Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner

REVIEW · DINING EXPERIENCES

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner

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Traveller rating 5.0 (11)Price from$49Operated byOn-A-Roll-ToursBook viaGetYourGuide

Singapore at night on two wheels feels wicked. This 3.5-hour ride turns classic sights into a moving street show: photo stops from Selegie to the Singapore River and real time at the three Quays after sundown. You’re also covered for the fun part that makes it more than sightseeing: dinner, dessert, and beer with a guide who blends stories with practical route tips.

I like that the tour leans into the stuff you usually miss unless you know where to look, from off-the-beaten side stops to that behind-the-scenes bar-and-story vibe. The one real consideration: this is active. You should be reasonably fit, have good balance, and be ready to ride about 10 km on a kick scooter.

Key Things I’d Prioritize Before You Go

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Key Things I’d Prioritize Before You Go

  • A guided scooter route that hits the Singapore River at night, when the 3 Quays feel most alive
  • Selegie, Fort Canning, and temple/photo stops that give you a Singapore “range,” not just one neighborhood
  • Meal time that’s built into the flow: you’ll pause for dinner at Feng Ji Chicken Rice and finish with Chinese dessert at Rochor Original Beancurd
  • Beer at Robertson Quay during a break, so the nightlife portion feels intentional, not rushed
  • Guide-led storytelling that runs from shocking crimes to secret whisky bar style finds
  • Disposable poncho included if weather turns, so you’re not hunting for gear at the last minute

Price and What Makes This $49 Tour Feel Fair

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Price and What Makes This $49 Tour Feel Fair
At $49 per person, this tour can look like a steal or like a “maybe” depending on what you expect. Here’s why it can work out well: you’re not just paying for scooter rental. You’re getting the licensed guide, a chunk of guided stops across central Singapore, and three food-and-drink moments tied to the route: dinner, dessert, and beer.

The timing matters too. A 3.5-hour evening hits the sweet spot between late afternoon and full night. You get daylight for some landmarks and then the Singapore River atmosphere after sundown. If you’re the kind of person who hates “sit there and listen” tours, scooter + meal breaks is a solid format.

The one trade-off is also simple: there’s no hotel pickup/drop-off. You’ll be making your own way to the meeting point at 73 Dunlop St, near Rochor MRT and next to a 7Eleven. Plan for that and the pricing feels more justified.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Singapore

Scooter Reality Check: Comfort, Balance, and the About 10 km Factor

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Scooter Reality Check: Comfort, Balance, and the About 10 km Factor
This isn’t a glide-and-photos-only loop. You’ll ride long enough to earn a little sweat and sharpen your balance. The tour is set up for people who are reasonably fit and able to ride for about 10 km.

If you’ve never ridden a kick scooter before, don’t panic. One of the best parts of this tour is how the guide handles the early learning curve so the group can keep moving. You’ll still want comfortable shoes and water. If your feet or legs hate impact, factor that in before booking.

Also note who should skip this: it’s not suitable for pregnant women, not for children under 8, and it’s not suitable for people over 220 lbs (100 kg). If you’re in the eligible range, the ride feels like the fun part of the evening, not a chore.

Where You Meet and How the Route Keeps Flowing Back to 73 Dunlop St

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Where You Meet and How the Route Keeps Flowing Back to 73 Dunlop St
You start and end at 73 Dunlop St. The meeting point is described as being around the corner from Rochor MRT, with the tour building directly next to a 7Eleven. That’s helpful because it reduces the classic Singapore problem of “where exactly is this place?”

The tour is designed to loop back to the same spot. That matters if you want an evening that doesn’t turn into a last-mile puzzle. You can plan for post-tour dinner or a quick MRT hop without having to re-orient to a new neighborhood.

The Evening Starts Soft: Selegie, Dhoby Ghaut Area Vibes, and Photo Stops That Set Context

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - The Evening Starts Soft: Selegie, Dhoby Ghaut Area Vibes, and Photo Stops That Set Context
After you’re sorted on scooter and ready, the early part of the route focuses on getting your bearings. You’ll glide through areas around Selegie, and then head toward other central-city landmarks where you can get that “this is Singapore” baseline fast.

