3 Days in Prague (2026) — Perfect First-Timer Itinerary by Locals

Itinerary · Prague

The complete local guide for a 3-day Prague visit — day-by-day itinerary covering Old Town, Prague Castle, Jewish Quarter, Malá Strana and a day trip option, with interactive map, skip-the-line tips and honest costs

Updated 2026 📅 3-day / 72-hour itinerary 🗺️ Interactive map — all three days 💰 Real costs in USD · Budget & mid-range

Three days in Prague is the sweet spot for a first visit. Enough time to cover every major landmark — Old Town Square and the Charles Bridge, Prague Castle, the Jewish Quarter in Josefov, and the baroque streets of Malá Strana — with time for a day trip, a proper dinner and the specific unhurried Prague experience that one or two days does not quite allow.

Book skip-the-line tickets now — Jewish Quarter and Castle queues reach 60 min in peak season. Hotels sell out weeks ahead for 3-night stays.
3 Days in Prague — At a Glance

The Perfect 3-Day Prague Itinerary

  1. Day 1 — Old Town & Riverside: Old Town Square and Astronomical Clock (morning), Charles Bridge walk, Wenceslas Square and National Museum (afternoon), Vltava river cruise, evening walk back across Charles Bridge.
  2. Day 2 — Prague Castle & Malá Strana: Prague Castle complex including St. Vitus Cathedral and Golden Lane (early morning), Malá Strana baroque streets and Nerudova, Petřín Hill funicular and lookout tower (afternoon), Kampa Island and John Lennon Wall, classical concert evening.
  3. Day 3 — Jewish Quarter & Day Trip: Jewish Quarter (Josefov) with six synagogues and Old Jewish Cemetery (morning), choice of afternoon day trip to Kutná Hora Bone Church or free afternoon in Vinohrady neighbourhood.
Quick answer — 3 days in Prague
Day 1
Old Town · Charles Bridge · Wenceslas Square · River cruise
East of the river — the historic core
Day 2
Prague Castle · Malá Strana · Petřín · Concert
West of the river — castle hill and baroque quarter
Day 3
Jewish Quarter · Day trip option
Josefov morning + Kutná Hora or Vinohrady afternoon
Book in advance
Jewish Quarter + Castle + Concert
All three sell out — especially June–August

Interactive Map — All 3 Days

Blue = Day 1 · Green = Day 2 · Orange = Day 3. Click any marker for details and direct booking links.


3-Day Prague Weekend — Full Overview

Day 1 — Old Town
08:00 Old Town Square
09:30 Astronomical Clock Tower
10:30 Charles Bridge walk
12:30 Lunch in Old Town
14:00 Wenceslas Square
16:00 Vltava river cruise
19:00 Dinner + evening walk
Day 2 — Castle
08:00 Prague Castle
10:30 Malá Strana wander
12:00 Lunch in Malá Strana
14:00 Petřín funicular + tower
16:00 Kampa Island
17:00 John Lennon Wall
19:00 Classical concert
Day 3 — Jewish Quarter
09:00 Jewish Quarter (Josefov)
11:30 Pařížská Boulevard
12:30 Lunch in Old Town
14:00 Option A: Kutná Hora
14:00 Option B: Vinohrady
19:00 Farewell dinner
The single most important thing: Book Jewish Quarter skip-the-line tickets before you leave home. In peak season (June–August), walk-in queues at Josefov reach 45–60 minutes. Everything else can be managed on the day — not this.

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Day 1
Old Town, Charles Bridge & the Riverside
Staré Město · Karlův most · Nové Město · Vltava River
1
08:00 — 09:30 · 90 min
Old Town Square (Staroměstské náměstí)
📍 Staroměstské náměstí, Praha 1 · Týn Church · Jan Hus Memorial

Start at Old Town Square before the tour groups arrive at 9am. The square — one of the finest medieval public spaces in Europe — is empty and at its best in the early morning. Walk the full perimeter past the Church of Our Lady before Týn (Gothic towers dating to 1365), the Jan Hus Memorial (1915), and the baroque St. Nicholas Church. The Astronomical Clock (Orloj) on the Old Town Hall tower has been measuring time since 1410 — the mechanical procession of apostles happens on the hour from 9am.

