Prague
CITY GUIDE

Prague

Golden city of spires and fairy-tale architecture

Prague hits different. Sure, you've seen those Instagram shots of the Astronomical Clock and Charles Bridge, but this city delivers way more than postcard moments. The Czech capital serves up medieval streets that actually lead somewhere interesting, beer that costs less than water, and castle views that don't require a helicopter tour. Here's the thing about Prague — it's managed to stay authentic while embracing tourism, which is rarer than you'd think. You'll find locals drinking in the same pubs tourists discover, because the beer really is that good and the prices really are that reasonable.

Best Months

APR · MAY · JUN · SEP · OCT

~18°C · moderate crowds

Culture & Context

BAROQUE MEETS BOLD HUMOR

Prague is the kind of city that looks like it was designed by a film set decorator working with an unlimited budget. Gothic towers, Baroque palaces, Art Nouveau cafés, and one very strange dancing building from 1996 that has no business looking that good. It sits on both banks of the Vltava River, with Prague Castle watching over everything from the hill above Malá Strana.

But here's the thing: the city has a dual personality. The historic core (roughly Prague 1) is extremely touristic, extremely expensive by Czech standards, and genuinely crowded from April through October. Walk ten minutes in almost any direction and the vibe completely changes. Locals actually eat, drink, and live in neighborhoods like Vinohrady, Žižkov, and Karlín. That gap between tourist Prague and real Prague is wide, and knowing it exists will save you money and give you better meals.

Czech culture tends toward reserve first, warmth second. Locals are not unfriendly, but they don't default to the kind of performative cheerfulness you might find elsewhere. Greet people properly ("Dobrý den" when entering any shop or café) and the temperature shifts noticeably. Czechs are extremely proud of their beer, their architecture, and their dark humor. They've been invaded, occupied, and "liberated" enough times that a certain wry stoicism runs through the culture. Don't mistake quietness for coldness.

Local Customs

GREET OR GET NOTICED

Always greet when entering any shop, café, or small restaurant with 'Dobrý den.' Skipping it is genuinely noticed and not appreciated. This is non-negotiable Czech social etiquette..

Tipping: 10% is the standard for good service in restaurants. Round up to the nearest convenient amount. Hand the tip directly to your server — don't leave cash on the table.

Saying the total including your tip when paying cash is the correct method (e.g., bill is 280 CZK, hand over 300 and say nothing; they keep the difference)..

Don't tip American-style (20%+). It's unnecessary and can confuse or even slightly embarrass staff. 10% is correct; a bit more for exceptional service at a fine dining place is fine..

Always make eye contact and clink glasses individually when toasting with 'Na zdraví.' Not making eye contact during the toast is considered bad luck — Czechs take this seriously.. Prague officially banned pub crawls.

The city made organized large-group crawls illegal to curb excessive noise and anti-social behavior. Don't look for them.. On public transport, offer your seat to elderly passengers and pregnant women.

Loud conversations and phone calls are considered inconsiderate. Trams and metro are quiet spaces by social norm.. Validate your transport ticket before boarding or immediately when entering.

Plainclothes inspectors do spot checks. Fines are 1,500 CZK — about 10x the ticket price. No warnings..

Burning of Witches (Pálení čarodějnic) on April 30: Bonfires across the city, including a big one on Petřín Hill, mark the farewell to winter. A genuinely local celebration, not a tourist event.. Czech people tend to be reserved with strangers but warm with people they know.

Don't mistake the initial reserve for unfriendliness. Persistence in small gestures of politeness pays off.

Safety

WATCH EXCHANGE RATES

Prague is genuinely safe. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. The Czech Republic ranks 7th in the Global Peace Index (2025) and Prague has a crime index significantly lower than Paris or Barcelona. That said, there are specific things to know.

The main risks are financial, not physical. Old Town Square, Charles Bridge, Wenceslas Square, and the nightlife zone on Dlouhá Street are where most tourist-targeted scams operate.

