Field, and Union Station: street art, baseball at altitude, and westward rails
- Denver Center for the Performing Arts and Civic Center Park: more than monuments
- Tivoli Brewery stop: the beer side of Denver’s origin story
- Guides and bikes: what makes it feel safe and easy
- Price and value: why $105 can make sense
- Weather, timing, and how long you’ll stay per stop
- Who this eBike tour is best for (and who should skip it)
- Should you book Original eBike Tour – Best of Denver?
- FAQ
- How long is the Original eBike Tour – Best of Denver?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- How many people are in a group?
- What are the age and rider requirements?
- Is there a weather requirement?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Key things to know before you ride

- Max 12 riders keeps it calm and easy to stay together
- Easy eBike setup helps you learn speed modes and feel in control fast
- Eight downtown-and-neighborhood stops in about two hours
- Best for daytime exploring because it depends on good weather
- Real Denver anchors: Broncos, Union Station, the arts center, and an old-school brewery
- Guides Colin and Chris are praised for patience, thoroughness, and good energy
Denver by eBike: how you cover more without exhausting legs

Denver can be a tricky city to tour on foot. Distances look manageable on a map, but once you stack sights in one afternoon, walking turns into a grind. This tour fixes that by using electric cruiser bikes so you keep moving while still seeing real neighborhoods instead of just a few blocks.
You’ll ride for roughly 2 hours total, and the itinerary is built around major “people spots” and recognizable landmarks. The best part is that you get to go beyond the most obvious downtown cluster. You’ll cover the Broncos stadium area, the river history zone at the confluence, the mural-heavy RiNo blocks, and the classic ballpark and transit sights, all while staying part of a single guided loop.
Also, this is not a high-intensity ride. You’re not training for a sprint. You’re cruising, learning the bike rhythm, and letting the guide connect each place to a piece of Denver’s story. It’s a smart move if you want a first-day orientation or you just need a time-efficient way to explore.
Other e-bike and bike tours we've reviewed in Denver
Empower Field at Mile High and Confluence Park: Broncos pride plus Denver’s start
You kick things off at Empower Field at Mile High, home of the Denver Broncos. Even if you’re not catching a game, it’s a great starting point because it instantly gives the tour local credibility. It also helps you get into “Denver mode” right away: this city is sports-forward, and your route sets that tone immediately.
The next stop is Confluence Park, where Denver’s beginnings connect to geography and water. You’ll learn how gold was first found in Denver and how the city’s start links to the meeting of the South Platte River and the Cherry Creek. This is one of those stops that changes how you see the city. After you’ve been told where the early spark came from, you start noticing the river lines and why certain areas became natural gathering points.
Because these stops are short, you’ll want to pay attention to what the guide points out and ask questions while you’re there. If you love stories tied to specific locations, Confluence Park is a good place to slow down mentally even if the physical time window is brief.
RiNo murals, Coors Field, and Union Station: street art, baseball at altitude, and westward rails

Then you roll into RiNo Art District—Denver’s outdoor mural scene. This stop works because it gives you a break from landmark buildings and lets you see how creative the city can be on a casual street level. You’re not just passing through; you’re getting a quick guided look at the “wow” factor that makes RiNo so recognizable.
Next is Coors Field, where you’ll learn about baseball at altitude. That matters here. Denver’s elevation changes the way the game feels and behaves, and the guide turns the stadium into a lesson instead of just a photo stop. If you’re a sports fan, this is the moment you’ll remember later when someone asks why baseball in Denver feels different.
From there, you head to Denver Union Station, one of the city’s best “big moment” structures. You’ll learn how trains built the west and why Denver is no exception. Union Station gives the tour a stronger sense of connection beyond just what’s happening today. It’s a reminder that Denver developed through movement—people, trade, and rail routes—and that history still shapes where things are.
Practical note: these stops are all in the part of the city where people actually live, work, and meet. That makes them feel more like real-world Denver than museum-only sightseeing.
Denver Center for the Performing Arts and Civic Center Park: more than monuments
A huge part of Denver’s identity is the arts, and this tour reflects that by including The Denver Center for the Performing Arts. You’ll see the complex where Denver hosts musicals, theater, concerts, ballet, and more in multiple performance spaces. The value here is simple: even if you don’t catch a show, you get oriented to where the city’s performing arts ecosystem lives.
Then it’s Civic Center Park, surrounded by iconic Denver buildings like the State Capitol, Denver Library, and the Denver Art Museum. This stop is basically a “spotlight” on the city’s civic core. It’s also a nice visual contrast after stadium and street art stops. If you’ve only seen Denver through a few neighborhoods, Civic Center Park helps you understand how the downtown experience is organized around government, education, and major culture institutions.
Because these are major landmarks, the guide’s job is important. You’ll get the quick connections that make the buildings more meaningful than they look in a quick glance. It’s the difference between taking photos and actually building a mental map of where Denver’s priorities sit.
Tivoli Brewery stop: the beer side of Denver’s origin story

