Prague Hotels in Historic Buildings (2026) — Monasteries, Gothic Palaces, Art Nouveau & a Former Communist PrisonPrague hotels historic buildings

Hotels · Historic Buildings

Ten Prague hotels where the building is as interesting as the room — spanning eight centuries of architecture, from a 13th-century Augustinian monastery to a brutalist landmark that was the first Western investment in the Eastern Bloc

Updated 2026 🏛️ 10 hotels · 6 architectural eras 📅 13th century to 1974 📍 Old Town · Malá Strana · New Town

Most European capitals have one or two hotels in genuinely historic buildings. Prague has dozens — a consequence of the city’s extraordinary architectural survival and its transition from Communist state property to private ownership after 1989, which released hundreds of historic palaces, monasteries and civic buildings onto the market simultaneously. The ten hotels on this list represent the range: from ultra-luxury in a medieval monastery to a budget option in a building where Václav Havel was interrogated by the secret police.


13–14c
Medieval Era
Monasteries & Convents — The Oldest Hotels in Prague

Medieval Monasteries

Most Extraordinary · 13th Century · Monks Still Present · Malá Strana
Augustine, a Luxury Collection Hotel
Letenská 12/33, Malá Strana · Walk to Charles Bridge · Prague Castle 15 min
Founded 1285 · Augustinian Monastery · Active religious community on site

The Augustine occupies a complex of seven historic buildings centred on the Church and Monastery of St Thomas, founded in 1285 by Wenceslas II. The Augustinian monks are still present — the monastery operates as an active religious community alongside the hotel, which is either a remarkable piece of living history or a slightly surreal arrangement depending on your perspective. It is both simultaneously.

The hotel was created by the Rocco Forte group, which preserved the monastery’s original structure — vaulted stone corridors, frescoed ceilings, a brewery that has been operating since the 14th century and still produces St Thomas Dark Beer served in the hotel bar. Rooms occupy cells, cloisters and palace wings depending on category. The combination of medieval monastic architecture, the active brewery, and the Malá Strana location makes this the most historically complete hotel experience in Prague.

Historical note: The monastery brewery has operated continuously since 1358 — making it one of the oldest active breweries in Central Europe. The St Thomas Dark Beer served in the hotel bar is brewed to the original recipe.
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14th Century Dominican Convent · Malá Strana · Ultra-Luxury
Mandarin Oriental Prague
Nebovidská 459/1, Malá Strana · Quiet street · 10 min to Charles Bridge
Founded 1360 · Dominican Convent of St Mary Magdalene · Gothic chapel preserved

The Mandarin Oriental occupies a 14th-century Dominican convent with a Gothic chapel that has been preserved as a spa treatment room — you can receive a massage in a medieval vaulted chapel, which is a sentence that does not lose its strangeness on repetition. The building retains original stone vaulting, Gothic windows and the spatial logic of a convent: long corridors, unexpected courtyards, rooms of varying character depending on which part of the original structure they occupy.

The Malá Strana location is quieter than the Augustine’s — Nebovidská is a residential street away from the main tourist routes, which gives the hotel a seclusion that the neighbourhood’s cobblestones and baroque facades reinforce. Rates from CZK 12,000 (€480) per night. The spa in the Gothic chapel is worth booking even as a non-guest if availability permits.

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Medieval Tower · Charles Bridge · Malá Strana · Unique Location
Hotel Pod Věží
Mostecká 2, Malá Strana · Directly at Malá Strana Bridge Tower · Charles Bridge
Medieval tower complex · Malá Strana Bridge Tower · Charles Bridge gateway

Hotel Pod Věží — “Under the Tower” — sits directly beneath the Malá Strana Bridge Tower, the Gothic gateway at the Malá Strana end of Charles Bridge. The building is part of the medieval fortification complex that has guarded the bridge since the 14th century. Waking up in a room that looks directly at one of the most photographed bridges in Europe, from the medieval tower that was built to defend it, is a specific Prague experience that no other hotel location replicates.

It is a smaller, more characterful property than the Augustine or Mandarin Oriental — boutique in scale, with rooms that vary considerably depending on which part of the tower complex they occupy. Some have direct bridge views; book specifically for these. Rates from CZK 3,500 (€140) per night — significantly more accessible than the monastery hotels.

