REVIEW · MUNICH
Private and full rickshaw tour in the English Garden
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Two wheels and Munich park calm. This private, full rickshaw tour is a smart way to see the English Garden with an English-speaking guide and plenty of room for questions. You’ll go beyond the postcard moments, mixing busy park sights in the south with a calmer countryside feel in the north.
I especially like the flexibility: you can ask for more or less time at the spots you care about most, and your guide will happily adjust on the fly. I also love how the experience feels friendly and personal, like you’re being shown the park by someone who genuinely enjoys it, with guides such as Agnes known for being pleasant, responsive, and well-informed.
One thing to consider: this tour needs good weather. If conditions are poor, you may be offered a different date or a full refund, so I’d keep an eye on the forecast and plan to travel with some flexibility.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at a Glance
- Why a Private Rickshaw Works So Well in Munich’s English Garden
- Starting at LMU: A Clean, Easy Point to Begin
- English Garden Highlights: Chinese Tower, Surfer Wave, Lake Views, and More
- The Chinese Tower: A Landmark You Can Aim For
- Surfer Wave Area: The Unexpected City-Entertainment Twist
- Kleinhesseloher See: A Lake Break for Breathing Room
- Hirschau: Where the Park Feels More Like Countryside
- Aumeister and the Amphitheater: Built-Environment Meets Nature
- If You’re Lucky: Sheep in the Park
- Your Guide Is the Real Value: Questions, Care, and Control
- Southern vs. Northern English Garden: The Mood Shift You’ll Feel
- Price and What You Get for $155.33 (Up to Two)
- Timing, Weather, and Getting the Most From a 2-Hour Ride
- Who This Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This English Garden Rickshaw Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the private rickshaw tour in the English Garden?
- What is the price?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What should I do if the weather is bad?
- Is it a private tour?
Key Highlights at a Glance

- Private rickshaw, just your group: up to 2 people, so you won’t be squeezed into a larger crowd plan
- English-speaking guide support: you can ask questions and get clear answers
- Iconic English Garden stops: Chinese Tower, Surfer wave area, Kleinhesseloher See, Hirschau, Aumeister, and the amphitheater
- A calm north-side feel: the park shifts from popular south areas to more relaxed countryside paths
- Timing that bends to you: you can request longer or shorter stops at particular viewpoints
- A lucky extra: sheep may appear if you’re there at the right moment
Why a Private Rickshaw Works So Well in Munich’s English Garden
The English Garden in Munich is one of those places that can feel huge fast. On foot, you’re either rushing between highlights or getting swallowed by the park and never making it to the key spots. A private rickshaw tour solves that. It gives you the glide of sightseeing without the “how far is this?” stress.
And because it’s private—only your group—the ride doesn’t turn into a timed checklist where you feel stuck. You can ask questions mid-route, you can pause when something catches your eye, and you can slow down when you want the park mood to take over.
The second big reason I like this style of tour is simple: it’s made for people who want a quick orientation. If you’re new to Munich, the English Garden is a perfect “welcome” area. You start at Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU), then you’re guided through a place that mixes famous landmarks with everyday relaxation.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Munich
Starting at LMU: A Clean, Easy Point to Begin

The tour meets at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1 (80539 München). I like meeting at a major location like this because it tends to be straightforward to find, and it’s listed as near public transportation.
You also get the practical benefit of starting close to a real city landmark. That matters because the English Garden is so big that it helps to get your bearings early, before you move deeper into the park.
The ride ends back at the meeting point. That round-trip structure is underrated. It means you don’t need to plan your return logistics while you’re still enjoying the day.
English Garden Highlights: Chinese Tower, Surfer Wave, Lake Views, and More

