REVIEW · MALLORCA
Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Loco Wheels · Bookable on Viator
A scooter tour in Mallorca is the fast lane to local life. This Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour puts you on guided back roads with the kind of pacing that feels relaxed, not rushed. I like the route-planning (including avoiding the worst traffic) and the fact you get real stops, not just a drive-by. One drawback to know up front: you’ll need the right riding setup and experience, because you’re actually driving the scooter.
The tour also has a small-group feel, capped at 15 people, and it ends right back where you started in Palma. I also appreciate the practical details: it’s in English, you get a mobile ticket, and the meeting point is easy to reach by public transport. Just remember that it’s weather-dependent, since the ride needs good conditions.
In This Review
- Key Things To Know Before You Ride
- Getting Set Up at LocoWheels in Palma
- Scooter Basics: Ages, License, and Who Should Book
- The 3.5-Hour Easy Rider Route: Palma to Puigpunyent and Back
- Palma de Mallorca: Where the Ride Starts
- Puigpunyent: Scenic Back-Roads Feel + Main Square Drink
- Es Capdella: Another Island Flavor Stop
- Calvià: Finish the Loop With a Sense of Place
- Back to Palma: Easy End, No Extra Hassles
- Why the Back-Roads Approach Feels Better Than Traffic
- Price and Value: What $78.27 Buys You
- Timing, Weather, and What to Wear
- Loco Wheels Service Style: Friendly, Flexible, and Built for Riders
- Should You Book This Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour?
- Where is the meeting point, and when does the tour start?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- How many travelers are on this tour?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- What fitness level do I need?
- What are the minimum age requirements and license rules for scooters?
- Can two people ride on one scooter, and how do we book it?
- Is weather important for this experience?
Key Things To Know Before You Ride

- Small group size (max 15) keeps the ride more manageable and less stressful.
- English-language tour makes the directions and stop explanations easier to follow.
- A real break in Puigpunyent’s main square gives you time to stretch and grab a drink.
- Your scooter booking is tied to riders (1 person = 1 scooter; 1 scooter can fit 2 people if you book it that way).
- Good road-and-traffic choices are part of the experience, not an afterthought.
Getting Set Up at LocoWheels in Palma
Most good scooter days start with a calm meeting point. This tour begins at LocoWheels Mallorca Scooter, Motorcycle Rental & Tour at Plaça de la Quartera, 7, Centre, 07002 Palma. It’s scheduled for 10:30 am, and the activity ends back at the same place, so you’re not scrambling to catch a later connection.
Since the location is near public transportation, I think it’s a smart setup if you’re staying somewhere central in Palma and don’t want to plan for tricky taxis. Plus, being able to return to the same spot matters with scooters—because you’re done when you’re done. No second guessing parking or timing.
One more practical point: you’ll receive confirmation at booking time, and you use a mobile ticket. That’s useful here because a scooter tour is already time-focused; the fewer extra steps at the start, the better.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Mallorca
Scooter Basics: Ages, License, and Who Should Book

This tour isn’t a casual “hop on and cruise” situation. You’re required to have a valid driver’s license and experience driving scooters. That’s not them being strict for fun—it’s what keeps the ride smooth for everyone.
Here are the minimums you need to follow:
- For 125cc scooters: minimum age 21
- For 50cc scooters: minimum age 18
- In both cases: your license must be valid, and you need scooter experience
You also want moderate physical fitness. That usually means you should be comfortable with the basics: getting on and off the scooter repeatedly during stops, handling short periods of riding without needing long breaks, and staying steady in your seat while you follow the group.
If you’re thinking of bringing a passenger, pay attention to how booking works:
- If you book 1 person, you’re booking 1 scooter
- If you need one scooter for two people, book 1 person because 1 scooter fits 2 people
This is the kind of rule that can save you from a headache later. If you book two separate spots when you only want one scooter, you could end up paying for more scooters than you need.
Finally, the tour caps at 15 travelers. That size is a sweet spot: large enough that it doesn’t feel awkward, small enough that you’re not lost in a traffic jam of helmets.
The 3.5-Hour Easy Rider Route: Palma to Puigpunyent and Back

The ride is about 3 hours 30 minutes (approx.). Short enough to feel like a highlight, not so long that you’re exhausted by midday. And because it’s guided, you don’t have to stress about navigation—just focus on riding and enjoying the stops.
Here’s the flow of the day, stop by stop:
Palma de Mallorca: Where the Ride Starts
You begin in Palma, which is a good choice for two reasons. First, it’s an easy base to reach. Second, starting in the city usually means you can transition quickly into quieter roads without losing too much time.
Think of Palma as your “warm-up” phase—get your bearings, get used to the scooter, and settle into the rhythm.
Puigpunyent: Scenic Back-Roads Feel + Main Square Drink
Next is Puigpunyent, where you also get a scheduled break. You’ll stop at the main square for a drink. That matters more than it sounds.
When you ride for hours in a small group, your brain needs little resets. A real pause in a central square gives you a chance to stand, stretch your legs, and regroup before you keep rolling. It also turns the tour from a moving sightseeing session into a mini local experience—coffee and conversation in the middle of your ride.
Es Capdella: Another Island Flavor Stop
Then you head to Es Capdella. You won’t be stuck in a formal long stop based on the tour format, but the value here is the pacing: you’re using the scooter to connect different parts of Mallorca efficiently, while still breaking things up with stops.
If you like taking photos and getting glimpses of neighborhoods and road texture, these mid-route stops are where you’ll feel you’re truly moving through the island, not just circling it.
Calvià: Finish the Loop With a Sense of Place
After Es Capdella, the tour continues to Calvià. Again, this is part of the route-building logic: you see different tones of the island on one ride without needing a full day behind handlebars.
I like how Calvià feels in this kind of format—like you’re ending with a recognizable name and a sense of where you are, then rolling back to base.
Back to Palma: Easy End, No Extra Hassles
The tour ends back at the meeting point in Palma. That clean loop is one of those small things that pays off. You don’t have to plan a ride after you finish, and you can go straight into lunch, beach time, or a stroll while the scooter day is still fresh.
Why the Back-Roads Approach Feels Better Than Traffic