Climb the Old Town Hall Tower for the best elevated view over the square and the red rooftops of Staré Město — worth the €6 entry and the pre-booking to avoid the queue.

Old Town Hall Tower — limited entry slots, sell out fast in summer. Secure yours now.
2
09:30 — 11:00 · 90 min
Charles Bridge (Karlův most) & Malá Strana Tower
📍 Karlův most · 30 Baroque statues · Vltava River

Charles Bridge — built by Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV in 1357 — connects Old Town to Malá Strana across the Vltava. The 516-metre Gothic bridge is lined with 30 Baroque statues added between 1683 and 1714, the most famous being St. John of Nepomuk (the bronze figure worn smooth by touching). Walk the full length to Malostranská věž (the Malá Strana Bridge Tower) and look back — the view of Old Town behind you and Pražský hrad (Prague Castle) above Malá Strana is the defining Prague perspective.

3
11:00 — 12:30 · 90 min
Back to Old Town — Lunch Away from the Square
📍 Dlouhá · Rámová · Celetná — eat here, not on the square

Walk back to Old Town for lunch. The rule applies here as everywhere: do not eat within direct sightline of Old Town Square. On Dlouhá, Rámová and the side streets off Celetná, Czech restaurants serve the same svíčková, goulash and roast pork at 40–50% below square prices. A full Czech lunch with beer costs CZK 250–380 (€10–15). Look for the chalk boards showing the denní menu (daily lunch menu) — two courses for CZK 130–180.

⚠️ The Prague tourist trap pattern: Menus without prices outside, waiters who follow you in from the street, laminated picture menus — all reliable indicators of tourist pricing. The moment you step off the main tourist axis, you are in a different economic reality.
4
14:00 — 16:00 · 2 hours
Wenceslas Square (Václavské náměstí) & New Town
📍 Václavské náměstí · Národní muzeum · Obecní dům

Václavské náměstí — Wenceslas Square — is a 750-metre boulevard that has been the stage for every major event in modern Czech history: the 1918 declaration of independence, the 1968 Soviet invasion, Jan Palach’s 1969 self-immolation, and the 1989 Velvet Revolution. The National Museum (Národní muzeum) at the top end recently reopened after a decade of renovation — the neo-Renaissance building and natural history collection are worth 45 minutes.

From Wenceslas Square, the Municipal House (Obecní dům) is 10 minutes’ walk — the finest Art Nouveau building in Prague, completed in 1912 and the site of Czechoslovakia’s declaration of independence. Free to enter the foyer and café; guided tours of the ceremonial halls available.

5
16:00 — 18:00 · 2 hours
Vltava River Cruise
📍 Departure from Čechův Bridge · Vltava River · Charles Bridge from below

A 1–2 hour Vltava river cruise gives you the view that most visitors never see — Karlův most from below, the castle on the hill above Malá Strana from the water, the embankment buildings in afternoon light. This is the perspective that makes Prague’s relationship with its river comprehensible and it cannot be replicated from land. The evening cruise option adds city lights if you prefer.

Vltava River Cruise — castle and bridge views from the water. Book to secure your preferred time slot.

Evening: Dinner in Old Town, then Charles Bridge after 9pm — tourists gone, bridge lit, castle floodlit above Malá Strana. This is the version worth lingering on.


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Day 2
Prague Castle, Malá Strana & Classical Concert
Pražský hrad · Malá Strana · Petřín · Klementinum
“I always tell people: go to the castle on the second morning, not the first. On the first morning you are fresh and should be in Old Town. On the second morning you know the city well enough to appreciate what you are looking at from up there — the red rooftops of Staré Město, the river, the hills beyond Vinohrady. The view from the castle ramparts is a different experience when you already know the city below.” — Dan, HelloPrague.net
1
08:00 — 10:30 · 2.5 hours
Prague Castle (Pražský hrad)
📍 Hradčany · St. Vitus Cathedral · Golden Lane · Castle Gardens

Pražský hrad — Prague Castle — is the largest ancient castle complex in the world at 70,000 square metres. Founded in 880 AD, continuously inhabited by Bohemian kings, Holy Roman Emperors and Czech presidents ever since. Arrive at 8am to beat the tour groups that arrive from 9:30am.

