Czech Republic

Prague Travel Planning & Itineraries

The best-preserved medieval centre in Europe. Gothic spires, baroque palaces, a 14th-century astronomical clock, and an Old Town Square that looks like it was CGI'd. Smaller and cheaper than Vienna or Budapest, and somehow still undertouristed in shoulder season. Best combined with a Czech beer education (Pilsner Urquell and the traditional pubs), which will ruin your relationship with most North American beer.

Our AI planner helps you pace your Prague days, pick the right neighbourhoods, and build a route that makes sense.

Planning Your Prague Trip

Best Time to Visit

April-June and September-October are the sweet spots — mild temperatures, blooming parks, Gothic spires against blue sky. July-August are hot and tourist-packed. December is magical for Christmas markets but bitterly cold. Late January and February are the cheapest (and most atmospheric) months if you don't mind sub-zero walks.

Budget Overview

Budget: $50-90 USD/day (hostel in Old Town, goulash + svickova meals CZK200-350, tram). Prague is one of Central Europe best value cities. Mid-range: $140-260 USD/day (4-star near Charles Bridge, beer hall dinners, castle tour, day trip to Cesky Krumlov). Luxury: $500+ USD/day (Four Seasons, Mandarin Oriental, Augustine, private old-town tour, fine dining).

Getting There

Fly into Vaclav Havel (PRG) — 8 hours from YYZ via Frankfurt, Munich, Amsterdam. Bus 119 to Nadrazi Veleslavin metro station (CZK40), then metro A to Old Town.

Getting Around

Metro + trams + walking. The historic centre is 100% walkable. Tram 22/23 is the scenic route — it climbs past Prague Castle. Buy a 72-hour pass (CZK330). Skip taxis from Old Town Square — they overcharge tourists.

Common Prague planning mistakes

1

Only walking Old Town + Charles Bridge

Thats one day. Prague rewards 3-4 days — Vysehrad, Karlin, Letna Park, Mala Strana are where locals actually live.

2

Ordering Budweiser

Czech Budvar is the original. American Budweiser lost every trademark lawsuit. Order Pilsner Urquell, Staropramen, or Kozel instead.

3

Changing money in Old Town Square

The exchange booths are scams with absurd rates. Use an ATM or a proper Exchange office with posted rates and no hidden fees.

4

Missing astronomical clock show

Every hour, the 600-year-old clock in Old Town Square does a short apostles parade. Its cute, takes 40 seconds, and locals think its silly.

Prague Neighbourhoods

Old Town (Staré Město)

The fairytale core with the astronomical clock, Old Town Square, and Jewish Quarter. Touristy but walkable to everything. Best for: first-timers, short stays.

Lesser Town (Malá Strana)

Across the Charles Bridge below the castle — baroque palaces, hidden gardens, the quietest beautiful streets in Prague. Best for: couples, repeat visitors.

New Town (Nové Město)

Despite the name, it's 600 years old — Wenceslas Square, department stores, the national museum. Less scenic, more functional, cheaper hotels. Best for: budget travelers, business trips.

Jewish Quarter (Josefov)

Former Jewish ghetto inside Old Town with six historic synagogues and the Old Jewish Cemetery. Best for: history seekers, culture buffs.

Vinohrady

Hip residential neighbourhood 15 minutes from Old Town with leafy streets, the best cafés and craft beer bars, and cheap rent. Best for: slow travelers, foodies.

Žižkov

Gritty-alternative neighbourhood with the famous Žižkov TV tower and the most pubs per capita in Europe. Cheap and authentic. Best for: nightlife, budget travelers.

Prague Food & Drink

La Degustation Boheme Bourgeoise

Czech tasting / 1 Michelin

Old Town. 7- and 11-course tasting menus featuring 19th-century Czech recipes. CZK3,500-5,000.

Lokal

Modern pub / classic Czech

Three locations. Gulas, svickova, and the best tank Pilsner Urquell in Prague. CZK200 mains.

Eska

Modern Czech bakery-bistro

Karlin. Michelin Bib Gourmand. Fermented bread, modern Czech small plates. The Karlin neighbourhood has become Pragues foodie quarter.