“I have walked past the Augustine monastery hundreds of times over my life — it is on the main route from Malá Strana up toward the castle. For most of that time it was a monastery and nothing else. When it became a hotel I was instinctively resistant to the idea. Then I went inside. The stone vaulting, the brewery, the monks moving through the corridors in the morning — it had not become something lesser by opening its doors. It had become something that more people could understand.” — Petr, HelloPrague.net

14–15c
Gothic Era
Gothic Buildings — Stone, Vaulting & Medieval Character

Gothic Buildings

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Gothic · Old Town · Medieval Courtyards · Boutique
Iron Gate Hotel
Michalská 19, Staré Město · 3 min to Old Town Square · Charles Bridge 5 min
14th century Gothic building · Original vaulted cellars · Medieval frescoes

The Iron Gate Hotel occupies a Gothic building on Michalská street in Old Town — one of the oldest streets in Prague, running from Old Town Square toward Charles Bridge. The building retains original Gothic vaulting in the cellars and medieval frescoes in some rooms, uncovered during renovation. Each room is different in character: some have stone walls, some have exposed ceiling beams, some have views over the medieval courtyard that the building wraps around.

This is the most accessible Gothic hotel in Prague — rates from CZK 3,800 (€152) per night, Old Town location, and a character that the larger luxury hotels cannot manufacture at any price. The building has been standing for six centuries; the rooms feel like it.

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Gothic Foundations · Old Town · 13th Century Origins
Hotel Černý Slon
Týnská 1, Staré Město · Týn Church courtyard · Old Town Square 2 min
13th century foundations · Gothic building · Týn Church courtyard · “Black Elephant” since medieval times

Hotel Černý Slon — the Black Elephant — sits in the Týn courtyard directly behind the Týn Church, one of the defining silhouettes of Old Town Square. The building’s foundations date to the 13th century; the current Gothic structure above them has stood since the 15th century. The name comes from a medieval merchant who kept an elephant on the premises, which was considered remarkable enough to become the permanent identity of the building.

The location is exceptional — two minutes from Old Town Square, in the courtyard of one of Prague’s most atmospheric Gothic churches, on a street that has been continuously inhabited for seven hundred years. Boutique scale, characterful rooms, genuinely historic fabric. Rates from CZK 2,800 (€112) per night.


17–18c
Baroque Era
Baroque Palaces — Frescoes, Courtyards & Theatrical Grandeur

Baroque Palaces

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Baroque Palace · Malá Strana · Hammam · Most Dramatic Interior
Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa
Tržiště 19, Malá Strana · Embassy district · 5 min to Charles Bridge
17th century baroque palace · Malá Strana embassy district · Ecsotica Spa with hammam

The Alchymist occupies a baroque palace in Malá Strana’s embassy district — the neighbourhood where the great noble families built their Prague residences in the 17th and 18th centuries, and where many of those palaces now house embassies and consulates. The interior is the most theatrically baroque of any hotel in Prague: frescoed ceilings, antique furnishings, candlelit corridors, a spa in vaulted stone with a hammam that would not look out of place in Istanbul.

The Alchymist is the hotel that understands baroque excess as a genuine aesthetic position rather than a decorating choice. Every room is different. Some have four-poster beds under painted ceilings; some have views over the Malá Strana rooftops. Rates from CZK 8,000 (€320) per night — a premium that the building earns.


1900–14
Art Nouveau Era
Art Nouveau — Prague’s Golden Age of Architecture

Art Nouveau Buildings

Prague built more Art Nouveau architecture per square kilometre than almost any other European city during the decade before the First World War. The style suited the city’s character — organic, decorative, historically conscious — and several of the finest examples are now hotels.

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Art Nouveau Masterpiece · 1904 · Old Town · National Monument
Hotel Paris Prague
U Obecního domu 1, Staré Město · Next to Municipal House · Old Town Square 3 min
Built 1904 · Art Nouveau · Czech National Cultural Monument · Adjacent to Municipal House

Hotel Paris was built in 1904 by Architect Jan Vejrych and is a protected Czech National Cultural Monument — the facade, the interiors and the structural elements are all legally preserved and cannot be altered. The building sits next to the Municipal House, Prague’s greatest Art Nouveau civic building, on a corner that represents the movement at its most confident and most complete.

Inside: original Art Nouveau ironwork, mosaic floors, stained glass, the Sarah Bernhardt restaurant with its period interior intact. The hotel has been operating continuously since it opened in 1904 — it hosted Franz Kafka, who lived nearby and used the café. Rates from CZK 4,500 (€180) per night for a building that has been one of Prague’s finest hotels for over a century.