Stops are mostly short photo stops plus guided storytelling, so you’re not stuck stationary for long. That format works well when you’re combining movement with information. Even if a stop is brief—think a church or a small historic-looking structure—you usually get the why, not just the what.

Selegie Road and Orchard Road Presbyterian Church (Quick, But Helpful)

These are the kinds of photo stops that can seem skippable on paper, but they’re useful for two reasons. First, they place you geographically early. Second, they set the guide’s tone: you’re going to get local context and oddball stories, not a generic script.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Singapore

Fort Canning Tree Tunnel and House of Tan Yeok Nee

Fort Canning’s “tree tunnel” stop is the kind of photo moment you want before you’re fully immersed in the river nightlife. It also gives your eyes a break—less skyline, more greenery and character.

Then you’ll move to House of Tan Yeok Nee, another stop that keeps the evening from being only about modern waterfront views. It’s a reminder that Singapore’s nightlife layer sits on top of older neighborhoods and architecture.

Temples and Churches: Sri Thendayuthapani Temple and Sacred Heart Along the Way

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Temples and Churches: Sri Thendayuthapani Temple and Sacred Heart Along the Way
This tour doesn’t keep everything to downtown slickness. You also pass through major spiritual sites, including Sri Thendayuthapani Temple and Church of the Sacred Heart.

These stops are short, but that can be a good thing. You get visual contrast and a sense of Singapore’s mix: different communities, different architecture, and different ways people mark daily life. Even when you only pause for a guided moment, the context helps your brain connect what you see later near the river.

Dinner Time at Feng Ji Chicken Rice: Why the Meal Break Works Mid-Tour

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Dinner Time at Feng Ji Chicken Rice: Why the Meal Break Works Mid-Tour
Here’s a smart design detail: the dinner happens around the middle of the ride. You’ll get about 40 minutes at Feng Ji Chicken Rice. That’s long enough to eat without rushing, but not so long you feel stuck when the fun part is still coming.

What I like about this structure: once you eat, the rest of the night flows easier. You’ll still ride and photograph, but you’re not powering through on empty. And because the dinner is part of the route, you’re not hunting for a place in the dark while your schedule slips.

The tour also aims for local texture rather than “tourist menu food.” If you’re the type who likes to eat where the locals go, this stop hits the mark.

Robertson Quay Beer Break: The River Turns Cinematic After Sundown

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Robertson Quay Beer Break: The River Turns Cinematic After Sundown
When the tour gets to Robertson Quay, you shift gears from city blocks to water. This is where the Singapore River highlights take center stage: you’ll be along the waterfront at night, with the skyline in the background and three Quays in your sights over the evening.

There’s a break time at Robertson Quay, including beer and a guided moment. This is the point where the scooter tour stops feeling like a “sequence of photos” and starts feeling like an evening you’d actually plan on purpose.

Why Robertson Quay Is a Key Stop

You’re not just looking at buildings. You’re watching the river vibe change after dark. The waterfront lighting and the motion of people make the scene feel alive in a way that daytime doesn’t match.

If you care about atmosphere, this is one of the tour’s strongest selling points.

Clarke Quay and Boat Quay: Three Quays, One Night Rhythm

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Clarke Quay and Boat Quay: Three Quays, One Night Rhythm
After Robertson Quay, the ride continues to Clarke Quay and then Boat Quay. Both are photo-stop style moments with guided context, and they keep the evening moving without turning it into a long sit-down show.

Clarke Quay is your next skyline-and-river layer. It’s a good spot to reset your camera settings, because the lighting and angles shift again. Boat Quay finishes the sequence with that classic riverfront Singapore look where the city feels close to the water.

The route’s promise of 12 colorful bridges of the Singapore River fits in here, even if you don’t stop at every single one. You’re riding along the corridor where those bridges shape the view, and the guided narration helps you notice them as you pass.

