Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner

REVIEW · SINGAPORE

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner

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Streetlights and scooters meet at dusk.

This Singapore kick scooter tour with dinner mixes famous sights with darker little stories, then sends you gliding along the Singapore River after sundown. I like the way the route threads together neighborhoods (Selegie, Dhoby Ghaut, River Valley) with the river’s bridges and skyline, so you get variety fast. I also like that the evening includes dinner, dessert, and beer, turning a sightseeing plan into a full night out. One thing to consider: the schedule depends on good weather, and you’ll be riding for about 3.5 hours.

What makes it work is the storytelling. With guide Ping leading the way, the stops feel like a guided walk through Singapore’s hidden angles, not a checklist. You’ll hear context at churches, parks, and old courtyard houses, then shift gears for river-time scenes at Robertson Quay, Clarke Quay, and Boat Quay.

The biggest practical drawback for some people is the riding itself. There’s a strict weight limit (100 kg) and it’s not for children 7 and younger, so it’s best if you’re comfortable on a scooter and can handle a moving evening.

Key points to know before you go

Small group size (up to 15) helps the pacing feel personal without being slow.

Sunset timing sets you up to see the city light up along the waterfront after dark.

Stops are story-driven: churches, temples, old courtyard houses, and war memorial context.

Dinner is part of the tour rhythm with Hainanese chicken rice, plus dessert later.

Rochor Original Beancurd shows up at the right moment, when your sweet tooth kicks in.

The Route Starts in Selegie, Then Builds Toward the River

The tour starts at 73 Dunlop St, Singapore 209401 at 5:30 pm, and it runs about 3 hours 30 minutes. That early evening start matters. You’re not just seeing Singapore at night; you’re watching it transition. You begin in central neighborhoods where street life is still in motion, then the route gradually slides toward the river area for the after-sunset part.

What I appreciate is how the route is staged. You start with local streets and buildings that people often walk past in daylight. Then, once the city darkens, you get the payoff by riding along Robertson Quay, Clarke Quay, and Boat Quay. The official highlights even call out 12 colorful bridges of the Singapore River, which tells you this isn’t random wandering. It’s a planned sequence built for views and mood.

Also, you get a mobile ticket, a disposable poncho, and food and drink included. That combo keeps the evening from turning into a spend-and-stress event.

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Scooter Time: How the Riding Fits With the Sights

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Scooter Time: How the Riding Fits With the Sights
Kick scooters are not just transportation here. They shape how you experience Singapore. The city is compact, and scooter speed lets you cover a lot of ground without feeling like you’re bouncing between distant blocks on public transit.

The tour also makes the route more “human.” When you’re on a scooter, you notice small details you’d miss from a car or bus: changes in street width, a sudden alley, the angle of a doorway, or how a park path funnels you toward a specific photo spot.

Practical note: the tour is capped at 15 people, so you’re not stuck in a giant line. Still, plan for a moving evening. You’ll have short stops, then you’ll ride again.

And yes, there’s a weather factor. The tour requires good weather, and you’ll have that disposable poncho, but the event still may be adjusted or canceled if conditions are bad.

Selegie to Dhoby Ghaut: Secret Bars and Old Corners

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - Selegie to Dhoby Ghaut: Secret Bars and Old Corners
The early stops set the tone: Singapore is full of places that look ordinary until someone points out the story behind them.

Stop 1: Selegie

You’ll start in Selegie, described as a neighborhood with secret bars and interesting eateries. It’s a good opening stop because it frames the evening theme: there’s more going on than what the street sign says. Even before the river, you’ll start thinking in layers.

Stop 2: Orchard Road Presbyterian Church

This church dates to 1878, and the tour highlights its darker past. When you hear that kind of context at dusk, the building feels less like a photo subject and more like evidence of how complicated the city’s story has been.

Stop 3: Fort Canning Park Tree Tunnel

An underground passage with a perpetual queue is a strong description, and it’s the kind of spot you’ll want your camera ready for. It’s also a nice tempo shift: after streets and churches, you’re suddenly in a more enclosed, fun-to-walk-through space.

