REVIEW · E-BIKE & SCOOTER TOURS
2-hour Private Wooden E-Bike Tour in Emporio Castle, Santorini
Book on Viator →Operated by Exi The Ultimate Experience · Bookable on Viator
Two beaches and one medieval village in two hours. This private wooden e-bike tour in Santorini strings together Perissa Black Beach, fortified Emporio Castle, and an easy finish at Perivolos—so you get variety without spending half your day in transit. I especially like the mix of guided stops and actual time to wander, plus the fact that it’s built for your group only, not a big crowd shuffle.
What I really like: you start in the dramatic volcanic-sand setting of Perissa (with crystal-clear water), then you get a full hour at Emporio’s narrow, winding medieval streets. The tour also ends with a short beachside breather in Perivolos, where you can grab a juice or beverage before you’re done. One consideration: the ride can be a little dicey along busy roads before you’re out into calmer areas, so if you’re easily stressed by traffic, go in with a steady mindset.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth planning around
- Why this 2-hour Santorini e-bike format is a smart move
- Perissa Black Beach: a dramatic start that keeps the mood easy
- Getting to Emporio Castle: medieval streets, preserved houses, and real scale
- A small drawback to factor in
- The ride itself: wooden e-bikes, local guidance, and road-share reality
- Perivolos finish: short beach time with an easy landing
- Who this “short finish” is for
- Price and value: what $82.80 covers in a private 2-hour ride
- Practical details that help you enjoy the day more
- Who should book this wooden e-bike tour in Santorini
- Should you book this Perissa to Emporio e-bike ride?
- FAQ
- How long is the Private Wooden E-Bike Tour in Emporio Castle?
- Where do you meet and where does the tour end?
- Is this tour private?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- Are admission tickets required for Emporio Castle and Perivolos?
- What is the cancellation and weather policy?
Key highlights worth planning around

- Private group time: Only your group rides, so the pace stays comfortable.
- Perissa Black Beach start: Volcanic sands and clear water set the tone from minute one.
- Emporio Castle wandering time: You get about one hour in a preserved medieval village.
- A guide named Georgio: Reviews flag friendly, informative guidance, and the ride makes more sense with local context.
- Perivolos beach finish: About 15 minutes to slow down by the sea.
Why this 2-hour Santorini e-bike format is a smart move

Santorini can be great, but it can also be a lot of staircases, long walks, and sudden heat. A 2-hour private e-bike tour is a practical middle path: active enough to feel like you’re moving through the island, but not so long that you’re exhausted by the time you reach the viewpoints.
For your money, you’re not just paying for transportation. You’re paying for a focused route with a guide, plus e-assist help that makes a coastal-to-village day feel manageable. The schedule also stays tight: you start at Perissa, hit Emporio, and then end in Perivolos. That matters because Santorini sightseeing often turns into “drive, park, walk, repeat.” Here, the plan is built to reduce that shuffle.
And the “private” part is genuinely useful. You’re not waiting for a large group to mount bikes or regroup after every quick photo. Your guide can adjust the pace to your comfort level, which helps a lot on Santorini roads.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Santorini
Perissa Black Beach: a dramatic start that keeps the mood easy

Your tour begins at Perissa Black Beach, one of Santorini’s most recognizable coastal spots. This is the black-sand beach with volcanic character, and it’s also where the water looks clear and inviting. Starting here works because it gives you an immediate visual payoff—no need to earn the view first.
It also sets a smooth rhythm for the ride. You’re not jumping straight onto a bike with zero context. You start your morning or afternoon by standing right where the island’s volcanic story shows up in real life. Even if you’ve seen photos before, it’s the kind of place where the texture of the sand and the brightness of the sea make you slow down a bit.
Practical note: Perissa is a beach environment, which usually means sun and strong light. If you’re sensitive to heat, plan to keep your time in the open sun short and move toward shade whenever you can during the early part of your ride.
Getting to Emporio Castle: medieval streets, preserved houses, and real scale
The tour’s biggest on-foot moment is Emporio, described as a fortified medieval village with narrow, winding streets. This is where Santorini shifts gears from sea-and-sun into something older and more sheltered. You’re not just walking through a pretty town square. You’re moving through a maze-like village layout that was shaped for defense, with tight passages and a lot of small visual surprises.
Emporio is also the largest settlement of Santorini, located about 12 km from Fira on the foothills of Mount Prophet Elias. That detail matters because it helps you understand why Emporio feels distinct from the more famous cliff-side towns. It’s not just a backdrop—it’s a substantial village with a medieval core that still reads as a community, not a theme set.
Once you’re in, look for the architecture at the village entrance: two blue-domed churches with impressive bell towers. They’re hard to miss, and they give you a clean orientation point while you wander. Inside the streets, you’ll find houses that are well-preserved, which is the difference between “old-looking” and “still intact.” An hour is a good amount of time here: long enough to wander without rushing, short enough to return to your bike before fatigue builds.
Admission is listed as free for this stop, which is a nice bonus. More importantly, the time allocation is right. Emporio isn’t presented as a quick photo pit stop. It’s treated like the anchor point of the tour.
A small drawback to factor in
Emporio’s street layout is narrow and winding. If you’re not comfortable navigating tight lanes while also watching your footing, you’ll want to slow down and take your time between street turns. It’s not a dealbreaker, but it’s worth flagging so you don’t feel rushed once you’re off the bike.
The ride itself: wooden e-bikes, local guidance, and road-share reality

