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A six-hour shore excursion designed for the cruise-ship mindset
Six hours door to door from the cruise terminal back to the cruise terminal, women-led, in a 9-seater van that exists in our fleet specifically for cruise-ship customers. Pickup right at the Riga Passenger Terminal as you walk off the gangway; an itinerary that drives furthest-first so the second half of the day is always returning toward your ship; a 90-minute safety buffer baked into every plan; six places curated out of a hundred, with stories about the ninety-four we won't have time for — in the van, with photos. €80 per adult, all-inclusive of entry fees to every venue we visit and all applicable taxes. Food, drinks and tips are not included; everything else is. Free cancellation up to 24 hours before your ship's arrival. You pay nothing today.
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You've been on water for days. The last thing you want is a boat ride on the Daugava. There won't be one. This excursion is six hours of dry land — cobblestones, courtyards, churches, market halls, the Old Town that took eight centuries to build. We've designed the day around the assumption that water is the medium you're already in too much of.
You've been fed. Cruise ships do food well, and we won't compete with their buffet. Food and drinks aren't included on this excursion, and we don't route through restaurants unless you ask. If you want a quick Latvian bite mid-tour, your guide will point you to two or three honest options near where we're standing — a bakery, a coffee shop, a small canteen — but the day isn't built around the lunch stop. The time you have ashore is more valuable than another sit-down meal.
A few hours isn't enough to absorb a country. So we don't try to give you everything. Out of roughly a hundred places worth seeing in Riga, we've picked six: the Art Nouveau quarter on Alberta iela (Riga holds the densest concentration of Art Nouveau facades of any city in the world — a third of the central district), Riga Cathedral and Dome Square, the House of Blackheads with the Roland statue, St Peter's Church (and optionally the tower for a city view), the Three Brothers (Riga's oldest stone houses), and the Powder Tower with the war museum behind it. Your guide picks one quieter stop on the day based on what your group seems to like — the Cat House, the Konventa Sēta convent courtyard, the Central Market hall, or the Freedom Monument. We tell you stories about the rest in the van, with photos, so you leave knowing what's there even if you didn't walk through it.
We drive furthest-first. The day begins at the farthest stop from the port and works back toward your ship. By hour four you're already inside the Old Town, ten minutes' walk from the gangway. You will never be stranded an hour from the port when sailing time approaches. The 90-minute buffer between our planned drop-off time and your ship's stated sailing time is non-negotiable in our planning — if your group wants to add stops that don't fit inside the buffer, we'll say no. It's the only thing on this excursion that isn't flexible, and we'd rather lose the booking than the ship.
We use a 9-seater on purpose, not a 16-seater. Touch wood the van has never failed during a cruise excursion. But if it did, a single Bolt, Uber or taxi can carry the group back to the port from anywhere in Riga in fifteen minutes — at our cost. The larger sixteen-seater we use for our day trips into Latvia wouldn't fit in one taxi, and that single fact would turn a small mechanical inconvenience into a "did we miss the ship?" emergency. The smaller van is a deliberate operational choice for cruise traffic, and one we'd defend even if you asked us to put more friends in your group.
No souvenir-shop stops. We do not partner with amber outlets, "linen heritage" boutiques, chocolate shops, or any other retailer that pays tour operators a commission to bring guests through the door. If your guide recommends a place — the Central Market hall, one or two small workshops she personally trusts, the Laima chocolate shop near Bastejkalns — it's because she personally likes it. Nobody is collecting a cut. If you'd like to buy something, she'll point you to it; the decision is yours, in your own time, with no van waiting outside while a salesperson pitches you.
Your guide is a licensed official Riga guide — the city's formal designation, examined and portfolio-vetted, not a self-described story enthusiast. Beyond the licence, our guides are well-travelled real people who have trained themselves into guiding because they wanted to. They've been the cruise passenger; they know what the lecture sounds like from the other side; they don't do it. Expect real perspectives, not a script. Tours are women-led; we can arrange a German, French, or Russian-speaking guide on request at the time of booking, with 72 hours' notice for language matching.
Fully registered, fully insured. Barefoot Baltic is registered with PTAC (the Latvian Consumer Rights Protection Centre, the regulator for tour operators in Latvia) and with ATD (the Latvian Association of Travel Agents and Operators). We carry civil liability insurance to the limits required for guided passenger transport. Documentation can be sent in advance to your cruise line's port agent if you need it for compliance with independent-tour policies — just ask at booking.