Memorials and Icons: Civilian War Memorial and Raffles Hotel

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Memorials and Icons: Civilian War Memorial and Raffles Hotel
Not every stop is about nightlife. You also pass by the Civilian War Memorial for a photo and guided explanation. It’s a pause that balances the energy of the evening and keeps the tour from becoming one-note fun.

Then you roll past Raffles Hotel. This stop is short, but it’s a recognizable marker that ties you back to the CBD skyline vibe the tour highlights. If you like seeing famous places from the perspective of actual streets and routes, this part hits.

Beach Road, Fortune Centre, and Ten Square (Landmark of Good)

Late in the ride, you’ll head to Beach Road, plus photo stops at Fortune Centre and Ten Square, the Landmark of Good at 1 Short Street.

This part works for two reasons:

  1. It keeps your route from feeling like only “river and old stuff.”
  2. It shows you a different slice of central Singapore’s visual identity: signage, streetscape rhythm, and modern focal points.

Beach Road is also a useful transition. It’s close enough to the water energy to feel connected, but it gives you city textures again before you finish up.

Dessert at Rochor Original Beancurd: The Chinese Finish That Feels Like Closure

You wrap with Rochor Original Beancurd, which lines up with the tour’s promise of traditional Chinese dessert in a tucked-away style setting. You’ll get a stop there of about 15 minutes, which is enough time to enjoy your dessert and chat with the group.

One of the nicest things about ending here is that dessert feels like a payoff. The tour builds from quick city photos to river nightlife to a final calm moment of food. It’s also a great way to slow down a bit before heading back to the meeting point.

The Guide Factor: Why Ping Makes This Tour Click

This tour really depends on the guide. One name that comes up often is Ping, who’s described as fun, friendly, and easygoing, with a knack for showing places people typically miss.

Even if you’ve never ridden a scooter, the guide’s job is to make it feel manageable and keep the group comfortable. And because the tour leans into “secrets” and off-the-beaten-track finds, you want a guide who can balance entertainment with clarity.

If your top priority is learning stories while you ride, this guide-led approach is exactly what you want.

Weather and the Small Practicalities That Save Your Night

Singapore nights can switch up fast. The good news here is that you get a disposable poncho if it’s raining or if weather turns ugly. That alone makes the tour feel more practical than a purely outdoor walking plan.

Bring water and comfortable shoes. If you’re wearing anything stiff or slippery, you’ll feel it on a scooter ride where you need steady footing.

Who This Tour Is Best For

I think this is a great fit if you:

  • Want a 3.5-hour evening plan that mixes sights, stories, and food
  • Like the Singapore River at night and want to see Robertson Quay, Clarke Quay, and Boat Quay
  • Are comfortable trying something active (scooter riding about 10 km)
  • Prefer a guide-led story format rather than a museum-style lecture

It’s probably not your best choice if you:

  • Need a fully seated, very low-activity option
  • Are in the listed excluded categories (pregnancy, under 8, or over 220 lbs)

Should You Book Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner?

If you like the idea of riding through central Singapore after dark, eating a real meal mid-route, and finishing with dessert by the river vibe, I’d book it. The pricing works because dinner, dessert, and beer are included, and the time window is tight enough to feel like a real night out rather than a long day commitment.

I’d only pause if you’re unsure about scooters or balance. This tour expects you to ride for about 10 km, and that’s the main variable affecting comfort.

FAQ

What’s the duration of the kick scooter tour?

The tour lasts 3.5 hours.

How much does it cost?

The price is $49 per person.

Where does the tour start and end?

It starts and ends at 73 Dunlop St, near Rochor MRT and next to a 7Eleven.

What’s included in the price?

You get kick scooter rental, a licensed English-speaking guide, dinner, dessert, and beer, and a disposable poncho during inclement weather.

What should I bring?

Bring water and comfortable shoes.

Is the tour suitable for kids or pregnant women?

It’s not suitable for pregnant women and not suitable for children under 8.

Do I need to be a strong rider before I go?

You should be reasonably fit and have a sense of balance to ride the kick scooters for about 10 km.

Is hotel pickup included?

No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.

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