This is a private wooden e-bike tour, which already hints that the goal isn’t extreme sport. It’s easier movement with electric assistance, and that matters on Santorini because the island isn’t flat in the way you might expect. Even without steep technical climbs, you still have real-world driving conditions.
The best proof of how the ride feels comes from a guide-related review: the guide Georgio was excellent, and the route can feel a little dicey along busy roads. The good news in that same sentiment is that you’re soon out in the country and things settle down.
Here’s what that means for you:
- If you’re comfortable riding near cars, you’ll likely find the busy-road stretch manageable.
- If you’re anxious around traffic, set expectations that the calm part comes later.
- Stay alert and keep a steady pace when you’re in busier sections. Your guide’s role is partly to time movements and guide you where the route makes sense.
Also, e-bike days reward good habits. Keep your hands relaxed, avoid sudden swerves, and don’t treat every uphill stretch like a sprint. You’ll enjoy it more, and you’ll arrive at Emporio less tired.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Santorini
Perivolos finish: short beach time with an easy landing

You end in Perivolos, a beachside area with a laid-back vibe. The tour gives you about 15 minutes, plus the option to unwind with a refreshing juice or beverage at a beach bar. That short stop is well-chosen. It gives you closure at the sea without turning the tour into a long beach day you didn’t plan for.
Perivolos also plays nicely with the day’s flow. You’ve had volcanic-sand drama at the start, medieval walking time in the middle, and now you return to a coastal setting that feels more relaxed. For many people, this is the moment the tour clicks. You stop thinking about itinerary logistics and start thinking about the simple pleasure of sitting down for a few minutes.
Who this “short finish” is for
If you don’t want a long sit-down break and you still want time to explore on your own, the 15 minutes fits your schedule. If you’re hoping for a long beach swim, you’ll probably want to plan extra time before or after the tour, because the tour finish is designed as a quick landing, not a full beach session.
Price and value: what $82.80 covers in a private 2-hour ride
At $82.80 per person for about 2 hours, the value comes down to what you get in those two hours. You’re not paying for a vague sunset ride with random stops. You’re paying for a guided, private route that hits three named locations: Perissa, Emporio Castle, and Perivolos.
Two details help the price feel more justified:
- Emporio and Perivolos stops list free admission (at least for the relevant visit components).
- You get private guidance in English, which matters when you’re walking medieval lanes and want context beyond just seeing buildings.
This isn’t a budget “hop on, hop off” experience. It’s better seen as a time-saver and comfort upgrade. Instead of spending your day planning transport and dealing with finding parking and figuring out which streets to walk, you get a structured plan that keeps you moving and still gives you real time at the key village stop.
If you’re traveling as a group and you want flexibility, private format tends to make sense. If you’re traveling solo, it can still be worth it when you prioritize having a guide and staying on schedule.
Practical details that help you enjoy the day more

A few small pieces of information can make your experience smoother:
- English is available, so you’ll get guided context without needing to translate.
- The tour uses a mobile ticket, which is handy on a day with sun and beach access.
- It’s near public transportation, so you’re not trapped if plans change.
- Confirmation is received at booking, and the tour is described as suitable for most travelers.
Now, the big practical factor: good weather matters. This experience requires good weather, and if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. On Santorini, that’s not a small detail. Wind and rain can change both road comfort and the way beaches feel.
My advice: check the weather early and again on the day. If it looks questionable, you’ll thank yourself for being ready to adjust.
Who should book this wooden e-bike tour in Santorini
This is a great fit if you want:
- A guided way to see more than one area (Perissa + Emporio + Perivolos) without spending all day moving.
- A paced experience that includes a substantial walk in a medieval village.
- The comfort of private time—especially if your group has different walking speeds.
It also works well for couples, friends, and small groups who like the idea of bikes but don’t want the route to feel chaotic. The fact that the guide Georgio is specifically praised for friendliness and information is a strong clue that this is meant to be enjoyable, not just educational.
You might reconsider if:
- You have a strong dislike for sharing roads with cars, even briefly.
- You want a long beach stop for swimming or lounging rather than a quick beach finish.
Should you book this Perissa to Emporio e-bike ride?
I’d book it if your priority is a clean, well-structured “see a lot without overdoing it” day. The combination of Perissa Black Beach, a solid hour in Emporio Castle, and a simple finish in Perivolos is a smart use of time. And because it’s private, the ride feels less like a chore and more like your own plan.
Skip it or at least think twice if road conditions stress you out, because that early stretch on busy roads can feel a little dicey before you get into calmer areas. Also keep an eye on weather, since the experience depends on it.
If you want a Santorini day that balances coastal drama with medieval walking—and you don’t want the whole thing to be a long slog—this private wooden e-bike tour makes a lot of sense.
FAQ
How long is the Private Wooden E-Bike Tour in Emporio Castle?
The tour lasts about 2 hours.
Where do you meet and where does the tour end?
It starts at an unnamed road in Perissa (847 03, Greece). The tour ends back at the meeting point.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
Are admission tickets required for Emporio Castle and Perivolos?
The provided details list admission ticket free for both the Emporio stop and the Perivolos finish.
What is the cancellation and weather policy?
You can cancel for free up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. The experience requires good weather; if it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.







































