From Charles Bridge at dawn to beer spas, river cruises, ghost tours, e-bike rides, classical concerts in Baroque halls and day trips to bone churches — everything Prague offers, ranked by someone who lives here
Prague consistently ranks among the top five most visited cities in Europe, and the question every visitor asks is the same: what are the best things to do in Prague? The honest answer is that the city has more genuinely excellent experiences per square kilometre than almost anywhere on the continent — from the Astronomical Clock and Charles Bridge that everyone knows about, to beer spas, Gothic bone churches, Baroque library concerts and river cruises past a castle that has been standing since the 9th century. This is the complete list, ranked honestly, with everything you need to book and visit each one.
If you are visiting Prague for 3+ days and plan to tick off several attractions, the Go City Prague Pass covers 30+ sites including the Jewish Quarter, Prague Castle, river cruises, walking tours and more — often saving 30–40% versus individual tickets. The most efficient way to approach a packed Prague itinerary.
Get Go City Prague Pass → Browse Prague City Passes →Prague Castle is not a single building — it is a complex of palaces, churches, gardens, a monastery, a royal burial ground and a gallery covering 70,000 square metres on a hill above the Vltava. St. Vitus Cathedral, begun in 1344 and not completed until 1929, contains the tombs of Bohemian kings and Holy Roman Emperors. The Royal Palace has the Vladislav Hall — the largest secular Gothic vaulted interior in Central Europe. The Golden Lane has Franz Kafka’s writing house. This is a full day minimum and the best single thing to do in Prague without question.
Charles Bridge is the most walked street in Prague and in summer the most crowded — 50,000 people cross it daily at peak. Before 7 AM, you may share it with 20 other people. The 30 Baroque statues, the castle ahead, the river below, the morning mist on the water — this is the version of the bridge that exists in everyone’s imagination of Prague and it requires an early alarm to experience. Walk it from Old Town toward Malá Strana; the castle reveals itself ahead as you cross.
Old Town Square is where a thousand years of Czech history happened in public — coronations, executions, revolutions. The Astronomical Clock (1410) is one of the oldest working clocks in the world and displays four simultaneous timekeeping systems including the position of the sun and moon against the zodiac. The Old Town Hall Tower at 69 metres gives the best overhead view of the square’s layout — the 27 white crosses marking the 1621 execution site are visible from above. The Týn Church towers, St. Nicholas Church and the Kinský Palace complete one of Europe’s great civic spaces.
The Jewish Quarter is the most concentrated historical neighbourhood in Prague — six surviving synagogues, the Old Jewish Cemetery with 100,000 people buried in layers twelve deep, and the Pinkas Synagogue with the names of 77,297 Czech Jewish Holocaust victims inscribed on its walls. The Golem legend originated here; Rabbi Loew ben Bezalel is buried in the cemetery. This is a profoundly important place and one of the most affecting hours you can spend in any European city.
Petřín Tower sits on a forested hill rising directly behind Malá Strana — at 63.5 metres on a hill already 327 metres above sea level, the panorama from the top is the most complete in Prague. The castle is at eye level to the north; Old Town’s towers cluster to the east; the Vltava curves below in both directions. The hill itself — orchards, rose gardens, mirror maze, the Strahov Monastery with its extraordinary Baroque library — deserves as much time as the tower. Take the funicular up, walk the hill, descend through the vineyards.
The Baroque Library Hall in the Klementinum — a two-storey oval room with ceiling frescoes depicting the Temple of Wisdom, gilded galleries and original 18th-century globes — is one of the most beautiful interior spaces in Central Europe. The Klementinum is the second largest complex in Prague after the castle, yet most visitors walk past it entirely on the way to Charles Bridge. The Astronomical Tower, from which the daily time signal was given to Prague from 1842 onwards, gives the best close-range view of Old Town rooftops in the city.
Vyšehrad is 20 minutes by metro from Old Town and visited by perhaps 5% of Prague’s tourists — which is one of the city’s great oversights. The rocky promontory above the Vltava contains the national cemetery with Dvořák, Smetana, Mucha and 600 other significant Czech figures, the Basilica of St. Peter and St. Paul, the casemates housing the original Baroque statues from Charles Bridge, and some of the best river views in Prague. It is free, uncrowded, historically rich and completely undervalued on the tourist circuit.
The best thing you can do on your first day in Prague is take a guided walking tour of the three historic districts before exploring independently. A good guide covers Old Town Square and the clock in proper depth, the 27 execution crosses, the Týn Church entrance that everyone misses, the Jewish Quarter Golem legend, and the New Town’s 1989 Velvet Revolution history — context that fundamentally changes how you see everything else for the rest of your trip.
