REVIEW · AUSTIN
Taco ‘Bout Austin Bicycle Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Bike and Brew ATX · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Austin tacos taste better on a bike.
This 3-hour Taco ’Bout Austin Bicycle Tour is a fun way to cover East Austin’s sights while you snack and sip. I like that the route pairs landmarks like the Texas State Cemetery and Texas State Capitol with real food-and-drink stops, so the history doesn’t feel like homework. One thing to consider: this tour involves steady cycling, plus it runs in all weather, so bring good shoes and expect a few sweaty minutes.
My favorite part is the food plan: you get 2 tacos and 3 paired drinks, which is enough to try a few things without turning the tour into a slow-motion meal. I also really enjoy the human side of it: you’ll bike along while listening to local Austin musicians, and you pass outdoor murals and street art that make East Austin feel like a living gallery.
The main drawback is simple. It’s not for everyone—people with heart problems or other serious medical conditions should skip it, and you also need to be comfortable riding a bike since there’s no wheelchair access.
In This Review
- Key reasons this tour is worth your time
- East Austin by Bike: fast, fun, and actually practical
- Price and what you really get for $110
- How the ride feels: pace, gear, and group size
- Landmark stop: the Texas State Cemetery and why it matters
- French Legation and Moon Tower: local details you can spot fast
- Texas State Capitol: a big sight with a food-tour twist
- Outdoor murals and street art: the visual side of East Austin
- Breweries like Blue Owl and Lazarus: the tasting breaks
- Live music while you ride: a small detail that changes everything
- Tacos on the move: how the included tastings work in real life
- Who should book this tour, and who should skip it
- Should you book Taco ’Bout Austin Bicycle Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Taco ’Bout Austin Bicycle Tour?
- What does it cost?
- What food and drinks are included?
- Is a bike and helmet included?
- Is the tour guide English-speaking?
- How big is the group?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- Who can’t join this tour?
Key reasons this tour is worth your time

- Small group (up to 10) keeps the pace friendly and lets you ask questions as you ride
- Food + drink math is clear: 2 tacos and 3 paired drinks, with the pairing built into the tour
- East Austin landmarks on wheels: State Cemetery, French Legation, State Capitol, plus art stops
- Local music while biking adds atmosphere without needing a separate show ticket
- Stops at notable breweries like Blue Owl and Lazarus help you taste the craft scene, not just read about it
- Guide-led biking with a helmet and bike included makes it easier to show up ready
East Austin by Bike: fast, fun, and actually practical

If you want Austin flavor without spending a full day hopping between neighborhoods, a bike tour makes sense. In 3 hours, you can cover ground you’d otherwise take all afternoon to reach by rideshare or on foot. Plus, you get to experience the city at street level—where murals, storefronts, and music happen—rather than only seeing big sights from one angle.
This tour keeps the vibe simple: ride, stop, eat, sip, learn, repeat. You’re not stuck in a lecture. You’re moving, and the guide connects the food and drink to the places around you, which makes the history and culture feel more relevant.
Other food tours and tastings in Austin
Price and what you really get for $110

At $110 per person for 3 hours, the value is strongest because the tour is not just a ride. You’re getting the bike and helmet, a live English-speaking guide, and included tastings: 2 tacos and 3 paired drinks.
That pairing detail matters. If you’re only paying for tacos, you might order whatever looks good and call it a day. Here, the tour structures the experience so you taste drinks that are meant to go with what you’re eating. For me, that’s where the money turns into something you can actually remember, not just something you ate while walking around.
How the ride feels: pace, gear, and group size

The tour limits the group to 10 participants, which is a sweet spot. It’s small enough that you’re not lost in the crowd, but large enough to keep the energy up. You’ll have a guide leading the route, and the bike and helmet are provided, so you’re not hunting for rentals or carrying extra stuff.
Because the tour operates in all weather, it’s smart to dress for the day you get—not the perfect day you hoped for. Light layers that you can adjust, plus grippy shoes, make a real difference on pavement.
Also, this one is not for anyone who can’t comfortably ride a bicycle. If you’re wobbly, anxious, or unsure about balance, you’ll spend the ride thinking about your bike instead of the tacos and the scenery.
Landmark stop: the Texas State Cemetery and why it matters
One of the coolest moments on this kind of tour is seeing a major civic site up close, then moving on before you lose momentum. The Texas State Cemetery brings that mix of meaning and scenery. You get a sense of Texas identity in a place that’s quiet and significant, not just a photo spot.
What I like about including a cemetery on a food tour is contrast. You’re tasting East Austin’s everyday energy, but you’re also learning about the roots—people and events that shaped the state. It’s a reminder that Austin’s food culture didn’t appear out of nowhere. It grew alongside the city’s larger story.
The practical takeaway: slow down mentally when you’re there. Take in the setting, then get back on the bike when you’re ready. That rhythm helps the tour feel like a coherent experience, not a list of stops.
French Legation and Moon Tower: local details you can spot fast
East Austin has a way of rewarding attention. The tour includes the French Legation, which is the kind of place you might skip if you’re only following a generic checklist. A stop like this helps you understand how different chapters of Austin’s story overlap—who lived here, how the city changed, and why certain buildings and areas matter.
Then there’s the Moon Tower, a name you’ll recognize once you see it. It’s an iconic reference point in Austin, and it works well on a bike tour because you get the landmark in your field of view while still moving. That means you’re not stuck trying to get the perfect angle at the perfect moment—you’re learning your way around.
Other bike and e-bike tours in Austin
Texas State Capitol: a big sight with a food-tour twist
The Texas State Capitol is the kind of location that turns into a landmark for a reason. Even if you’ve seen it in photos, being there changes how you experience it. The building’s scale and the surrounding civic space make it feel like Austin’s center of gravity.
On this tour, the Capitol stop isn’t just about taking pictures. It’s about context. You’re pairing major landmarks with the food and drinks that represent the city’s present. That contrast is the point: you understand both the headline history and the day-to-day culture in a single afternoon.
Quick tip for your experience: keep your expectations flexible. On a tour like this, you’re sampling and learning at the same time, so you may not have a long, slow museum-style moment at every stop. Think of it as a guided orientation plus tastings, not a deep academic seminar.
Outdoor murals and street art: the visual side of East Austin
The route includes iconic outdoor murals and works of art, and this is where cycling really pays off. Murals are meant to be seen on foot or at street level, and biking lets you move through multiple artful blocks without turning the day into constant stopping.
I like how the tour weaves these visuals into the overall story. Art in Austin isn’t only decorative. It often reflects community identity, local pride, and the city’s creative side. When you see murals between the history stops, it makes the city feel connected—past to present, official landmarks to everyday walls.
If you care about photography, this is your time. Just be aware you’re on a schedule, so don’t miss the ride for one shot. The guide will keep you on track while you capture what matters.
Breweries like Blue Owl and Lazarus: the tasting breaks