This is the heart of the experience: you’re not just driving past scenery. You’re guided through distinct English Garden zones, anchored by major named sights. The exact stop order can vary with route flow and timing, but the highlights you can expect include the Chinese tower, the Surfer wave area, Kleinhesseloher See, Hirschau, Aumeister, the amphitheater, and sometimes the charming surprise of sheep.
Let’s talk about why each one matters, and what to watch for.
The Chinese Tower: A Landmark You Can Aim For
The Chinese tower is one of those recognizable English Garden features that gives the whole place an identity. Even if you’ve seen photos online, it hits differently when you see it in person from within the park context. It’s also a great first anchor because it helps you understand how the English Garden is built as a series of “scenes,” not just one flat green space.
Practical tip: treat this as a orientation stop. If you want photos, ask your guide for a moment that works with the light and the angle from your rickshaw.
Surfer Wave Area: The Unexpected City-Entertainment Twist
Then you get the English Garden’s fun curveball: the Surfer wave. It’s a reminder that this park isn’t only about calm walking paths. It’s also a place where people bring energy—watching, training, and enjoying a kind of everyday entertainment tied to the water.
Even if surfing isn’t your thing, this stop is useful. It breaks up the nature rhythm with a clear visual moment, and it keeps the tour from becoming purely scenic drift.
Kleinhesseloher See: A Lake Break for Breathing Room
Next comes Kleinhesseloher See. A lake stop is your mental reset in a park this size. This is where your ride starts to feel less like “touring Munich” and more like you’re being shown how locals use the park when they want a slower pace.
This is also a good point to ask questions. When you’re not moving at every second, you can hear the guide’s explanation and actually connect it to what you see.
Hirschau: Where the Park Feels More Like Countryside
Hirschau is where the English Garden’s mood shift becomes clear. In the southern parts, the park is described as well visited and lively. In the northern parts, it turns into a more relaxed countryside vibe.
That shift is the entire point. You get variety without having to plan it yourself. One moment you’re in the popular “scene-setting” side, and the next you’re moving through a quieter feel that helps the park land as a place you’d return to.
Aumeister and the Amphitheater: Built-Environment Meets Nature
You’ll also pass the Aumeister area and reach the amphitheater. These stops matter because they show that Munich didn’t treat the English Garden as only “wild nature.” There’s built structure here too, integrated into the park.
The amphitheater in particular is interesting in a park setting because it makes you think about how people gather in this green space for events or simply to enjoy views from a defined area. It’s a good moment to slow down, look around, and notice how the open spaces are shaped.
If You’re Lucky: Sheep in the Park
The tour description includes the possibility of a flock of sheep. That’s exactly the kind of “only in the real world” detail that makes a guided ride worthwhile. You can plan all the landmarks you want, but you can’t schedule a surprise moment like that. If it happens for you, it’ll feel like a bonus, not a checkbox.
Your Guide Is the Real Value: Questions, Care, and Control
A short tour can still feel great if your guide is good. Here, that’s the theme. The experience is consistently described as fun, with a guide who’s friendly, caring, and genuinely enthusiastic.
The practical part is the language and communication. The tour is offered in English, and guides are described as having excellent English. That matters more than you might think. When you can ask questions and understand the answers right away, the park becomes a story you follow instead of scenery you just scan.
Even better, the guide doesn’t lock you into one fixed pace. If you tell them you want more time in one spot, they’ll typically make it happen; if you’d rather move on sooner, they’re willing to adjust. That kind of control is especially helpful for couples or jet-lagged travelers who don’t want to spend the day forcing their energy level to match someone else’s schedule.
And yes, there’s a nice extra: guides have been known to suggest reasonable Bavarian restaurants when asked. It’s not the main event, but it’s a useful payoff. You leave the park with a next step for your evening, not just a pile of photos.
Southern vs. Northern English Garden: The Mood Shift You’ll Feel
The English Garden is huge, and it doesn’t feel like one thing. It’s described in a way that’s easy to understand: southern areas are well visited, while the northern side feels more like relaxed countryside.
On a guided rickshaw tour, you don’t just see both; you feel the transition. It’s one of those subtle travel moments: you realize you’re not simply “at a park,” you’re moving through different versions of the park experience. That makes the 2-hour format work. You get enough variety without burning your entire day.
If you’re planning Munich around a tight schedule, this matters. Two hours can give you both the classic “I saw it” highlights and the calmer “I could live here” feeling.
Price and What You Get for $155.33 (Up to Two)

At $155.33 per group (up to 2), the first question is obvious: is it worth it compared to walking?
For me, the value comes down to three things:
- You buy time and comfort. A rickshaw reduces the physical grind in a park this size. If you’re walking you’ll cover ground, but you’ll also spend mental effort planning routes.
- You get a private, responsive experience. This isn’t a big group bus tour where you’re watching from the side. It’s designed so you can adjust your pace.
- You get English support tied to real places. Being able to ask questions at the moment you’re standing near the Chinese tower, the surfer wave area, or the lake changes how the sights land.
So yes, it costs more than self-guided exploring. But it’s not priced like a luxury fantasy either. It’s positioned as a practical way to see a lot in a short time while keeping the ride personal.
Also note: it’s commonly booked about 91 days in advance on average. That doesn’t mean you must book far ahead, but if your dates are tight, earlier planning is smart.
Timing, Weather, and Getting the Most From a 2-Hour Ride
This is listed as about 2 hours. That duration is perfect for people who want highlights without turning the day into a marathon.
Because the tour is described as requiring good weather, I’d treat the forecast as part of your planning, not an afterthought. If the day turns wet or stormy, you might be offered a different date or a full refund.
A few practical ways to get the most out of it:
- Dress for comfort first. You’re riding, but you’ll still be stopping, looking, and moving around the park areas.
- Bring your curiosity. The best moments happen when you ask. If you want context about what you’re seeing—ask.
- Have one or two priorities. For example, if the lake matters most to you, tell your guide early so they can manage time accordingly.
Who This Tour Is Best For
This tour is especially suited to:
- Couples who want a shared experience with privacy and room to talk
- People with limited time in Munich who still want to see meaningful English Garden features
- Visitors who value an English-speaking guide and want to understand what they’re seeing, not just look at it
- Travelers who like the park vibe but don’t want to spend their day measuring distances
It also makes sense if you’re the type who enjoys a guided day but dislikes rigid schedules. The ability to request longer or shorter stops keeps it feeling like your day.
Should You Book This English Garden Rickshaw Tour?
If you want the English Garden experience with less planning, less walking fatigue, and more local context, I think this is a strong choice. The big wins are private rickshaw comfort, English-speaking guidance, and the chance to hit the major named sights—Chinese tower, surfer wave area, Kleinhesseloher See, Hirschau, Aumeister, the amphitheater—without feeling rushed.
Book it if you’re traveling as a couple, you want an efficient two-hour overview, and you like the idea of asking questions as you go. I’d hold off only if your travel dates are inflexible and weather is likely to be poor, since this activity needs good conditions.
FAQ
How long is the private rickshaw tour in the English Garden?
The tour lasts about 2 hours.
What is the price?
It is listed at $155.33 per group, up to 2 people.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1, 80539 München, Germany, and ends back at the same meeting point.
What should I do if the weather is bad?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Is it a private tour?
Yes. It’s private, so only your group will participate.





























