3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM)

REVIEW · MONTREAL

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM)

  • 5.0332 reviews
  • 3 hours (approx.)
  • From $70.80
Book on Viator →

Operated by Ça Roule Montreal · Bookable on Viator

One good ride can cover Montreal fast. This 3-hour bike tour pairs Old Port views with food, parks, and neighborhood stories, plus an optional e-bike upgrade for the hills.

I especially like that you get a structured route with real stops, not just free-form riding, and that the tour includes a drink and a snack so you don’t have to plan lunch. One consideration: you’ll still be sharing city streets, and a small handful of people flagged bike-condition and group-mix issues.

Quick Take: What Makes This Montreal Bike Tour Worth It

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - Quick Take: What Makes This Montreal Bike Tour Worth It

  • Two route options (City Tour or Vista Architecture) so you’re not locked into one style of sightseeing
  • E-bike upgrade helps on Montreal’s hills and keeps the group together
  • Food stop built in, with either St-Viateur Bagel or Première Moisson tasting depending on the tour
  • Beer or wine + bottled water included, which turns the tour into a proper reset, not a rushed snack
  • A park-and-neighborhood mix that gives you a feel for Old Montreal, Latin Quarter, Mount Royal area, and more
  • Real guide personalities show up in reviews, with names like Mike, Pasquale, Nicolas, Julien, and Renee popping up often

Why a 3-Hour Bike-and-Drink Tour Works in Montreal

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - Why a 3-Hour Bike-and-Drink Tour Works in Montreal
Montreal is perfect for bikes—bike lanes help, and the neighborhoods are close enough that you can connect them without losing the whole day to transit. What makes this tour smart is the timing and structure: you get around three hours of guided riding, with stops that hit the city’s biggest “first time here” magnets.

It also respects how travel days really feel. You’re in a new place, you’re figuring out streets and signs, and you’re probably trying to eat well. By bundling route, guide, helmet, water, and an alcoholic drink, the experience reduces decision fatigue. You can focus on seeing, not scheduling.

The other win is that the tour is designed for motion. If you like walking but want more ground covered, biking lets you “stack” sights: Old Port waterfront energy, Latin Quarter streets, and park scenery around Mount Royal—all in one outing.

Other bike & e-bike tours in Montreal

Price and What You’re Really Buying for $70.80

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - Price and What You’re Really Buying for $70.80
At $70.80 per person, this is not a budget-only activity. But you are paying for a lot of bundled value:

  • A professional licensed guide
  • A helmet and a multi-speed comfort city bike (21-speed)
  • Bottled water
  • A food tasting stop
  • A glass of beer or wine
  • Local taxes included

For me, the big value piece is the guide + route. Montreal is full of history, but reading about it isn’t the same as riding past it. A good guide helps you notice what you’d otherwise miss: why certain areas developed when they did, what the city chose to keep, and how the neighborhoods connect.

And that drink? It’s not just a perk. It gives the tour a natural “pause” point, so the last stretch doesn’t feel like you’re pedaling only to pedal.

Choose Your Ride: City Tour vs Vista Architecture

This tour runs in two distinct styles. Pick the one that matches how you want to see Montreal.

City Tour: Old Port to Latin Quarter to Mount Royal Area

The City Tour is the “classic neighborhoods” option, roughly a 9-mile (14 km) ride. It moves from the Old Port area out toward the Latin Quarter, then connects onward past Mont-Royal Park and into Old Montreal.

The highlight food stop on this route is a world-famous St-Viateur Bagel stop for a snack. If you want the Montreal you can smell—bagel steam, bakeries, that sidewalk food moment—this is the best fit.

Vista Architecture Tour: Estacade Crossing and Bakery Tasting

The Vista Architecture Tour leans more into built form and big-city views. It’s about a 13-mile (20 km) ride and includes the Estacade, the structure that spans the Saint-Lawrence River.

You’ll also stop for a Première Moisson bakery tasting. If you care about architecture, river panoramas, and a longer “fuller day” style ride, this option usually feels more satisfying than the shorter neighborhood loop.

Meeting at Ça Roule Montreal and Getting Set for the Ride

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - Meeting at Ça Roule Montreal and Getting Set for the Ride
Your tour starts at Ça Roule Montreal – Bike tours & bike rentals in Montreal, 27 Rue de la Commune E. Build in time to arrive early—at least 15 to 20 minutes—so you’re not stressed at check-in.