You’ll include brewery stops such as Blue Owl and Lazarus, and that’s a smart choice for a bike-and-taco concept tour. It anchors the tour in Austin’s craft beer scene, so the “brews” part isn’t vague.
What you should expect at these stops is a break that feels intentional, not random. You’re tasting drinks alongside the tacos you’ve been working toward, which helps you notice how flavors combine. If you’re the type who likes learning as you taste, the guide’s explanations during the stops make the pairings feel less like guesswork.
Also, because the tour includes 3 paired drinks, you’ll likely have enough variety to understand the vibe of each stop. It’s not one single beer-and-pretend. It’s structured tasting, and that’s where the included price starts to feel fair.
Live music while you ride: a small detail that changes everything
Austin’s music culture shows up in tiny ways, and this tour builds that in. You’ll listen to local Austin musicians while biking, which adds atmosphere without turning the day into a separate concert plan.
For me, that’s the charm of a guided bike tour: your attention stays on the street experience. A playlist in your headphones can’t replace that street-level energy—especially when you’re rolling past murals and landmark exteriors at the same time.
Tacos on the move: how the included tastings work in real life
Food tours can go one of two ways: either you get a bunch of small bites that don’t add up, or you get a heavy meal that slows the day down. This one hits the middle. You’re getting 2 tacos and 3 paired drinks, which usually lands in the sweet spot for a 3-hour outing.
Plan for this like a snack-and-sip experience, not dinner. If you eat a full lunch right before, you’ll probably still enjoy the tacos, but you may not go all-in on the drinks. If you skip a meal, you’ll appreciate the fuel more.
Also, if you have dietary restrictions, check first. The tour data only confirms a set number of tacos and drinks, so you’ll want to confirm whether there’s flexibility for your needs before you book.
Who should book this tour, and who should skip it
This is a great fit if you want:
- A guided East Austin sampler with landmarks + tacos + beer in one ride
- A small-group experience that doesn’t feel like cattle herding
- A way to see murals and the public side of Austin without spending the whole day driving around
You should probably skip it if:
- You can’t comfortably ride a bike
- You have heart problems or other serious medical conditions (the tour is not recommended for these)
- You are pregnant
- You’re under 21
- You need wheelchair access or have visual impairment needs that can’t be supported by this format
Should you book Taco ’Bout Austin Bicycle Tour?
I’d book it if you want a solid, guided taste of East Austin that doesn’t require planning ten separate stops. The included 2 tacos + 3 paired drinks plus bikes, helmets, and a guide make it feel like a real deal, especially in a city where craft beers and local food can add up quickly.
I wouldn’t book it if you’re looking for a slow, mostly walking museum day. This is movement-first. You’re riding, seeing, tasting, and learning in a tight 3-hour window.
If you’re a confident cyclist and you like the idea of pairing food with Austin’s culture—murals, music, and famous landmarks—this tour is one of the easiest ways to turn a half-day into a story.
FAQ
How long is the Taco ’Bout Austin Bicycle Tour?
It lasts 3 hours.
What does it cost?
The price is $110 per person.
What food and drinks are included?
You get 2 tacos and 3 paired drinks.
Is a bike and helmet included?
Yes. The tour includes use of a bicycle and use of a helmet.
Is the tour guide English-speaking?
Yes. The live tour guide speaks English.
How big is the group?
It’s a small group with a maximum of 10 participants.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes, it operates in all weather conditions, so you should dress appropriately.
Who can’t join this tour?
It’s not suitable for people under 21, pregnant women, wheelchair users, people who can’t ride a bike, and people who are visually impaired. It’s also not recommended for travelers with heart problems or other serious medical conditions.
