A guided scooter tour lives or dies on route choices. The best versions of this kind of experience are the ones that help you avoid the worst traffic and keep you on roads that feel fun to ride—curves, views, and steady flow.
On this tour, the whole point is a more relaxed driving experience with scenic roads and less gridlock. One of the most praised parts of this setup is exactly that: routing through scenic back roads and avoiding heavy traffic.
That’s more than comfort. It changes how you experience Mallorca. With less stop-and-go, you can actually look around while you ride. And with a guide controlling pacing, you’re less likely to get separated or pressured into unsafe gaps.
Also, having a guide like Thomas (mentioned in an Easy Rider tour experience) matters because a good guide helps everyone—new riders included—follow smoothly. The group just works better when the leader is paying attention.
Price and Value: What $78.27 Buys You

At $78.27 per person for about 3 hours 30 minutes, this tour sits in a price zone that makes sense for a guided scooter experience.
Here’s how I think about value on tours like this:
- You’re paying for the guided route, meaning you’re not doing the mental work of planning a fun loop.
- You’re also paying for the time efficiency—you see multiple areas without spending your whole day commuting across the island.
- The booking rules tie you to a scooter, so you’re not buying a vague activity. You’re buying an experience that has riding built into it.
One thing to double-check before you go (not because it’s tricky, just because it’s smart): what’s included with your booking in terms of the scooter itself. The booking structure strongly suggests scooter time is part of the package, but always read your confirmation details when you get them.
If you compare it to the cost of renting a scooter plus figuring out a route plus spending time trial-and-error, a guided half-day can feel like a shortcut to a better day.
Timing, Weather, and What to Wear

This tour starts at 10:30 am, which is a practical time of day. You’re not competing with late-morning chaos, and you’re often still early enough to enjoy calmer conditions on the roads.
Weather is key. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That tells me the operator plans to keep safety and road conditions front and center.
What I’d wear:
- Clothes you don’t mind getting a little sun-warmed
- Shoes with solid grip (riding days punish sloppy footwear)
- Sunglasses and sunscreen, because you’ll likely be out and exposed
Also, you’ll want your ride-day essentials ready, because the tour rhythm is built around stops plus riding, not extended shopping breaks.
Loco Wheels Service Style: Friendly, Flexible, and Built for Riders

Loco Wheels shows up consistently in the way people describe their experience—mainly around the service. I’d focus on three themes that pop up again and again:
First, scooters are described as being in excellent condition. That matters. If a scooter feels sketchy, the whole day gets less fun fast.
Second, the team is described as friendly and flexible, with owners willing to help. One review notes that the owner provided a beautiful route to explore, which fits the idea that they understand what makes a ride enjoyable.
Third, the guiding style gets praise. For this experience, Thomas is specifically mentioned for taking people on the Easy Rider tour. That kind of consistency tells me the operator isn’t just renting vehicles; they’re trying to make the driving part work smoothly.
There’s also a wider pattern from other Loco Wheels experiences: support systems and backup planning are part of how they run longer scooter tours. Even if this one is shorter, it’s a reassuring sign that they’ve thought about rider comfort and keeping plans moving.
Should You Book This Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour?

I think you should book if you want Mallorca by scooter without the stress of route planning. This is especially appealing if:
- You already ride scooters and want an organized day on the road
- You like scenic back-roads more than you like sitting in traffic
- You want a half-day format that still feels like a real experience, not a quick photo lap
- You appreciate a drink stop that breaks up the ride and gives you a moment on your feet
I’d skip or seriously reconsider if you’re not confident driving scooters, or if the idea of moderate physical effort on a moving ride day makes you nervous. This isn’t a beginner-friendly drive-by situation. It’s a rider’s tour.
If you’re in that good middle—experienced enough to feel comfortable, but wanting the local guidance—you’ll likely come away feeling like you saw more of Mallorca than you would have by sticking to only city streets. And you’ll finish back in Palma, ready to keep exploring with your scooter day behind you.
FAQ
What is the duration of the Easy Rider Mallorca Scooter Tour?
The tour lasts about 3 hours 30 minutes.
Where is the meeting point, and when does the tour start?
The tour starts at LocoWheels Mallorca Scooter, Motorcycle Rental & Tour, Plaça de la Quartera, 7, Centre, 07002 Palma and begins at 10:30 am.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
How many travelers are on this tour?
The tour has a maximum of 15 travelers.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes, it’s offered with a mobile ticket.
What fitness level do I need?
You should have moderate physical fitness.
What are the minimum age requirements and license rules for scooters?
For 125cc scooters, the minimum age is 21. For 50cc scooters, the minimum age is 18. In both cases, you need a valid driver’s license and experience driving scooters.
Can two people ride on one scooter, and how do we book it?
If you book 1 person, that books 1 scooter. If you want 1 scooter for 2 people, book 1 person because 1 scooter fits 2 people.
Is weather important for this experience?
Yes. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
