Here’s what you can count on before wheels start turning:

  • A helmet is provided
  • You’ll ride a multi-speed comfort city bike (21-speed)
  • Bottled water is included
  • Your departure is either in the morning (around 9:30am) or the afternoon (around 1pm)

The tour is also offered in English, and the minimum age is 13. The ride is labeled moderate fitness, so if you can comfortably bike for a bit and don’t mind hills, you’ll be fine.

Montreal hills are real. Several reviewers explicitly recommended the electric bike option for long climbs, especially in summer heat or if your group includes mixed skill levels. If you’re unsure, consider upgrading. It’s the difference between arriving fresh for the rest of your day versus arriving tired and cranky.

The Stops That Give You a Real Sense of Neighborhoods

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - The Stops That Give You a Real Sense of Neighborhoods
The tour includes time at a set of big “anchor” areas. Even when your chosen route focuses more on bagels or architecture, the stops help you stitch Montreal into one coherent picture.

Montreal On Wheels / Ça Roule Montreal

This is the start point and intro. You’ll get ready here, then roll out into the city with a guide.

Old Port of Montréal

Old Port is the easy win: waterfront energy, historic streets, and that Montreal “arrival” feeling. You don’t just see it—you cycle through it, which gives you a stronger sense of distance and layout than a quick photo stop.

Quartier Latin

This is where Montreal feels more like a living neighborhood—student vibe, older streets, and the kind of local street texture you can’t replicate from a museum. If you like people-watching, this is a good area to savor.

Mount Royal Park

Even people who don’t plan hikes often love the Mount Royal area from street level. The biking route helps you experience the park as part of the city, not as a distant viewpoint you only see on postcards.

La Fontaine Park

La Fontaine Park adds a breath of green time. It’s a helpful contrast to Old Montreal’s stone and Quartier Latin’s streets, and it gives the ride a more relaxed rhythm.

City Tour Details: What You’ll Feel on the Old Montreal Loop

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - City Tour Details: What You’ll Feel on the Old Montreal Loop
If you pick the City Tour, think of it as a ride through Montreal’s most visit-worthy “clusters.”

You’ll start near Old Port, then travel toward the Latin Quarter. Expect a guided pacing that keeps the group together while still letting you look around during short stops. You’ll then pass by Mont-Royal Park and keep cycling toward Old Montreal.

The standout “food memory” is the St-Viateur Bagel stop. It’s not just eating. It’s timing. You get that classic Montreal snack while the bike tour momentum is still strong, so you don’t waste the day hunting for one iconic bite.

A practical note: part of the experience is riding in traffic rhythms. Montreal can be bike-friendly, but you’re still among cars at intersections and along certain stretches. If you’re nervous around moving vehicles, choose the e-bike and lean into the comfort-bike setup.

Vista Architecture Tour Details: River Views and Big Built-Form Moments

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - Vista Architecture Tour Details: River Views and Big Built-Form Moments
The Vista Architecture Tour is longer and more visual. You’re getting more distance—about 13 miles (20 km)—with a focus on architecture and sweeping perspectives.

The Estacade crossing is the moment to anticipate. Since it spans the Saint-Lawrence River, it gives you that “okay, this is the city’s scale” feeling that photos often miss. You can see how neighborhoods connect to the water instead of treating the river as a background.

Food-wise, this route includes a tasting at Première Moisson. It’s a solid choice if you want Montreal bakery culture tied to the longer architecture ride.

This option tends to suit you if you like taking the scenic route and you don’t mind a steadier physical effort. If you’re short on time, but still want a big “Montreal wow” factor, it’s the one.

The Guide Factor: When the Stories Make the Ride

3 Hour Montreal City Bike Tour with Wine or Beer (AM & PM) - The Guide Factor: When the Stories Make the Ride
This tour lives or dies on the guide. The reviews are heavy on positive guide energy and a focus on safety and group control.

Specific guide names showing up often include:

  • Mike, praised for making biking feel safe and comfortable while sharing lots of local context
  • Pasquale, noted for being entertaining and thorough
  • Nicolas, praised for history and pride in Montreal
  • Julien, praised for clear instructions and attentive safety
  • Renee, praised for timing stops and managing weather well

That matters because Montreal can be confusing when you’re new. A good guide helps you connect what you’re seeing to why it matters. It also helps you ride confidently, which makes the whole experience more relaxing.

Bike Comfort, Hills, and Group Dynamics (The Stuff to Know Before You Ride)

Montreal is not flat. Even if you’re a strong cyclist, you may want the e-bike if you’re with family, if it’s hot, or if you don’t want to arrive sweaty.