Priority order with 2.5 hours: Katedrála sv. Víta (St. Vitus Cathedral) — the Gothic interior with its 21 chapels, the Bohemian Crown Jewels vault and the stained glass by Alphonse Mucha is the centrepiece of the entire complex. The castle courtyards and rampart views over Prague. Zlatá ulička (Golden Lane) — the tiny coloured houses built into the castle wall in the 16th century, where Franz Kafka briefly lived at No. 22 in 1916–17. The castle galleries if time allows.

Prague Castle — timed entry tickets sell out early on summer mornings. Don’t queue — secure your slot now.
2
10:30 — 12:00 · 90 min
Malá Strana — Nerudova & Malostranské náměstí
📍 Nerudova ulice · Malostranské náměstí · Chrám sv. Mikuláše

Walk down from the castle through Malá Strana — the baroque quarter between the castle hill and Charles Bridge, the most architecturally intact neighbourhood in Prague. Nerudova ulice descends from the castle steps through palaces identified by their distinctive house signs: the Two Suns (No. 47, where Jan Neruda was born), the Three Fiddles, the Red Eagle, the Golden Horseshoe. Malostranské náměstí at the bottom contains the Church of St. Nicholas (Chrám sv. Mikuláše) — arguably the finest Baroque church in Central Europe, with a ceiling fresco by Johann Lukas Kracker that covers 1,500 square metres.

3
12:00 — 13:30 · 90 min
Lunch in Malá Strana
📍 Josefská · Tomášská · Prokopská · Všehrdova

The streets one back from Malostranské náměstí — Josefská, Tomášská, Prokopská — have Czech restaurants where the lunch set menu costs CZK 150–250 (€6–10). A wine bar lunch on Všehrdova or Nebovidská is the specifically Malá Strana experience: a glass of Moravian wine, bread with lard, a view through the window of the cobblestones emptying as the afternoon begins.

4
14:00 — 16:30 · 2.5 hours
Petřín Hill, Funicular & Kampa Island
📍 Petřínská rozhledna · Lanová dráha · Kampa · Čertovka

Petřín is a forested hill rising above Malá Strana — accessible by the lanová dráha (funicular railway) from Újezd using a standard transit ticket. The Petřín Lookout Tower (Petřínská rozhledna) — a 60-metre iron tower built in 1891 — gives a 360° panorama of Prague and on clear days extends 100km. In late April the cherry orchards are in bloom. At any time the contrast with the density below is immediate.

Walk back down through Kampa — the island below the Malá Strana end of Charles Bridge. The Čertovka (Devil’s Stream) runs alongside the island. The John Lennon Wall on Velkopřevorské náměstí — a continuously repainted memorial to Lennon since 1980 — is a 5-minute walk from Kampa. One of the genuinely moving small things in Prague.

5
19:00 — 21:00 · Evening
Classical Concert — Mirror Chapel or Lobkowicz Palace
📍 Zrcadlová kaple Klementina · Lobkowicz Palace · Prague Castle

The Klementinum Mirror Chapel (Zrcadlová kaple) — a baroque hall with mirrored walls and ceiling frescoes — hosts evening concerts of Vivaldi, Mozart and Baroque Czech composers. The Lobkowicz Palace concert at Prague Castle is equally exceptional: performing inside the castle complex after closing hours, in a palace that has housed Beethoven manuscripts since the 19th century. Both venues sell out weeks ahead in June, July and August.

Classical concerts at Prague’s most beautiful historic venues. Both sell out in peak season — book before you travel.

