REVIEW · HELSINKI
Helsinki: Alpaca Farm Tour with Guided Walk (private)
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Guidance DMC · Bookable on GetYourGuide
One alpaca day can reset your whole trip. This private Helsinki alpaca farm tour pairs up-close feeding with a calm guided walk through the forest, so you get both animal time and real fresh-air time.
I like that you lead the experience in a gentle way: you feed behind fences first, then you’re paired with an alpaca for a guided trail walk.
The main drawback to weigh is that it’s not built for everyone—animal allergies, babies under 1, and people over 70 aren’t a fit, and you’ll need warm clothes for the outdoor walking.
In This Review
- Key Points at a Glance
- A Calm Counterpoint to Helsinki: Alpacas in Uusimaa
- The Tour Flow: Pickup, Alpaca Time, Then Back to Helsinki
- Alpaca Feeding Behind Fences: Why This Setup Works
- The One-Alpaca-Per-Guest Forest Walk
- What You’re Paying for: Value at $235 Per Person
- Guide Quality: The Difference Between Good and Great
- Getting Ready: Clothing, Shoes, Cameras, and Farm Rules
- Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Should Skip It)
- Kids and Animal Lovers: The Practical Family Angle
- Weather Reality for an Outdoor Alpaca Walk
- Quick Review Scorecard: What’s Most Praised
- Should You Book This Helsinki Alpaca Farm Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the private Helsinki alpaca farm tour?
- Is this tour private?
- Where does pickup happen?
- What’s included in the price?
- Do I need to pay for food?
- What language is the guide?
- Can I feed or touch alpacas anywhere on the farm?
- Are pets allowed on the farm?
- What should I bring?
- What’s the cancellation and payment flexibility?
Key Points at a Glance

- Hand-feeding behind fences lets you get close without risky touching
- One alpaca per guest means you’re actually leading the walk, not just watching
- Forest trail time with a guide is slower and calmer than most city excursions
- Private group keeps the pace comfortable for your party
- Guide attention matters, and the experience has strong praise for friendly, professional guidance (names seen include Neela and Nina)
- Kid-friendly bonus: there’s a small toy souvenir for children
A Calm Counterpoint to Helsinki: Alpacas in Uusimaa
Helsinki is great for energy—cafés, boats, architecture, and all that city momentum. This tour gives you a hard reset: animals first, then quiet trails. It’s the kind of plan you’ll appreciate if you’ve been walking a lot in town and want a gentler change of scenery.
What makes it especially appealing is the balance. You get real interaction with the alpacas, but the farm setup keeps it orderly—feeding happens behind fences, and the later walk is guided and paced. That combination tends to make the whole experience feel safe and relaxed.
Another small but important detail: this is a private group experience. You’re not stuck in a crowd waiting your turn with the animals or sprinting to keep up.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Helsinki
The Tour Flow: Pickup, Alpaca Time, Then Back to Helsinki

The timing is simple. You’ll start with pickup in Helsinki, then travel to the alpaca farm in Uusimaa. After that, your “main act” is a guided session that lasts about 1 hour with the alpacas and forest walk, then you return to Helsinki.
Here’s how the experience typically feels hour by hour:
1) Arrival and alpaca introductions
You’ll meet the alpacas and get your first chance to feed them behind the fences. This is the moment most people remember clearly, because alpacas are curious in a soft, non-scary way. You’re close enough to see their personalities, and the fence keeps the interaction controlled.
2) Feeding with treats, carefully and respectfully
The rules matter here. You’re only supposed to feed and touch in designated areas. That’s a good thing for animals and visitors. It keeps the farm experience consistent and helps the alpacas stay calm.
3) The guided walk through the forest
Once the alpacas are familiar and you’ve gotten your bearings, the guide brings you into the trail part of the outing. Each guest gets an alpaca to lead, so you’re not just standing around taking photos—you’re doing something.
4) Return to Helsinki
After the guided portion, you head back to your Helsinki pickup area. It’s a practical format when you want a memorable half-day plan without turning the day into a travel marathon.
Alpaca Feeding Behind Fences: Why This Setup Works

The alpaca feeding part is more than a cute start. It’s set up to keep expectations reasonable and interactions smooth.
Feeding behind fences does two things:
- It lets you get up close without scrambling around animals.
- It helps keep the farm rules clear. Feeding outside the allowed zones isn’t part of the experience.
This also shapes how the alpacas behave. When the process is predictable, alpacas tend to stay curious instead of stressed. You get those calm moments where they carefully take treats right from your hand.
Practical photo tip: if you care about images, plan to shoot during feeding. That’s when alpacas are closest and most focused on you.
The One-Alpaca-Per-Guest Forest Walk

The second half is where the tour slows down. You’ll take a peaceful walk with an alpaca through the forest, led along scenic trails with the guide.
The key detail is that each guest has an alpaca to lead. That turns the walk into an active experience, not just a viewing session. You’ll be walking, holding the lead, and following the guide’s direction. It’s a simple format, but it makes a big difference in how memorable the outing feels.
What I like about this part is how it changes the energy. The farm visit can feel like a mini animal show—this walk feels like a quiet pause. You’re moving through trees while your alpaca stays steady and curious.
You should also know it’s outdoors walking. Even if the pace is gentle, you’ll still want real traction under your feet.
What You’re Paying for: Value at $235 Per Person
At $235 per person, this isn’t a budget add-on. So the value question isn’t just cost—it’s what’s included and how personal the experience is.
You’re getting:
- Private group attention
- Guided interaction with live animals
- One alpaca per guest for the walk
- Transportation to and from the farm
- A toy souvenir for kids
If you compare this to low-cost group animal attractions, the private format and the guided walk matter. The walk part can be hard to replicate independently because you’d need access, rules, animal handling setup, and a guide to make sure you’re doing it correctly.
Still, the price is best justified when you value hands-on interaction and don’t want the “stand in line, watch, move on” style of activity. If you’re hoping to spend most of your time on long sightseeing, this is shorter. It’s a focused alpaca-and-forest experience.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Helsinki
Guide Quality: The Difference Between Good and Great