CURRENCY EXCHANGE: The single most common trap. Exchange offices near tourist sites charge 10–15% hidden commissions by manipulating displayed rates. Use ATMs at bank branches (marked 'Bankomat'). Never use standalone Euronet machines at tourist spots — they charge flat fees and poor rates. Prague is nearly cashless; cards work at almost everything, including small cafés.

BAR SCAMS: A well-documented, organized scam. Someone (often a woman) approaches men traveling in groups near Old Town and suggests a specific bar. Menus show no prices or prices that change dramatically on the bill — documented amounts range into the hundreds or thousands of euros. Bouncers prevent you from leaving. Rule: never enter a bar at a stranger's direct suggestion. Choose your own venues. Stick to bars in Vinohrady, Žižkov, or Holešovice for normal local pricing.

TAXIS: Street taxis hailed in tourist areas have a long history of overcharging. Use Bolt, Uber, or Liftago apps exclusively — fixed price, GPS-tracked, driver identity on record. For the airport, Bus 119 to Nádraží Veleslavín (then Metro A to Old Town) costs 40 CZK and takes about 35 minutes. The Airport Express (AE) bus goes directly to the main station for 100 CZK.

PICKPOCKETS: Work the crowds at Charles Bridge, Old Town Square, and trams 22 and 23 to the Castle. Crossbody bag, zipper facing forward. Don't keep anything in back pockets.

FAKE CHARITY PETITIONS: Clipboard-wielding people near major tourist sites asking you to sign petitions for 'deaf children' or similar causes, then demanding cash donations. Walk past. Don't engage.

NIGHT SAFETY: Most areas are safe at night. The lower end of Wenceslas Square gets rowdy on weekends (stag party tourism). Avoid strip club touts there entirely — those establishments use manipulative pricing and bouncers to prevent customers from leaving without paying. Night trams (lines 91–94) run every 30 minutes until dawn and are safe to use.

Emergency number: 112 (EU-wide, English operators available).

Getting Around

TRAMS & METRO RULE

Prague's public transport system is one of the better ones in Europe. Three metro lines (A/green, B/yellow, C/red), an extensive tram network, and buses cover the entire city. The system runs 5am to midnight, with night trams after hours.

TICKETS: A 90-minute transfer ticket costs 40 CZK (€1.60) and works on metro, tram, and bus. A 24-hour pass is 120 CZK (€4.80). Buy tickets at yellow machines in metro stations, via the PID Lítačka app (recommended — you can buy and activate tickets in the app, see routes, and even check which metro exit to use), or via SMS. Validate paper tickets in yellow stamping machines before boarding. Plainclothes inspectors do spot checks. Fine is 1,500 CZK. No warnings.

TRAMS: The backbone of the city. Tram 22 passes many major landmarks and is genuinely scenic — locals call it the tourist tram, but it's also legitimately useful. Note: As of March 21 through July 17, 2026, the Pražský Hrad and Královský Letohrádek stops on tram 22/23 are closed for track repairs. Alight at Prašný Most for Prague Castle (13-minute uphill walk) or Pohořelec and walk down.

NEW IN 2026: The Dvorecký Bridge, a 338-meter tram and pedestrian bridge over the Vltava in the southern part of the city, opened April 17, 2026. It links tram lines 20 and 21 and includes dedicated cycling lanes. Also: the Petřín funicular, closed for repairs, has reopened in spring 2026.

METRO LINE D: A KC30 billion contract was signed in 2026 to extend the much-anticipated Metro Line D. Construction is underway; not relevant for current visitors but a sign the city is investing seriously in transit.

APPS: PID Lítačka for tickets and routing. Bolt or Uber for ride-hailing (always use these over street taxis).

