REVIEW · MIAMI
Miami Pedal Pub: Arts District Party Bike Pub Crawl
Book on Viator →Operated by Pedal Pub Miami · Bookable on Viator
Wynwood plus a pedal-powered party is a winning combo. The big draw here is riding through Miami’s street-art neighborhoods while you stop at well-known bars and breweries for quick sips. I also like that you can BYOB and still get onboard music, plus drink-discount deals at partner spots. One possible drawback: it’s a moving party, so you’ll want to be ready to pedal, sweat a little, and keep the vibe rolling in a tight 2-hour window.
If you want a tour that feels social, this works. You’ll likely end up chatting with the people sharing the bike, and that’s a rare bonus in a city where everyone else is mostly focused on their own schedule. Just know the experience has a small cap, so it can sell out for popular times.
And yes, there’s a serious side benefit: you get to see Wynwood the way locals do it—one stop at a time, with good music and plenty of places to glance up at the walls.
In This Review
- Key things that make this Pedal Pub crawl worth your time
- Wynwood on a Pedal Pub: how the ride changes the sights
- Your 2-hour loop through Miami’s art blocks
- Stop-by-stop: what each venue does for the party plan
- Miami Mojito Company: 20 minutes of the classic pour
- Casa La Rubia: craft beers and micheladas in a Latin-style setting
- 1-800-Lucky: 25 minutes with Asian-inspired options and an industrial feel
- Cervecería La Tropical: Cuban heritage meets craft beer and live music
- Music, BYOB, and the wristband: what’s included (and what to bring)
- Value for money: what the $58 price really buys
- Group vs private booking: which format fits your trip style
- What the ride feels like in practice (based on real guide energy)
- Weather, timing, and the reality of party logistics
- Who this is best for (and who should skip it)
- Should you book Miami Pedal Pub? My practical decision guide
- FAQ
- How long is the Miami Pedal Pub arts district party bike crawl?
- What does the $58 price include?
- Do I need to buy alcoholic beverages during the tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What stops are included during the crawl?
- Is it offered in English?
- What happens if weather is bad or the tour doesn’t meet the minimum?
Key things that make this Pedal Pub crawl worth your time

- Wynwood street murals as your moving backdrop, not a quick photo stop
- BYOB setup with coolers, cups, and ice provided so you control what you drink
- Partner-bar wristband discounts, which can stretch your budget during the ride
- Four focused hangout stops (mojitos, micheladas, Asian-inspired food hall, Cuban-style craft beer)
- Small group limit (max 15) for a more connected, less chaotic feel
- Onboard sound system so your ride doesn’t turn into awkward silence
Wynwood on a Pedal Pub: how the ride changes the sights

This is not a sit-and-zoom tour. It’s a pedal-powered crawl built for movement, music, and quick breaks. Wynwood’s murals can be impressive from the sidewalk, but they land differently when you’re rolling through the blocks with other people, calling out colors, and noticing details as you pass.
I like that the route is built around the neighborhood’s energy. The experience leans into the idea that Wynwood is both art and nightlife—warehouses and outdoor walls turned into places you actually want to hang out in.
Also, you get to mix “seeing” with “doing.” In a lot of tours, you spend time looking and then later hunt for drinks. Here, the drinking and the sight-hunting happen in the same plan, so you waste less time deciding what to do next.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Miami
Your 2-hour loop through Miami’s art blocks

You’re looking at about 2 hours total, and the structure is simple: short mural-forward segments, then a sequence of drink stops that each last roughly 20–25 minutes. That pacing matters. Too many bar tours drag on. Too short, and you feel rushed. This one tries to hit the sweet spot.
Along the way, you’ll get time in:
- Wynwood’s street mural corridor, with large-scale works and bold color
- An outdoor stretch featuring huge murals by artists from around the globe
- A stop at Wynwood Marketplace, where art, food, fashion, and music mix in one area
In real terms, this means you’re not just hunting for murals in isolation. You’re moving through a neighborhood that’s designed for you to look up, walk a few steps, then step into a bar or food hall that matches the vibe outside.
Stop-by-stop: what each venue does for the party plan

The crawl is built around four main drink-and-chill stops. Each one is short enough to keep energy high, but long enough to actually feel like you’re inside the place, not just passing through.
Miami Mojito Company: 20 minutes of the classic pour
Your first major stop is Miami Mojito Company. The pitch is simple: this is a mojito-focused bar, and the plan gives you about 20 minutes here. If you’re the kind of person who wants something easy and refreshing after pedaling, this is a solid start.
Practical note: since this is a BYOB experience, admission here is listed as free, but you should plan on using your own beverages plus any wristband discount deals available at partner bars. That keeps your choices flexible.
Casa La Rubia: craft beers and micheladas in a Latin-style setting
Next up is Casa La Rubia, another 20-minute stop. This one is described as a boutique brewery serving craft beers and micheladas in a Latin-style atmosphere.
Why this stop works: it gives you variety. If mojitos aren’t your thing, you can shift quickly into beer or micheladas without the tour falling apart. It also helps the crawl feel less repetitive, since each stop leans into a different drink style and vibe.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in Miami
1-800-Lucky: 25 minutes with Asian-inspired options and an industrial feel
After that, you’ll hit 1-800-Lucky, where the timing stretches a bit longer to 25 minutes. This spot is a sprawling food hall and bar with Asian-inspired eateries in an industrial-type setting.
Even if you don’t plan a full meal, the food-hall layout is useful. It gives you something to do while others grab drinks, and it breaks the pattern of bar-only stops. If your group includes food people and drink people, this kind of hybrid spot helps everyone stay happy.
Cervecería La Tropical: Cuban heritage meets craft beer and live music
The last listed drink stop is Cervecería La Tropical, also about 20 minutes. It’s framed as a brewery, restaurant, and live-music venue that blends Cuban heritage with modern craft beer culture and a tropical atmosphere.
This is a strong closer because it adds atmosphere. A live-music setup tends to make the end of a party feel like a real destination, not just the last bar on a list.
Music, BYOB, and the wristband: what’s included (and what to bring)