Courtyard Houses, Temples, and Churches: The City’s Many Facets

After that first set of “what you thought you knew” stops, you get a run of religious and heritage locations. This portion works because it shows how Singapore has held multiple communities side by side.

Stop 4: Former House of Tan Yeok Nee

This one stands out for sheer specificity. The tour points out that it’s one of two Chinese courtyard houses left standing. It also notes it was sold for about S$88 million in 2022. Even if you don’t know the architecture, the fact that a courtyard house can become an ultra-valuable property today makes the story click.

Stop 5: Church of the Sacred Heart (1910)

A Catholic church from 1910 brings you into another slice of the city’s past. Short stop, but a chance to compare how different communities built their landmarks over time.

Stop 6: Sri Thendayuthapani Temple (1859)

This Hindu temple was built by the Chettiars and is dedicated to Lord Murugan, called the God of War. The tour keeps it tight: you’re not stuck for an hour, but you get a clear cultural anchor.

If you’re the kind of person who likes your sightseeing with a story, this cluster is a big reason the tour earns high marks. You’re not just passing by. You’re getting context in bite-size chunks between rides.

Dinner at Feng Ji Chicken Rice: Where the Evening Turns Practical

The schedule then makes sense: you eat when energy is high enough to enjoy it. Stop 7: Feng Ji Chicken Rice is your dinner stop, lasting about 35 minutes, and it’s included.

Hainanese chicken rice is simple in concept, but it’s a classic Singapore move for a reason. It’s comforting, quick to eat, and easy to handle on a tour schedule. You’re also not stuck in a long sit-down meal that ruins the pacing.

What I like most is that dinner timing usually lines up with the “stories” mode. You’ve already gotten early stops that feel slightly dark or mysterious. Then you switch to something familiar and satisfying before the waterfront section, where the mood naturally lightens.

After Sundown on the Singapore River: Robertson Quay to Boat Quay

Secrets of Singapore Kick Scooter Tour with Dinner - After Sundown on the Singapore River: Robertson Quay to Boat Quay
This is the part you remember.

Once you hit Robertson Quay, the tour leans into nighttime vibes. The itinerary even adds a story detail: smooth-coated otters can come out along Robertson Quay. Riding alongside the river after dark gives the area a different feel than the daytime photos you see online.

Stop 8: Robertson Quay (about 30 minutes)

You’ll ride alongside the river and pause for an exposé of a past horrific crime. The point isn’t shock value; it’s how Singapore’s waterfront has always been tied to real people and real events, not just postcard views.

Stop 9: Clarke Quay (about 5 minutes)

This is framed as an afterdark hotspot. It’s brief, but it helps you connect the dots between river segments and why they’re popular at night.

Stop 10: Boat Quay (about 5 minutes)

Boat Quay is described as a strip of watering holes near the financial district, including mention of a favorite bar of a figure connected to the UK’s oldest merchant bank, Barings. Whether you catch every name detail or just absorb the vibe, the river here feels like the city’s social engine.

Then you get the history grounding again.

Stop 11: Civilian War Memorial (about 5 minutes)

World War II’s impact on Singapore and local people comes into focus. It’s a quick stop, but it changes how you interpret the earlier “dark stories.” Instead of random creepiness, you get a more grounded sense of why the city holds onto certain memories.

Raffles Hotel Arcade, Beach Road, and Fortune Centre: Dark Tales in City-Scale

After the river, the route shifts back toward landmark territory. The pacing stays tight, which helps you keep momentum without feeling like the scooter is taking over your whole evening.

Stop 12: Raffles Hotel Arcade (about 10 minutes)

The tour frames it as a place with secrets hiding behind the scenes. The arcade setting also makes a nice change after open-river views: you’re under a roof, surrounded by an iconic Singapore setting, and your guide’s stories help connect old glamour with street-level reality.

Stop 13: Beach Road (about 10 minutes)

This stop includes a tale of a meat cleaver and an almost severed hand, plus a mala hotpot joint. It’s not presented like horror entertainment; it’s used to show how ordinary street corners can hold weird, human-scale legends.