Prague has one of the richest traditions of dark history and urban legend in Central Europe — the 1621 execution of 27 Czech lords on Old Town Square, the Golem of the Jewish Quarter, the headless horseman, the clock legend of Master Hanuš. The ghost tour covers all of this in the lanes after dark, when the tourist crowds have thinned and the city is genuinely atmospheric. Standing at the execution site at 9 PM while a guide explains what happened there on 21 June 1621 is one of the most affecting experiences Prague offers.
The view of Charles Bridge from the water — looking up at the Baroque statues from below, with the castle behind — is completely different from walking across it and worth experiencing once. The open-top glass boat lunch cruise gives you this view over two hours with a meal included, passing the castle, the National Theatre, Vyšehrad and the Dancing House. The perspective from the river explains the city’s geography in a way that walking through it cannot.
The jazz-style evening cruise is the most atmospheric river experience in Prague — the castle lit from below, Charles Bridge reflected in the Vltava, live music and a running commentary on the buildings and history passing on both banks. The best couples’ activity in the city and an excellent alternative to a standard dinner if you want to combine food, music and the best views Prague offers in a single evening booking.
Cycling with a local guide is the single most efficient way to cover Prague’s historic districts — you move at three times walking pace, your guide knows which lanes to take and which cobblestones to avoid, and the city looks completely different from a bicycle than from a tourist walking route. Private and small-group options mean the guide adjusts the route to your interests. The e-bike option makes the castle hill approaches manageable for anyone who wants to cover the full city without arriving at the top breathless.
The Mirror Chapel (Zrcadlová kaple) inside the Klementinum is a small, perfectly proportioned 18th-century chapel with a frescoed ceiling, gilded mirrors and candlelight — one of the most beautiful small concert venues in Europe. The Royal Czech Orchestra performs here regularly. An evening concert in this room, followed by dinner in a nearby wine cellar, is the definitive Prague cultural evening and costs a fraction of equivalent venues in Vienna or Salzburg.
The Lobkowicz Palace in the Prague Castle complex owns original handwritten manuscripts by Beethoven and Mozart. The midday concerts take place in a room where music has been performed since the 18th century, in a palace whose collection includes Beethoven’s own annotated scores. The combination of castle visit in the morning and midday concert is the best single cultural day Prague offers.
Franz Kafka was born 300 metres from Old Town Square, attended school in the Kinský Palace on the square, and lived within a ten-minute walk of it for most of his short life. The Kafka Museum in Malá Strana, near Charles Bridge, covers his Prague through original manuscripts, photographs, correspondence and the city itself as his primary creative influence. The bureaucratic, labyrinthine, slightly threatening city in his novels is recognisably Prague, and walking the lanes around Old Town Square after visiting the museum makes the connection visceral.
You soak in a large oak tub filled with warm water, Czech beer, hops and brewer’s yeast — said to have skin and circulation benefits — while unlimited cold Bernard beer flows from a tap beside you. This is an entirely genuine Czech wellness tradition, available nowhere else, and it is considerably more relaxing than it sounds. The massage add-on makes it a proper half-afternoon. Best experienced in winter when the warmth of the tub after cold cobblestones is particularly welcome, but excellent in any season.
Prague’s Ice Pub is kept at -8°C and constructed entirely from ice — walls, bar, glasses, sculptures. Fur coats are provided at the door. You drink Czech beer from an ice glass in a room where everything is frozen solid. It is genuinely fun, takes about 45 minutes, and works particularly well as a pre-dinner novelty for groups. The nightclub entry option extends the evening considerably.
Old Town has more tourist-facing restaurants per square metre than almost anywhere in Europe, and a food tour is the most reliable solution — it takes you to the places locals actually eat, covering svíčková, smažený sýr, chlebíčky open sandwiches, Czech beer culture and the kavárna tradition that is one of Prague’s most important and most undervisited cultural institutions. You leave knowing where to eat for the rest of your trip without the guesswork.
Czech pub culture is one of the most important social institutions in the country — the pivnice (pub) has a specific atmosphere, a specific relationship between the barman and the regular, and a specific etiquette around Czech beer that takes years to understand independently. A historic pubs tour with a local guide who knows the stories behind each venue gives you in three hours what would take three visits to absorb on your own. Drinks are included and the route covers pubs that have been operating for centuries in some cases.