Historical note: Franz Kafka lived 200 metres from Hotel Paris on náměstí Republiky. The hotel was already twelve years old when he died in 1924. He is known to have used the café.
Art Nouveau · Jewish Quarter · River Views · Fully Renovated 2025
Fairmont Golden Prague
Právnická 1, Josefov · Jewish Quarter · Vltava river · Old Town 5 min
Art Nouveau exterior · Jewish Quarter · Renovated 2025 · Original artworks preserved

The Fairmont Golden Prague occupies an Art Nouveau building on the Vltava embankment in the Jewish Quarter — the facade and public spaces reflect the early 20th-century architectural character of Josefov, which was rebuilt almost entirely in the Art Nouveau style between 1893 and 1913 when the medieval ghetto was demolished and replaced. The building retains its original exterior and the renovation preserved significant period elements in the public areas.


19c
Neo-Renaissance & Historicism
19th Century Grand Buildings — Civic Architecture at its Most Ambitious

Neo-Renaissance Buildings

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Former Central Bank of Bohemia · Neo-Renaissance Palace · New Town
NH Collection Prague Carlo IV
Senovážné náměstí 13, Nové Město · Metro Náměstí Republiky · 10 min Old Town
Built 1890s · Former Central Bank of Bohemia · Neo-Renaissance · Largest hotel pool in central Prague

The NH Collection Carlo IV was built in the 1890s as the Central Bank of Bohemia — a neo-Renaissance palace designed to project the financial authority of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in Bohemia. The soaring banking halls, marble columns, ornate ceilings and the sheer scale of the building all reflect this institutional ambition. Converting a bank of this grandeur into a hotel produces spaces that no purpose-built hotel can match: a breakfast room in a former banking hall with a ceiling twenty metres high is a specific experience.

The pool and spa occupy converted lower-level spaces that retain the building’s structural character. Rates from CZK 4,500 (€180) per night — the best value on this list for the combination of historic building quality and facilities.

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Historic Building · Old Town · Classical Character · Mozart Connection
The Mozart Prague
Staré Město · Old Town · Central location
Historic Old Town building · Classical interiors · Named for Prague’s most celebrated musical guest

The Mozart Prague takes its name from the city’s most celebrated musical connection — Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart premiered Don Giovanni at the Estates Theatre four hundred metres away in 1787, and famously declared that the Praguers understood him better than the Viennese. The hotel occupies a historic Old Town building with classical interiors that suit the name. A characterful mid-range option for travellers who want historic fabric without ultra-luxury pricing.


1948–89
Communist Era
The Buildings Nobody Expected to Become Hotels

Communist-Era Buildings — The Most Unexpected Category

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Former Secret Police Prison · Václav Havel Detained Here · Most Unusual
Unitas Hotel Prague
Bartolomějská 9, Staré Město · Old Town · Near Charles Bridge
Former Czechoslovak Secret Police (StB) detention facility · Václav Havel held here · Now a budget boutique hotel

The Unitas Hotel is the most historically charged budget hotel in Prague. The building on Bartolomějská street served as a detention and interrogation facility for the Czechoslovak secret police (StB) during the Communist era. Václav Havel — playwright, dissident, and eventual first President of democratic Czechoslovakia — was held here during one of his many detentions. The cells are still visible; some are available as rooms.

After 1989 the building was transferred to the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of St Charles Borromeo, who had operated a convent here before the Communists appropriated it in 1948. They now run it as a budget hotel. The combination of history — convent, secret police prison, dissident detention, religious community, budget hotel — is compressed into a single building on a single Old Town street. There is nowhere else quite like it in Prague, or possibly anywhere.

Historical note: Cell P6 at the Unitas is where Václav Havel was held during one of his interrogations. The room is now available as a guest room. The original cell door and fittings remain intact.
“My father was questioned by the StB twice — once in 1968, once in 1977. Not at Bartolomějská; at a different facility. But when I first walked into the Unitas Hotel and saw the corridor with the original cell doors, I understood something about that period that I had not understood from books or from his account of it. The physical reality of a small room with a metal door is different from the description of it. That is what historic buildings do, when they are honest about their history.” — Petr, HelloPrague.net

Compare All 10 Hotels

Hotel Era Area From/night
Augustine1285 MonasteryMalá Strana€350+
Mandarin Oriental1360 ConventMalá Strana€480+
Hotel Pod Věží14c TowerMalá Strana€140+
Iron Gate Hotel14c GothicOld Town€152+
Hotel Černý Slon13–15c GothicOld Town€112+
Alchymist Grand17c BaroqueMalá Strana€320+
Hotel Paris Prague1904 Art NouveauOld Town€180+
Fairmont GoldenArt Nouveau / 1974Jewish Quarter€280+
NH Collection Carlo IV1890s Neo-RenaissanceNew Town€180+
The Mozart PragueHistoric Old TownOld Town€120+
Unitas HotelCommunist-era prisonOld Town€60+