Stop 14: Fortune Centre (about 10 minutes)

Described as a vegetarian food haven with more than meets the eye. Even if you don’t eat here, this stop helps you understand how Singapore can be both practical and surprising at once. It’s a useful reminder that food neighborhoods are part of the city’s identity, not just places to grab a meal.

Beancurd Dessert at Rochor Original Beancurd: The Sweet Reset

Stop 15: Rochor Original Beancurd is about 15 minutes, and it’s included. This is the point where the evening shifts from “stories and riding” to “slow down and taste.”

Beancurd dessert is one of those Singapore treats that feels light but still satisfying. After the scooter time and the river segment, it’s a clean reset for your palate and a comfortable end-of-tour snack. The alley-style setting adds to the experience too: it’s described as a hidden back alley, which fits the tour’s theme perfectly.

Ten Square (Landmark of Good @ 1 Short Street) and the Final Streets

Stop 16: Ten Square, Landmark of Good @ 1 Short Street is only about 2 minutes, but it’s memorable because it’s described as one of two luxury car vending machines in Singapore. A quick stop like this works as a final “only-in-Singapore” moment.

Then you ride back to the start point. The route ends back at 73 Dunlop St, so there’s no confusing hop between locations.

Price and Value: What $55.43 Buys You

At $55.43 per person, this isn’t a budget-only activity, but it also isn’t just paying for scooter rental. The price covers kick scooter rental, a licensed tour guide, food and drink, and a disposable poncho.

For me, the value logic is simple: you’re buying (1) guided storytelling, (2) a scooter that helps you cover the city efficiently, and (3) included meals. Dinner at a proper local chicken rice restaurant plus dessert later would add up quickly if you planned it yourself. Add in the guide’s route decisions and the fact the tour is built around sunset river scenery, and the total starts to look fair.

One more value point: the group size is small. Up to 15 keeps the scooter experience manageable, and it helps you get more meaningful stops instead of just passing through.

Best Fit: Who This Tour Works For

This tour makes the most sense if you want:

  • An active way to see central Singapore in an evening
  • Story-based sightseeing that mixes churches, temples, parks, and war memory with river nightlife
  • Included food that’s timed to keep you comfortable

It’s less ideal if you:

  • Want a slow, sit-down museum style evening
  • Are sensitive to riding after dark
  • Need an activity that works regardless of weather

Also, it has clear limits: no children aged 7 and under, and a weight cap of 100 kg.

Quick Practical Tips So You Enjoy It More

A few common-sense things that help with scooter tours in Singapore:

  • Wear shoes you don’t mind getting a little warm or dusty. The route includes sidewalks and short stop walks.
  • Bring a light layer. Even in warm weather, evenings by the river can feel cooler.
  • Expect short stops and steady movement. This is a “lots of stops, short time each” format.

Should You Book This Singapore Kick Scooter Tour With Dinner?

If you like Singapore’s contrasts and you want an evening that mixes river views, neighborhood texture, and included meals, I’d book it. The route is clearly designed to give you both landmark familiarity (like the Raffles area and war memorial context) and the off-beat feel of back streets, alleys, and story-heavy stops.

If your top priority is a quiet, purely scenic walk, you might find the scooter pace too active. But if you want a fun way to learn the city without spending all evening researching where to go next, this one is a strong fit.

FAQ

FAQ

What time does the tour start, and how long does it last?

It starts at 5:30 pm and runs for about 3 hours 30 minutes.

Where does the tour start and end?

The tour starts and ends back at 73 Dunlop St, Singapore 209401.

What’s included in the price?

Kick scooter rental, a licensed tour guide, food and drink, and a disposable poncho are included.

Is dinner included?

Yes. Dinner is included at Feng Ji Chicken Rice, and there’s also dessert included at Rochor Original Beancurd.

Do you ride at night?

Yes. After sundown, you ride by the waterfront through Robertson Quay, Clarke Quay, and Boat Quay.

Are there age or weight limits?

Yes. Children aged 7 and younger are not allowed, and people who weigh more than 100 kg are not allowed.

What kind of weather is required?

The tour requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

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