The ambitious option, if your ship is in port longer. The default version of this excursion stays entirely inside Riga. If your sailing time gives us at least eight hours ashore, we can add destinations up to about an hour from Riga and still return well inside the buffer: Jūrmala (35 minutes, the Tsarist seaside spa town with the long sandy Baltic beach), Ḳemeri National Park's boardwalk (50 minutes, a 10,000-year-old raised bog older than the Pyramids), Sigulda's medieval castle and cable-car (1 hour, often called "the Switzerland of the Baltics"), or Rundāle Palace (1 hour 15 minutes, the "Versailles of the Baltics" designed by Rastrelli, who also designed the Winter Palace in St Petersburg). Mention your ship's sailing time at the time of booking and we'll tell you honestly what's possible. For passengers who'd rather play it safe, the in-city version is by far the more common choice — and it's enough.
You'll leave with the feeling of having understood Riga. Not the encyclopaedia of it — nobody absorbs eight hundred years of Hanseatic, Polish, Swedish, Russian, German and Latvian history in an afternoon. But the shape of it. Why the Old Town has the proportions it does. Why the Art Nouveau facades exploded in a single decade around 1900. Why the Freedom Monument means what it means to Latvians today, and what the three stars on top stand for. Why the Three Brothers are three. What the Hanseatic League actually was. What it's like to live here, with the war next door — from someone who actually does. That's the deliverable. Not a checklist; a feeling.
The route, on the map
Pickup at the Riga Passenger Terminal, drive out to the Art Nouveau quarter on Alberta iela (the day's farthest stop), loop back through the Esplanade and the Freedom Monument, into the Old Town for the Cathedral, the House of Blackheads, St Peter's, the Three Brothers and the Powder Tower, then a short walk back down to the cruise terminal. Roughly 8 km of driving and 2 km of walking, structured furthest-first so the back half of the day is always returning toward the ship.
~10 km total · 6 hours door-to-door · Furthest-first routing · 90-minute port buffer
A few clips from our recent shore excursions
Coming soonYour six hours, step by step
Pickup at the Riga Passenger Terminal — flexible to your ship's arrival
Your guide meets you right at the terminal exit (Eksporta iela 3a) with a Barefoot Baltic sign and her name. You'll receive her photo, mobile number and exact meeting-point details by email 24 hours before your ship docks. We track your vessel's AIS data on the morning of the tour — if you're running 90 minutes late on a headwind, we already know and we've already adjusted. We confirm your ship's sailing time at the start of the tour and plan the entire day backwards from a 90-minute safety buffer before you need to re-board.
Drive to the farthest stop of the day — the Art Nouveau quarter
About 12 minutes from the cruise terminal, with your guide using the drive to set up the day — what makes Riga's Old Town distinct from Tallinn's and Vilnius's, why the city was so wealthy in the late 1800s that it could afford an entire neighbourhood of Art Nouveau, what to look for when you step out of the van. We start with the densest cluster of facades on Alberta iela — Mikhail Eisenstein's astonishing 1903–1906 buildings, with stone women's faces, peacocks, sphinxes and the famous Riga has the largest concentration of Art Nouveau architecture of any city in the world. A third of the central district is in this style. We walk a few blocks, your guide explains what you're looking at, and you take the photos that matter.
Loop back via the Freedom Monument and the Esplanade
From Alberta iela we drive 10 minutes south to the Freedom Monument (Milda) — the 42-metre obelisk that has stood at the centre of Latvian national identity since 1935. Your guide will tell you what the three stars on top stand for, what happened here in 1987 (a quiet moment that mattered enormously), and why the honour guard still changes every hour. From there it's a short walk through Bastejkalns canal park — the moat that surrounded the old Hanseatic city, now a soft green ribbon — back to the van for the short drive into Old Town.
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Riga Old Town — Dome Square, Cathedral, House of Blackheads
We park near the Dome and walk the medieval core. Dome Square with the 13th-century Cathedral; the House of Blackheads with its Roland statue and the Hanseatic merchant guild story behind it; a short stretch of cobblestone with your guide pointing out the small things most visitors miss — the date stones, the merchant marks above doorways, the rebuilt vs original sections. Roughly 45–60 minutes of walking at a relaxed pace. If anyone in the group needs to sit, there are benches every hundred metres and a coffee shop every two.
St Peter's Church, Three Brothers, Powder Tower, plus one quieter stop
Onward to St Peter's Church (you can go up the tower for a city-from-above view if your group wants, entry included), the Three Brothers on Mazās Pils iela (Riga's oldest stone houses, 15th to 17th century), and the Powder Tower with the war museum behind it — the last surviving piece of the medieval city wall. Plus one quieter stop your guide picks on the day based on what your group seems to enjoy: the Cat House on Meistaru iela, the Konventa Sēta convent courtyard, the Central Market hall (a Zeppelin-hangar-turned-food-market, surprisingly good for a single Latvian bite if you want one), or a short loop into the Riga Castle area.
Drop-off at the cruise terminal — 90 minutes before sailing time
By hour five and a half we're walking the last few blocks toward the van; ten minutes back to the cruise terminal at Eksporta iela 3a. We deliver you at your ship's sailing time minus 90 minutes, which is the buffer cruise lines themselves typically recommend for independent tours. You re-board with time to shower, change for dinner, and watch Riga slip past the porthole. If your sailing time means we'd have a shorter day than six hours, we tell you that honestly at booking and shape the itinerary to fit.