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Day 3
Jewish Quarter & Day Trip or Vinohrady
Josefov · Pařížská · Kutná Hora or Vinohrady
1
09:00 — 11:30 · 2.5 hours
Jewish Quarter (Josefov)
📍 Josefov · Španělská synagoga · Starý židovský hřbitov · Pinkasova synagoga

The Josefov quarter — Prague’s Jewish Quarter — is the most concentrated collection of Jewish heritage in Central Europe. Six synagogues and the Starý židovský hřbitov (Old Jewish Cemetery) — 12,000 headstones in layers up to 12 deep, the oldest grave from 1439. The Pinkasova synagoga (Pinkas Synagogue) is one of the most affecting memorials in Europe: the walls are inscribed with the names of 80,000 Bohemian and Moravian Jews killed in the Holocaust, written in their hometown groups. The Španělská synagoga (Spanish Synagogue) has Moorish Revival interiors from 1868 that are among the most beautiful in the country.

Jewish Quarter combined ticket — all 6 synagogues + cemetery. This is the most important advance booking in Prague.
2
11:30 — 12:30 · 1 hour
Pařížská Boulevard & Lunch
📍 Pařížská ulice · Art Nouveau architecture · Old Town lunch

Pařížská ulice — Prague’s most exclusive shopping street — runs from Old Town Square to the Jewish Quarter through a parade of Art Nouveau facades. The architecture (late 1890s–1910s) is worth looking at regardless of the luxury brands at street level. Lunch in Old Town: two streets back from the square, as always.

3
14:00 — 18:00 · Afternoon
Afternoon Option A — Day Trip to Kutná Hora
📍 Kutná Hora · Kostnice ossuary · Chrám sv. Barbory · UNESCO

Kutná Hora — 80km east of Prague — is a UNESCO World Heritage silver-mining town with two extraordinary landmarks: the Sedlec Ossuary (Kostnice) — a church decorated with the bones of 40,000 people arranged into chandeliers, coats of arms and garlands — and the Cathedral of St. Barbara (Chrám sv. Barbory), a Gothic cathedral begun in 1388 and one of the finest in Central Europe. A guided day trip from Prague covers both with transport included and takes 4–5 hours return.

Kutná Hora day trip — guided tour with transport from Prague. Bone Church + St. Barbara’s Cathedral included.
4
14:00 — 18:00 · Afternoon
Afternoon Option B — Vinohrady neighbourhood
📍 Náměstí Míru · Riegrovy sady · Mánesova · local Prague

If a day trip does not appeal, spend the afternoon in Vinohrady — the Art Nouveau residential district immediately east of Wenceslas Square. Náměstí Míru (Peace Square) with the Neo-Gothic Church of St. Ludmila. Riegrovy sady — a hilltop park with a beer garden and one of the best city views in Prague, looking across the rooftops toward the castle. Mánesova and the side streets for the best restaurants and wine bars in the city, at local prices. This is where Prague’s professionals live and eat — the version of the city that most visitors on a short trip never see.


Real Costs — 3 Days in Prague

A realistic budget for 3 days in Prague per person, mid-range:

ItemBudgetMid-rangeNotes
Hotel (3 nights)$165–240$360–560Budget hotel vs 4-star Old Town
Jewish Quarter tickets$24–28$24–28Same price regardless of budget
Prague Castle tickets$16–22$40–60Self-guided vs guided tour
Old Town Tower$6$6
River cruise$18–22$22–281–2 hours
Classical concert$32–40$40–55Mirror Chapel or Lobkowicz
Kutná Hora day trip$35–45$45–60Optional Day 3
Food & drink (3 days)$60–90$90–150Eating locally vs restaurants
Transport pass (3-day)$13$13All trams, metro, funicular
Airport transfer (return)$40–50$40–50Pre-booked private transfer
Total per person$409–556$720–1,010Excl. flights

For full price breakdown with USD comparisons to other European cities: Prague Cost Guide.