A few practical issues came up in reviews, so I’d suggest you keep them in mind:

  • Some people mentioned the bike condition could be better, like slipping chains or worn gears. That’s rare enough that many people still rate the tour highly, but it’s worth checking your bike at pick-up.
  • A few reviewers wanted mirrors for better traffic visibility. If you’re used to riding with mirrors, it might be worth mentally preparing for how you’ll handle traffic awareness without them.
  • One criticism was about the mix of regular bikes and e-bikes in the same group. If you’re on a regular bike and you prefer a slower, more even pace, an e-bike can reduce stress.

My advice: at the shop, do a quick personal check. Squeeze brakes. Test shifting. Make sure the seat feels right. Then go. A small check makes the whole ride smoother.

Food, Drink, and Why That Included Stop Feels Like a Bonus

This tour isn’t just sightseeing. It feeds you. You get bottled water, plus a glass of beer or wine and a snack at the food tasting stop.

That drink-and-snack pairing is what turns the ride from a “tour bus experience with wheels” into something you can enjoy like a local activity. It gives you a moment to sit, cool down, and reset your senses while the guide keeps things moving.

It also helps you avoid the usual trap in cities: you spend all morning searching for food, then you miss half the afternoon. Here, the food is scheduled, so you can plan your remaining time with confidence.

Some reviews also mention that the provided rental time can extend beyond the guided portion, with at least one person describing keeping bikes until around 6pm. If that’s part of your package, it’s a great way to turn your tour into a longer day without extra rental hassles.

Timing and How to Plan Your Day Around It

Your tour runs about 3 hours. That’s the bike time plus tour pacing with short stops. If you’re tight on your schedule, book it early in your trip so you can use what you learn to plan the rest of your days.

The morning departure (about 9:30am) is a smart pick if you want energy for the rest of the day. The afternoon departure (about 1pm) is better if you’re sleeping in, arriving by late flight, or want something lighter after lunch.

Weather matters. If conditions are poor, it may get canceled and you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.

Who This Tour Fits Best

This is an excellent fit if you:

  • Want to see multiple Montreal neighborhoods in one outing
  • Prefer active sightseeing over long museum days
  • Like the idea of included food and a drink
  • Are comfortable biking with some hills (and you’ll likely feel much better with the e-bike)

It’s also a good first booking because it helps you understand how Montreal neighborhoods relate. Once you’ve ridden Old Port, Latin Quarter, and the Mount Royal area, planning future walks gets easier.

If you’re very risk-averse around traffic, or if you need perfectly flat, stress-free riding, you might prefer a walking tour or a route with less road exposure. But for most people, the guided pacing and helmets make it manageable.

Should You Book This Montreal City Bike Tour?

Yes, you should book it if you want an efficient, fun way to learn Montreal’s shape without feeling like you’re rushing. The mix of Old Port + Latin Quarter + Mount Royal area is the kind of “first time here” coverage that pays off fast. Add in the bagel or bakery tasting and the beer or wine, and it’s a real value play for a 3-hour day.

I’d choose the City Tour if you want the most iconic food moment (St-Viateur Bagel) and a classic neighborhood sampler. I’d choose Vista Architecture if you want longer distance, Estacade river views, and a stronger architecture focus.

If you do book, show up early, check your bike at the start, and seriously consider the e-bike if you don’t want hills to steal your fun.

FAQ

How long is the Montreal bike tour?

The tour is about 3 hours.

What are the departure times?

You can choose between a morning departure around 9:30am and an afternoon departure around 1pm.

Where does the tour start?

The meeting point is Ça Roule Montreal – Bike tours & bike rentals in Montreal, 27 Rue de la Commune E, Montréal, QC H2Y 1H9, Canada.

Does the tour include a helmet and water?

Yes. Helmet, bottled water, and a multi-speed comfort city bike are included.

What food and drink are included?

You’ll get a food tasting at one stop, plus a glass of beer or wine.

Is there an option for electric bikes?

Yes. You can upgrade to an e-bike.

What kind of fitness level do I need?

It’s recommended for travelers with a moderate physical fitness level.

What’s the minimum age to join?

The minimum age is 13 years.

Is the tour offered in English?

Yes, it’s offered in English.

Is hotel pickup included?

No. Hotel pickup and drop off are not included. The tour ends back at the meeting point.

Explore Montreal