A farm tour lives or dies on the guide. The tour includes a live guide in English and Ukrainian, and the quality shows up in reviews tied to two guide names: Neela and Nina.
Here’s what that praise tends to translate into for you:
- Clear explanations so the animals interaction feels thoughtful, not chaotic
- A friendly, professional tone that helps first-timers relax
- More than just logistics—enough personality to make the walk feel personal
That said, not every experience is rated perfectly. One review flagged that the location guide could be more friendly. So if you’re sensitive to warm hospitality style, keep that in mind. The structure is solid either way, but the “tone” is human.
Getting Ready: Clothing, Shoes, Cameras, and Farm Rules
This is an outdoors-and-animals mix, so your prep matters. The tour suggests warm clothing and warm shoes. Do not treat the farm walk like a quick stroll in town.
What I’d bring:
- Warm layers you can move in
- Comfortable walking shoes with grip
- A camera (the tour strongly suggests you’ll want photos)
What you should leave at home:
- Pets (not allowed on the farm)
- Any plan involving smoking on-site (prohibited)
And two behavioral rules you should follow:
- Feeding and touching only in designated areas
- No feeding outside the allowed zones
If you like animal experiences, you’ll appreciate these boundaries. They keep the experience respectful and consistent.
Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Should Skip It)

This is a sweet fit for animal lovers and people who want a break from city pacing. It’s also a smart choice if you’re traveling with kids, because there’s a toy souvenir for kids and the interaction format is straightforward.
It’s less suitable if:
- You have animal allergies
- You’re bringing a baby under 1 year
- You’re over 70 years
Those limits are important. Don’t plan around them; plan based on what the farm experience can safely and comfortably do.
If you’re traveling solo or as a couple, the private format can make the whole session feel unhurried. If you’re a small group, it’s still a focused event rather than a long checklist tour.
Kids and Animal Lovers: The Practical Family Angle

If you’re thinking about this with children, the big plus is that the interaction is structured and close-up. Kids can enjoy the feeding moment without the experience turning into an all-day shuffle.
Also, the tour includes a toy souvenir for kids, which is a small detail that often helps the “did we spend our time well?” question at the end of the day.
One practical note: plan for cold. In winter especially, warmth and footwear matter. Your kids can enjoy the walk more if they stay comfortable.
Weather Reality for an Outdoor Alpaca Walk
This tour is outdoors by design. Even if the pace is peaceful, you’ll be walking in a forest setting, so you should treat it like an active cold-weather outing.
I’d plan layers because Helsinki-area weather can shift. Bring something warm you can keep on without feeling bulky. And keep your shoes warm and grippy. If your feet get cold, the experience can stop feeling relaxing fast.
Quick Review Scorecard: What’s Most Praised
With a 4.7 rating from 16 reviews, the pattern is clear.
The most praised parts:
- The overall experience feeling one of a kind
- Guides who are kind, helpful, and professional (with Neela and Nina specifically standing out in feedback)
- The chance to see the animals well and spend real time with them
- The calming effect of mixing animal interaction with a guided outdoor walk
- For families, it’s seen as a good option even if it’s not right in the center of town
The key consideration to balance:
- Guide friendliness can vary by person and situation, even if the core experience is strong
Should You Book This Helsinki Alpaca Farm Tour?
Book it if you want a short, meaningful break from city life and you like the idea of feeding alpacas and then leading one on a guided forest walk. The private setup and the “one alpaca per guest” format are major value drivers for the money.
Skip it if you’re dealing with animal allergies, you’re traveling with a baby under 1, or you’re over 70. Also skip if you dislike outdoor walking in cool conditions.
If you do book, pack warm layers, bring your camera, and follow the farm rules about feeding and touching only in designated areas. That’s how you’ll get the calm, memorable alpaca moments this tour is built for.
FAQ
How long is the private Helsinki alpaca farm tour?
The total duration is 2 hours, including pickup and transportation, with about 1 hour of guided tour time at the farm.
Is this tour private?
Yes, it’s a private group experience.
Where does pickup happen?
Pickup is in Helsinki, and you’ll also return to Helsinki at the end of the tour.
What’s included in the price?
It includes alpaca feeding behind fences, a guided walk with an alpaca through the forest, one alpaca per guest for the walk, transportation to and from the farm, and a toy souvenir for kids.
Do I need to pay for food?
Meals are not included.
What language is the guide?
The live tour guide speaks English and Ukrainian.
Can I feed or touch alpacas anywhere on the farm?
Feeding and touching are allowed only in designated areas. You should not feed or touch outside those areas.
Are pets allowed on the farm?
No, pets are not allowed.
What should I bring?
Bring warm clothing and warm shoes. Also, bring your camera for photos.
What’s the cancellation and payment flexibility?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. You can also reserve now and pay later.
