Booking Tips for Historic Building Hotels

  • Request a specific room type — in hotels like the Iron Gate, Augustine and Alchymist, rooms vary enormously in character depending on which part of the historic building they occupy. Email the hotel directly after booking to request stone-walled rooms, vaulted ceilings or courtyard views specifically.
  • Ask about the building’s history — the best historic hotels in Prague have staff who know the building’s story in detail. At the Augustine, ask about the brewery. At the Unitas, ask about the StB period. At the Mandarin Oriental, ask about the Gothic chapel spa. The knowledge is there if you ask for it.
  • Book with free cancellation — all hotels on this list are bookable with free cancellation on Expedia, which allows you to lock in rates while plans are still being confirmed.
  • Low season advantage — November to February (excluding Christmas) offers the best rates at all historic hotels on this list, often 30–40% below summer prices. The buildings are unchanged; the crowds are not.
Best value historic hotel: The Unitas Hotel is the most historically significant budget option in Prague — former Communist secret police detention facility, Václav Havel’s cell available as a room, from €60/night. The NH Collection Carlo IV is the best value for serious historic grandeur with modern facilities — former Central Bank of Bohemia, large pool, from €180/night.

Prague Historic Hotels — Book Direct
13th Century Monastery
Augustine, Luxury Collection
Book →
14th Century Convent · Spa
Mandarin Oriental Prague
Book →
Baroque Palace · Hammam
Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa
Book →
Art Nouveau 1904 · Monument
Hotel Paris Prague
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Former Central Bank · Pool
NH Collection Carlo IV
Book →
Gothic · Charles Bridge Tower
Hotel Pod Věží
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Former StB Prison · Havel’s Cell
Unitas Hotel Prague
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Gothic · Old Town Square Area
Hotel Černý Slon
Book →

More Prague Hotel Guides


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the oldest hotel in Prague?
The Augustine Hotel occupies a complex centred on the Monastery of St Thomas, founded in 1285 — making it the oldest building operating as a hotel in Prague. The monastery brewery has been operating since 1358. The Mandarin Oriental occupies a Dominican convent founded in 1360. Both are in Malá Strana, within ten minutes’ walk of each other.
Which Prague hotel has the most interesting history?
The Unitas Hotel is the most historically charged — a former Czechoslovak secret police detention facility where Václav Havel was held, now operated as a budget hotel by a religious order. The Augustine is the most architecturally complete — an active monastery with an operating brewery dating to 1358. The NH Collection Carlo IV has the most unexpected conversion story — a neo-Renaissance Central Bank of Bohemia turned into a hotel with a swimming pool.
Can I stay in Václav Havel’s cell at the Unitas Hotel?
Yes — Cell P6, where Havel was held during one of his StB interrogations, is available as a guest room. The original cell door and fittings remain intact. The Unitas Hotel is operated by the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy of St Charles Borromeo, who reclaimed the building after 1989. It is one of the most historically significant budget accommodation options in any European city.
What is the best value historic hotel in Prague?
For budget travellers: the Unitas Hotel from €60/night — former Communist prison, extraordinary history, Old Town location. For mid-range: Hotel Černý Slon from €112/night — 13th century Gothic foundations, Týn Church courtyard, two minutes from Old Town Square. For the best combination of historic grandeur and modern facilities: NH Collection Carlo IV from €180/night — former Central Bank of Bohemia with a large indoor pool.
Which historic Prague hotel has a spa?
The Mandarin Oriental has a spa in a preserved Gothic chapel — a medieval vaulted room used as a treatment space. The Alchymist Grand Hotel has the Ecsotica Spa including a hammam in a baroque palace. The Fairmont Golden Prague has a full spa and the only indoor/outdoor pool in a Prague city-centre hotel. The NH Collection Carlo IV has a comprehensive spa and the largest pool in the central hotel area.
Are Prague historic hotels good value compared to other European cities?
Yes — significantly. A night at the Augustine (13th century active monastery) starts at around €350; the equivalent in Paris, Rome or London would be €600–900. The Iron Gate Hotel (14th century Gothic, Old Town) starts at €152; a comparable historic building hotel in Florence or Venice would be €250–400. Prague’s historic hotel market offers genuine value by Western European standards, partly because the city emerged from Communism with an extraordinary stock of historic buildings and a relatively lower cost base.

Sleep in Prague’s History

From a 13th-century monastery to a former Communist prison — all bookable with free cancellation on Expedia.

Augustine — 13c Monastery → NH Carlo IV — Former Bank → Unitas — Havel’s Prison →

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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