The Sedlec Ossuary is decorated with the bones of approximately 40,000 people — chandeliers made of every bone in the human body, garlands of skulls, a coat of arms assembled from human remains. It is one of the strangest and most affecting places in Europe. Combined with St. Barbara’s Cathedral and the UNESCO medieval town, Kutná Hora is the single best day trip from Prague and 55 minutes by direct train.
Český Krumlov is three hours from Prague and worth every minute of the journey — a medieval castle town in a bend of the Vltava in South Bohemia, with the second largest castle in the Czech Republic above cobbled lanes and Renaissance squares. The castle gardens give a view down onto the town and river that is one of the defining images of Central European travel. Take a guided tour to avoid timetable stress on the return bus.
Dan Brown’s 2025 thriller The Secret of Secrets is set entirely in Prague — Charles Bridge, the Klementinum, Petřín Tower, Folimanka Park’s Cold War bunker, the Four Seasons Hotel. All real locations, all visitable. The official Dan Brown walking tour covers the key sites with a guide who knows the novel, giving the historical and architectural context that makes the locations make sense both as Prague landmarks and as thriller settings.
The Prague Christmas market on Old Town Square is one of the finest in Europe — and most visitors experience it by wandering through without understanding the Czech Christmas traditions, food culture and folklore behind it. The guided market tour with photoshoot covers the context and produces professional photographs with the Týn Church and decorated square as backdrop. Runs through the Easter market season (March–April) as well as December.
The Powder Tower marks the eastern gateway to Prague’s historic Old Town — a late Gothic tower begun in 1475, standing at the start of the Royal Route that runs west to Prague Castle. The tower view looks east over New Town and west along Celetná Street toward Old Town Square. Combine it with the Municipal House next door (one of Prague’s finest Art Nouveau buildings) for a 45-minute stop that most visitors on a short itinerary miss entirely.
Winter is not the compromise season in Prague — for many visitors it is the best time to come. The crowds disappear, hotel prices fall significantly, the Christmas market fills Old Town Square with mulled wine and carols, the concert halls reach their peak, and the morning fog on the Vltava with Charles Bridge and the castle emerging from it is one of the most beautiful urban images in Europe. February is the best-value month of the year. December is the most magical.
Book Every Prague Experience — All Tickets & Tours in One Place
- Tiqets — Old Town, Jewish Quarter & New Town walking tour
- Tiqets — Prague ghost tour · Old Town legends & dark history
- Klook — Prague Old Town food tour · traditional Czech cuisine
- GetYourGuide — Prague historic pubs tour with drinks included
- Tiqets — Prague Dan Brown walking tour · Secret of Secrets locations
- WeGoTrip — Self-guided audio tours of Prague
- Tiqets — Klementinum Mirror Chapel classical concert · Royal Czech Orchestra
- Klook — Midday concert at Lobkowicz Palace · Prague Castle
- GetYourGuide — Prague beer spa · Bernard Beer Spa with massage option
- GetYourGuide — Prague private spa with jacuzzi and/or sauna
- GetYourGuide — Prague Ice Pub entry with nightclub option
- GetYourGuide — Prague Christmas & Easter Markets tour with photoshoot
- Tiqets — Kutná Hora guided day trip · Bone Church + St. Barbara’s
- Tiqets — Český Krumlov guided day tour from Prague
- Tiqets — Karlštejn Castle day trip from Prague
- Tiqets — Terezín day trip with transport from Prague
- Klook — Bohemian & Saxon Switzerland day tour
For the full day trips guide with honest verdicts on every destination, see our Best Day Trips from Prague guide.
Plan Your Full Prague Visit
- Prague Travel Guide 2026 — the complete planning resource before you arrive
- 3 Days in Prague Itinerary 2026 — how to sequence these 25 activities across three days
- Prague Castle Complete Guide — full guide to No.1 on this list
- Charles Bridge Complete Guide — all 30 statues explained, best times, tower views
- Old Town Square Guide — the clock, the 27 crosses, what nobody tells you
- Best Restaurants in Prague 2026 — where to eat between activities
- Prague in Winter Guide — if visiting November through March
- Best Day Trips from Prague — full guide to all 8 destinations
- Best Hotels in Malá Strana — where to stay to be closest to the best of these activities
- Prague Airport Transfer Guide — getting from the airport to start your Prague experience
Frequently Asked Questions — Things to Do in Prague
Start Planning Your Prague Visit
Book the ghost tour for your first evening, the castle for your first morning, and Charles Bridge alarm for 6 AM on day one. Everything else follows naturally from those three decisions. Prague rewards the early riser and the curious — it is a city that gives more the more you look.
Get Go City Prague Pass Book Ghost Tour — First Evening Browse All Prague ActivitiesThis 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.