Field

Modern Czech / 1 Michelin

Old Town. Seasonal tasting with Bohemian ingredients. CZK3,800 tasting menu.

U Fleku (since 1499)

Historic beer hall

New Town. 500-year-old brewery with its own dark lager. Touristy but historically legit — oompah music nightly.

Sisters Bistro

Czech sandwiches

Dlouha street. Tiny chlebicky (open sandwiches) at CZK50-80 each. Quick, delicious, iconic snack.

Cafe Louvre

Historic cafe (since 1902)

Narodni trida. Einstein + Kafka hung out here. Breakfast, coffee, apple strudel, excellent people-watching.

Day Trips from Prague

Cesky Krumlov

3 hr by bus

UNESCO fairy-tale town on the Vltava. Castle, cobblestones, medieval charm. 3 hours by bus each way — long day but unmissable.

Karlovy Vary

2 hr by bus

Famous spa town with 12 thermal springs. Grand Hotel Pupp (Casino Royale). 2 hours by bus.

Kutna Hora

60 min by train

Bone Church (Sedlec Ossuary) decorated with 40,000 skeletons. Plus St. Barbara Cathedral. 60 min by train.

Terezin

60 min by bus

WWII concentration camp and fortress. A heavy but important day. 60 min by bus from Prague.

Ready to build your Prague days?

Tell us your dates, pace, and interests — we’ll draft a day-by-day Prague itinerary in under a minute.

A Sample Prague Itinerary

Here’s a flavour of what our AI planner builds. Generate your own personalized Prague itinerary in 60 seconds.

Day 1

Arrive + Old Town

  • PRG arrival
  • Old Town Square + Astronomical Clock
  • Charles Bridge at sunset
  • Dinner at Lokal
Day 2

Prague Castle day

  • Tram 22 to Prague Castle
  • St. Vitus Cathedral + Golden Lane
  • Strahov Monastery library
  • Lunch in Mala Strana + Kampa Park
Day 3

Jewish Quarter + Karlin

  • Josefov synagogues + Old Jewish Cemetery
  • Municipal House Art Nouveau tour
  • Dinner at Eska in Karlin
  • Cocktails at Hemingway Bar
Day 4

Cesky Krumlov day trip

  • Early bus to Cesky Krumlov
  • Castle + tower climb
  • Vltava raft or walk
  • Return for U Fleku beer hall dinner
Day 5

Vysehrad + departure

  • Vysehrad fortress walk
  • Letna Park beer garden lunch
  • Last pastries at Cafe Louvre
  • PRG departure

Prague Travel FAQ

How many days do I need in Prague?

Three to four days is perfect. Day 1: Old Town Square, astronomical clock, Jewish Quarter. Day 2: Charles Bridge, Lesser Town, Prague Castle at the top of the hill. Day 3: Vinohrady, Vyšehrad for the views, beer tour. Day 4: day trip to Kutná Hora (bone church) or Český Krumlov.

Is Prague cheap?

Yes — one of the best values in Europe. A Pilsner Urquell in a traditional pub is 50-80 CZK (under $4). Meals at solid local restaurants run 250-450 CZK ($10-18). Hotels have gone up but are still cheaper than Vienna or Berlin. Bring koruna, not euros.

Is the astronomical clock worth waiting for?

The show itself is 30 seconds of mild clockwork — honestly underwhelming. But the clock tower and face are beautiful. See it once, don't plan your day around it. The climb up the Old Town Hall tower next to it for the rooftop view is better value.

Is Prague safe?

Very safe. Pickpockets in Old Town Square and on tram 22 (the castle tram) are the main risk. The classic scam is fake 'change money' street guys — always refuse and use ATMs. Avoid Wenceslas Square strip clubs — they're all rip-offs.

Should I drink Czech beer?

Yes — Czech lager is arguably the best beer on earth, and it's produced a stone's throw from Prague. Drink it in traditional pubs (hospody), not tourist-oriented bars. Pilsner Urquell, Staropramen, Budvar (the real Budweiser) — they all travel badly, so drink them here. Order 'pivo prosím' (a beer, please).

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