Useful Phrases

Dobrý denDOH-bree den
Good day / Hello (formal). Use this every time you walk into a shop, café, or restaurant. Not using it is considered rude. This one phrase alone will noticeably change how locals treat you.
ProsímPRO-seem
Please / You're welcome / Here you go. One of the most versatile words in Czech. Use it when ordering, when handing something over, or when responding to 'thank you.'
DěkujiDYE-koo-yee
Thank you. Shortened to 'díky' (DEE-ky) in casual contexts, which is fine with younger locals.
Jedno pivo, prosímYED-no PEE-vo, PRO-seem
One beer, please. Possibly the most useful sentence in Czech. Swap 'jedno' for 'dvě' (dvye) for two beers.
Na zdraví!nah ZDRA-vee
Cheers! / To your health! Always toast before the first sip. Make eye contact when you clink glasses
skipping eye contact is considered bad luck by many locals.
Účet, prosímOO-chet, PRO-seem
The bill, please. Don't leave cash on the table
hand the money directly to your server and tell them the total including tip. Leaving coins on a table signals you forgot your change, not that you're tipping.
Kde je...?GDEH yeh
Where is...? Follow with 'metro' (metro), 'toaleta' (twa-LEH-ta) for bathroom, or 'Pražský hrad' (PRAZH-skee hrad) for Prague Castle.
Mluvíte anglicky?MLOO-vee-teh ANG-lits-kee
Do you speak English? Most younger Praguers do, especially in hospitality. Older residents may not. Starting with this question (rather than launching straight into English) is the polite move.

Explore the Region

Map showing 5 destinations
Neighborhoods
5 destinations

Where to Stay in Prague

9 recommended properties

Things to Do in Prague

View all
Prague Castle & Gardens

Prague Castle & Gardens

Hradčany · 120 min
Charles Bridge & Street Musicians

Charles Bridge & Street Musicians

Old Town (Staré Město) · 90 min
Havelska Market

Havelska Market

Old Town (Staré Město) · 60 min
Old Town (Staré Město) puts you in the postcard, but expect to pay for it. Hotel Golden Well charges €200+ per night, but you're steps from the Astronomical Clock. Malá Strana feels more residential — cobblestone streets wind past embassies and hidden gardens. The area around Kampa Island gives you river views without the Old Town crowds. New Town isn't actually new (it's from the 14th century), but it's where locals live. Wenceslas Square buzzes with shops and restaurants, plus the metro connects you everywhere in 15 minutes. Vinohrady offers the best value — tree-lined streets, Art Nouveau buildings, and apartments that cost half what you'd pay in Old Town. The neighborhood around Náměstí Míru feels like residential Prague without the tourist markup. Vinohrady also puts you near some of Prague's best restaurants. Lokál Dlouhááá serves traditional Czech food without the tourist trap pricing — goulash runs about 180 CZK ($8). Skip Karlova Street entirely for accommodation. It's wall-to-wall souvenir shops and overpriced hotels.

Money-Saving Tips

  • 1.Buy a Prague Castle ticket online to skip the lines and save 50 CZK per person
  • 2.Eat lunch at local pubs in Vinohrady instead of Old Town — same food, half the price
  • 3.Use public transport day passes (120 CZK) instead of individual tickets if you're sightseeing
  • 4.Shop at Tesco or Albert supermarkets for snacks — tourist shops mark up everything 200%
  • 5.Book restaurants directly instead of through hotel concierges to avoid commission markups
  • 6.Happy hour at beer gardens runs 4-6 PM with 30% off drinks
  • 7.Free walking tours run daily from Old Town Square — tip your guide 200-300 CZK
  • 8.Visit museums on first Monday mornings for reduced admission prices

Travel Tips

  • Download the Prague Public Transport app for real-time schedules and ticket purchases
  • Carry cash — many traditional pubs and small restaurants don't accept cards
  • Learn basic Czech greetings — 'Dobrý den' (good day) opens doors with locals
  • Wear comfortable walking shoes — cobblestones are brutal on feet and ankles
  • Book popular restaurants 2-3 days ahead, especially in Vinohrady and Karlín
  • Keep your phone and wallet secure on Charles Bridge — pickpockets target distracted tourists
  • Try Czech wine — Moravian whites compete with Austrian and German bottles
  • Validate public transport tickets immediately or face 800 CZK fines from inspectors

Frequently Asked Questions

Three to four days covers Prague's main attractions comfortably. You'll want one day for Prague Castle and Malá Strana, another for Old Town and the Jewish Quarter, plus time for food tours and day trips. Five days lets you explore neighborhoods like Vinohrady and take a day trip to Český Krumlov.

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