To finish, you visit Tivoli Brewery, and you’ll learn how beer is part of the story that made Denver great, with a focus on the oldest brewery in Denver. This is a smart ending. Sports, art, transit, government landmarks—the tour gives you a full-spectrum Denver first. Then it lands on a local tradition people can talk about easily, which makes the whole experience feel more grounded.
This is also where you’ll appreciate the eBike format. If you were walking, you’d be tired right when you reach the best “reward” stop. On the eBike, you can actually arrive feeling fresh enough to enjoy the explanation and take in the setting.
You end back at the meeting point, so it’s a complete loop rather than a one-way shuffle.
Other cycling tours in Denver
Guides and bikes: what makes it feel safe and easy
Electric cruiser bikes work best when someone helps you learn the rhythm in the first minutes. That’s exactly what shows up in the best reviews of this tour. Guides like Colin and Chris are praised for being thorough and patient—especially with riders who need a little extra time to get comfortable. If you’re traveling with older adults, this matters, because confidence on a bike is more important than speed.
You can also expect practical support around helmets and controls. People specifically mentioned the guide helping with helmet fit and explaining speed modes. That kind of attention isn’t flashy, but it’s what turns an eBike ride from stressful into relaxing.
Group size caps at 12 travelers, which makes a big difference. You’re not stuck watching a distant cluster disappear ahead. You’re kept close enough that you can hear the guide and ask questions without shouting over traffic.
As for rider rules: you’ll need to be at least 14 to ride your own eBike. The tour requires participants to be between 5′-2″ tall (minimum) and 300 lbs (maximum). Seniors can ride if they demonstrate competent balance on the bike. If any of those constraints give you pause, it’s worth double-checking before you book.
Price and value: why $105 can make sense

At $105 per person for about two hours, this isn’t a budget-only activity. But the price starts to make sense when you factor in what you’re buying: a guided route across multiple neighborhoods, bike support, and time savings compared to trying to stitch together these stops yourself.
Walking this kind of route would eat your day. Even if you’re fit, you’d spend time just moving between locations—time you could spend learning what makes each stop matter. With an eBike, you’re paying for transportation that keeps you in “tour mode.”
Also, the tour hits recognizable Denver anchors in a way that’s hard to replicate if you’re guessing. The guide connects each location to a short piece of Denver context—Broncos stadium, river confluence origins, RiNo murals, altitude baseball, westward rail history, the performing arts complex, civic landmarks, and the oldest brewery. That’s a lot of orientation in a small time window.
If you like structure—someone telling you where to go and what to notice—this price is easier to justify. If you prefer free-form wandering with no guidance, you might find it less worth it.
Weather, timing, and how long you’ll stay per stop
This experience requires good weather, so plan around that. If conditions are poor, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. On the day you go, the stops are short—around five minutes at each listed location—so you’re moving regularly through the city rather than pausing for long breaks.
That’s why the pacing is so important. The guide’s job is to keep you comfortable on the bike and keep the information coming in digestible chunks. If you’re the type who asks lots of questions, you’ll still have chances, but don’t expect long lectures at every stop.
Timing-wise, it runs about two hours total and ends back at 2028 Eliot St, Denver. You can use it as a morning or early afternoon orientation and then build the rest of your day around what you liked most.
Who this eBike tour is best for (and who should skip it)
This is a great pick if you want a first taste of Denver and you’d rather not do museum-and-miles sightseeing all day. It’s especially useful for people who feel limited by distance but still want variety: sports area, river history, street art, transit heritage, civic landmarks, and beer culture.
You’ll likely enjoy it if:
- you want to see more than you could reasonably walk in limited time
- you appreciate guided context, even in short bursts
- you’re comfortable balancing on a bike and following a group pace
You might want to skip it if:
- you need long stops at each attraction
- you dislike structured itineraries and prefer to wander without guidance
- weather could be unreliable during your travel window
Should you book Original eBike Tour – Best of Denver?
If you’re visiting Denver and want one activity that quickly shows you the city’s range, I’d book it. The combination of easy eBike support, a well-paced downtown-to-neighborhood route, and strong local emphasis—from Broncos to RiNo to Union Station—makes it an efficient, fun way to get your bearings fast.
If you’re already set on slowing down at just one neighborhood for hours, you may prefer a smaller, more flexible outing. But for most visitors who want a highlight reel with real context, this tour is a solid choice.
FAQ
How long is the Original eBike Tour – Best of Denver?
It runs for about 2 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $105.00 per person.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at 2028 Eliot St, Denver, CO 80211, USA and ends back at the meeting point.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
How many people are in a group?
The maximum group size is 12 travelers.
What are the age and rider requirements?
Minimum age is 14 to ride their own eBike. Riders must not be under 5′-2″ tall and must not exceed 300 lbs. Senior riders need to demonstrate competent balance on the bike.
Is there a weather requirement?
Yes. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.


