What’s Included
Included in €80 per adult
Not Included
Good to Know
What We Need at Booking
Five things, beyond the date and group size: (1) your cruise ship's name and sailing time so we can plan backwards from the buffer; (2) any language preference beyond English (German, French, Russian on request with 72 hours' notice); (3) any mobility or accessibility needs so the guide can adjust pace and route in advance; (4) preferred extras — St Peter's tower, a Central Market food stop, an ambitious half-day add-on like Jūrmala or Rundāle; (5) cruise-line documentation — tell us whether your line requires us to send PTAC/ATD registration and insurance proof to their port agent, and we'll do it.
What to Wear & Pack
Comfortable walking shoes you don't mind on cobblestones — Riga Old Town is medieval cobble and the Art Nouveau quarter is broad pavement. Light layers — cruise season in Riga ranges from 14°C (May, October) to 26°C (July) with afternoon shifts of 5–8°C either way. A light waterproof regardless of forecast; the Baltic is the Baltic. Cash optional — almost everywhere takes cards. Your cruise ID card for re-boarding. Daypack with a water bottle if you'd like to fill at the van.
Accessibility & Fitness
Largely accessible with planning. Riga Old Town is cobblestoned but we route by van between clusters so the walking sections are short — typically 15–25 minutes between sit-down moments. Tell us at booking about knees, hips, walking distance limits, wheelchair, cane, ship's accessibility cart, and we'll adapt the itinerary: more van time, fewer cobble stretches, slower pace, guide briefed in advance. We don't pretend medieval streets are smooth, but with planning very few guests have to skip stops. For wheelchair users we'd recommend mentioning it at least 7 days ahead.
Cancellation & Cruise-Itinerary Changes
Free cancellation up to 24 hours before your ship's stated Riga arrival, for a full refund. Within 24 hours: non-refundable, except for cruise-line itinerary changes (Riga dropped, weather diversion, mechanical) which always get a full refund, no questions. Tell us as soon as you know — cruise lines typically announce diversions 24–72 hours ahead — and we process the refund the same day.
Weather
We run rain or shine. Light rain is actually one of the better versions of Riga — the Art Nouveau quarter is gorgeous wet, the indoor stops (Cathedral, House of Blackheads, war museum) carry the day, and the guide has umbrellas. We cancel only for safety-relevant weather: a serious thunderstorm, ice on the cobbles, sustained heavy rain. In that case you get a full refund. Bring a light waterproof regardless.
Payment & Deposit
You reserve today without paying anything. A small 20% deposit goes out 48 hours before your ship's Riga arrival. The balance settles at the cruise terminal at the start of the tour, by card or by cash — we accept EUR, USD, GBP, SEK and DKK at the published exchange rate. Receipt issued on the day; if you need an invoice with your cruise-line booking number for reimbursement, mention it at booking and we'll prepare it in advance.
For Cruise Lines & Port Agents
If your cruise line operates an independent-tour vetting policy (some do, especially U.S.- and U.K.-flagged lines), we can send PTAC operator licence, ATD registration, civil liability insurance certificate, and guide licence numbers to your line's port agent in Riga ahead of the call. Allow 5 working days for the documentation pack; the standard cruise lines we work with regularly have it on file already.
From Your Guide
Daiga & her licensed Riga guide team
Who this excursion is for
Cruise passengers who want to understand Riga rather than tick it off a list. Travellers who've been doing the big-bus shore excursion and are over it. Anyone who'd rather see six places well than thirteen places badly. Architecture lovers (the Art Nouveau alone is worth the day). History buffs (eight centuries of Hanseatic, Polish, Swedish, Russian, German and Latvian rule, told as a single thread). Solo travellers, couples, small family groups. Less suited to: passengers who want to "do" every monument photo-by-photo in five hours — that's the cruise-line bus tour, and it's a different product.
How the day actually feels
Your guide is licensed by the City of Riga, women-led, well-travelled enough to know what the lecture sounds like from the other side. We don't lecture. We walk, we point, we tell stories, we answer real questions, we go quiet when you want to take photos. The van between stops is where the longer stories happen — the ninety-four places we won't walk through, the things that didn't fit the cobblestones, what it's actually like to live here. If you'd like to share what brought you to Riga, the day shapes itself around that. We've taken architects who wanted only Art Nouveau, retired historians who wanted only the Hanseatic, families with restless ten-year-olds who needed playful pacing. Tell us at booking, and the itinerary moves with you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Book This Shore Excursion
Book Direct with Daiga
Same Riga, same licensed local guide, same Old Town — just a better price when you book directly. No cruise-line desk commission, no platform fee.