Here’s the core logistics that make this tour feel like a party you can actually control:
- BYOB on the Pedal Pub (you bring the beverages)
- The pedal pub supplies coolers, cups, and ice
- There’s an onboard sound system so music stays with the group
- You also get a pedal pub wristband for exclusive drink discounts at partner stops
So you’re not stuck buying everything on site. You can bring what you like, then still take advantage of the wristband deals when you want to try something at the partner venues.
Two practical tips:
- Bring your stuff like you’re going to a beach party, not a museum. Cold drinks matter, and ice access helps, but you still need a plan for keeping things manageable.
- Wear something you can move in. Even if you don’t go pedal-fast, you’ll be in “active mode” for the whole 2 hours.
Value for money: what the $58 price really buys

At $58 per person, you’re paying for more than just transit through Wynwood. You’re paying for the combined package: guided route through a top Miami neighborhood, the pedal pub setup, and onboard entertainment—plus the BYOB-friendly infrastructure.
What improves the value is that it includes the rhythm of the experience:
- Multiple short stops (not one long boring stretch)
- The wristband discount component
- The sound system so you don’t lose the vibe during movement
If you were to do Wynwood solo, you could absolutely see murals and then bar-hop on your own. But you’d spend time planning, paying for rides between places, and figuring out when and where everyone in your group wants to stop. This tour tries to eliminate that friction.
The other value factor: the small maximum group size (15). A smaller cap usually means less time waiting for people to catch up, and more chance that your group clicks.
Group vs private booking: which format fits your trip style

The experience offers both group and private booking. That’s more than a marketing choice.
- If you’re traveling with friends and you want shared energy, group booking can be fun because you’ll meet other people while still keeping the route and stops organized.
- If your priority is control—say, a birthday crew with your own playlist vibe—private booking can help keep the party exactly how you want it.
Either way, the core structure stays the same: Wynwood sights plus timed stops.
What the ride feels like in practice (based on real guide energy)

The vibe depends a lot on the guide and the group’s momentum. In past rides, I’ve heard strong praise for guides who kept things rolling and added extra touches to make the experience feel personal—like helping with photo moments and keeping the energy up even when schedules got weird.
For example, names like Christian and Alex came up in positive experiences. One guide-driven ride also involved DJ-style track choices and a “work up a sweat” kind of fun, which lines up with the fact that you’re on a pedal pub, not a bus.
The takeaway for you: show up ready to participate. If you want a quiet, scenic cruise, this isn’t it.
Weather, timing, and the reality of party logistics

This experience needs good weather. If conditions are poor, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That matters in Miami because plans can change fast during storms.
Also, since the tour lasts around 2 hours, timing is everything. Arrive early enough to settle in, but don’t assume you can stroll in whenever you feel like it. Small groups run on time.
One more thing: because the number of travelers can affect whether the tour runs, it’s worth booking with realistic expectations. If there’s a minimum not met, you might see a reschedule option or a full refund.
Who this is best for (and who should skip it)
This pedal pub crawl is ideal if you:
- Want Wynwood sights plus nightlife in one plan
- Like social tours where conversation is part of the activity
- Have a group that’s happy to move, pedal, and bounce between stops
It might not fit if you:
- Prefer quiet sightseeing without music
- Want a long, slow, photo-focused route
- Have mobility concerns that make active participation difficult (this is listed as doable for most travelers, but it’s still a moving, pedal-based setup)
If you’re celebrating something—birthday, friends trip, bachelor or bachelorette energy—this kind of tour is built for that.
Should you book Miami Pedal Pub? My practical decision guide
Book it if you want a fun, organized way to experience Wynwood without turning your day into a planning headache. The combination of street-art scenery, BYOB convenience, onboard music, and short stops makes it good value for a specific kind of traveler: the one who wants activity, not just pictures.
Consider skipping or choosing something calmer if you don’t want an active party setting, or if you’re traveling during uncertain weather and can’t flex your schedule.
If you do book, I’d do two things: bring your favorite drinks (since it’s BYOB) and arrive on time for the best chance of a smooth start.
FAQ
How long is the Miami Pedal Pub arts district party bike crawl?
It lasts about 2 hours.
What does the $58 price include?
You get the pedal pub experience, BYOB setup (coolers, cups, and ice), an onboard sound system, and a wristband that can score exclusive drink discounts at partner bars.
Do I need to buy alcoholic beverages during the tour?
No. Alcoholic beverages are not included, but it’s a BYOB tour, so you bring your own.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at 2121 NW 2nd Ave UNIT 203, Miami, FL 33127 and ends back at the meeting point.
What stops are included during the crawl?
The tour includes Wynwood area stops and four main venues: Miami Mojito Company, Casa La Rubia, 1-800-Lucky, and Cervecería La Tropical.
Is it offered in English?
Yes, the experience is offered in English.
What happens if weather is bad or the tour doesn’t meet the minimum?
The experience requires good weather. If canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different experience/date or a full refund.






