Where to Stay for 3 Days in Prague

For a 3-day visit, staying in Old Town or Malá Strana makes both days entirely walkable. New Town (Wenceslas Square area) saves 20–30% on hotel costs with Old Town 12 minutes away on foot.

Best Overall · Old Town
Iron Gate Hotel
Gothic 14th century · 3 min Old Town Square · Medieval frescoes · From $152/night
Best Atmosphere · Malá Strana
Hotel Waldstein
14th century · Renaissance cellar · Castle area · From $128/night
Best Value · New Town
BoHo Prague Hotel
Design hotel · SLH member · Indoor pool · From $152/night
3-night Prague stays sell out fast in May, June and September. Don’t leave the hotel for last.

Full guide: Where to Stay in Prague · Where NOT to Stay · Old Town vs New Town


More Prague Planning Guides


Frequently Asked Questions — 3 Days in Prague

Is 3 days enough for Prague?
Yes — three days covers everything essential for a first visit: Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock, Charles Bridge, Prague Castle and St. Vitus Cathedral, the Jewish Quarter, and Malá Strana. It also allows time for a river cruise, a classical concert, and one day trip. The only things three days does not cover are the outer neighbourhoods (Vinohrady, Žižkov, Holešovice) and multiple day trips — which require a 4–5 day visit.
What is the best 3-day Prague itinerary for first-timers?
Day 1: Old Town Square and Astronomical Clock, Charles Bridge, Wenceslas Square, river cruise, evening walk. Day 2: Prague Castle early morning, Malá Strana streets and Church of St. Nicholas, Petřín funicular and lookout, Kampa Island and John Lennon Wall, classical concert. Day 3: Jewish Quarter with all synagogues, Pařížská boulevard, afternoon day trip to Kutná Hora Bone Church or afternoon in Vinohrady neighbourhood.
Is Prague Castle worth visiting?
Yes — Prague Castle is one of the most significant historic complexes in Europe and is worth a full morning. St. Vitus Cathedral alone justifies the trip: the Gothic interior, the Bohemian Crown Jewels vault, and the Alphonse Mucha stained glass window. The castle courtyards, Golden Lane (where Kafka lived), and the views from the ramparts over Prague are all independently worthwhile. Allow 2–2.5 hours minimum. Arrive early (8am) to avoid the tour groups that arrive from 9:30am.
How much does 3 days in Prague cost?
Per person, excluding flights: budget travellers approximately $400–560 (hostel or budget hotel, skip-the-line tickets, local restaurants), mid-range approximately $720–1,010 (3–4 star hotel in Old Town, all main attractions, restaurant dinners). The most significant variables are accommodation (budget hotel vs Old Town 4-star adds $200–300) and whether you do the Kutná Hora day trip ($35–60 per person). Full breakdown in our Prague Cost Guide.
Is Kutná Hora worth a day trip from Prague?
Yes — Kutná Hora is the best single day trip from Prague for most first-time visitors. The Sedlec Ossuary (Bone Church) is genuinely extraordinary and unlike anything else in Europe. The Cathedral of St. Barbara is one of the finest Gothic cathedrals in Central Europe. The UNESCO town is well-preserved and uncrowded compared to Prague. A guided day trip with transport takes 4–5 hours and includes both main sites.
What should I book in advance for a 3-day Prague visit?
Three things are essential to book before you travel: (1) Jewish Quarter skip-the-line tickets — the single most important advance booking, walk-in queues reach 45–60 min in peak season. (2) Prague Castle timed entry — saves the queue at the main gate. (3) Classical concert at Mirror Chapel or Lobkowicz Palace — both sell out weeks ahead in June, July and August. Hotel booking: 4–6 weeks ahead for shoulder season, 2–3 months for peak summer.

Ready to Plan Your 3 Days in Prague?

Secure the hotel and the skip-the-line tickets now — everything else can wait until you arrive.

Get Skip-the-Line Tickets → Find Your Hotel Now → Where to Stay Guide →

This article contains affiliate links. If you book through them, HelloPrague earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. All recommendations are based on personal experience and honest assessment. Full disclosure here.

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