Prague Travel Guide: Where to Stay in the Old Town, Malá Strana, and Vinohrady

Locals Insider · Czech Republic

Prague is the Czech capital that travelers consistently call Central Europe's most postcard-perfect city break — the iconic Charles Bridge across the Vltava, Prague Castle (the largest in the world by some measures), the medieval Old Town Square with its astronomical clock, and the world's highest per-capita beer consumption. The Jewish Quarter (with one of Europe's oldest surviving synagogues) anchors the historical depth; the Mala Strana baroque district below the castle preserves the 18th-century city; and the Letná Park and Vyšehrad fortress offer the locals' Sunday-walk alternatives.

This guide is built for first-timers but useful on the return trip. We've started with picking the right side of the river (Old Town vs Malá Strana) and worked through the hotels (the Augustine Luxury Collection in a 13th-century Augustinian monastery with a working brewery), the restaurants from La Degustation's Michelin-starred 19th-century Czech to the proper goulash institutions, and the museums beyond the Castle.

Prague Prague travel guide

Quick facts

Population 1.3M (metro 2.7M)
Language Czech (English in tourist areas)
Currency CZK (Kč)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
Famous for: The Astronomical Clock, Prague Castle (largest ancient castle complex in the world), Charles Bridge, beer culture (highest per-capita consumption in the world), the Mucha Museum, and being the city of Kafka.
Fun fact: Czechs drink more beer per capita than any nation on earth — about 184 liters per person per year, nearly double the European average.

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Where to base yourself

First-time visitor? Pick a neighborhood that matches your vibe and stay there.

Old Town (Staré Město)

The Medieval Prague

The Astronomical Clock, Old Town Square, Charles Bridge at the river's edge — Prague's most photographed quarter. Touristy by day; magical at sunrise.

Best for: First-timers, anyone wanting iconic Prague

Feels like: A perfectly preserved Gothic-Renaissance fairytale

Malá Strana (Lesser Town)

The Baroque Prague

Across Charles Bridge below the castle — palace gardens, the Baroque St. Nicholas Church, the Lennon Wall. Cobbled, quieter, atmospherically intact.

Best for: Couples, second-time visitors, anyone wanting calmer central

Feels like: Habsburg-era Prague preserved

Vinohrady

The Local Prague

East of the center — Art Nouveau apartment buildings, leafy streets, Riegrovy sady park, the best restaurants the locals keep to themselves.

Best for: Repeat visitors, food obsessives, design lovers

Feels like: Where actual Praguers live

Žižkov

The Bohemian Prague

Once working-class, now Prague's hipster heart — the most pubs per square meter in any European neighborhood. The Žižkov TV Tower (with the climbing babies sculpture) at the center.

Best for: Younger travelers, indie food explorers, nightlife seekers

Feels like: Prague's Brooklyn — with cheap beer

Karlín

The Modern Prague

Once-industrial neighborhood north of the center — now design studios, indie cafés, the Forum Karlín concert hall. The most rapidly-gentrifying part of Prague.

Best for: Younger travelers, design lovers, food explorers

Feels like: Brooklyn-meets-Berlin, but Czech

Holešovice

The Artistic Prague

Across the river from Vinohrady — the DOX Center for Contemporary Art, indie galleries, the Letná Park with its panoramic view. Where Prague's design class works.

Best for: Design lovers, second-time visitors, families

Feels like: Prague's quiet creative quarter

The Insider's Edit

Three picks Prague regulars send their friends to — curated from Tatler 2026, the World's 50 Best lists, and verified hospitality reporting.

Augustine, a Luxury Collection Hotel

In a 13th-century Augustinian monastery in Malá Strana with a working monastic brewery.

Four Seasons Prague

Three connected buildings (Baroque, Renaissance, neoclassical) on the Vltava.

La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise

One Michelin star; reinterprets a 19th-century Czech cookbook.

Where to stay

Luxury
Augustine, a Luxury Collection Hotel
Letenská 33, 118 00 Praha 1

In a 13th-century Augustinian monastery in Malá Strana — the monks still brew beer in the basement (a working brewery you can visit). 101 rooms across the monastery complex.

“Most architecturally significant hotel in Prague.”

€350-1,000 / night Book →
Luxury
Four Seasons Prague
Veleslavínova 1098/2A, 110 00 Praha 1

Three connected buildings (Baroque, Renaissance, neoclassical) on the Vltava — view across to Prague Castle. The CottoCrudo restaurant, the riverside terraces.

“Among Europe's best-located luxury hotels.”

€500-2,000 / night Book →
New 2026
The Emblem Hotel
Platnéřská 19, 110 00 Praha 1

Modernist boutique in the Old Town — 59 rooms designed by Prague firm OOOOX. The rooftop spa and George Prime Steak restaurant.

“Among the best newer boutique luxury hotels in Prague.”

€220-600 / night Book →
Historical boutique
Hotel Paříž
U Obecního Domu 1, 110 00 Praha 1

1907 Art Nouveau classic — beside the Municipal House. The Sarah Bernhardt restaurant has period detail.

“Properly Belle Époque, fair pricing for what it offers.”

€220-500 / night Book →
Historical boutique
Hotel U Prince
Staroměstské Náměstí 29, 110 00 Praha 1

Directly on Old Town Square — the Terasa U Prince rooftop has the most coveted view in Prague (the Astronomical Clock from above).

“24 rooms in a Gothic building.”

€220-450 / night Book →
Boutique
Hotel Josephine
U Půjčovny 953/4, 110 00 Praha 1

Romantic boutique hotel in the Old Town — 22 rooms, antique-styled interiors, well-located for everything.

“Among the best mid-budget boutiques in central Prague.”

€140-300 / night Book →
Design
Mama Shelter Prague
Belgická 282/23, 120 00 Praha 2

Philippe Starck-influenced design hotel — the colorful, playful Mama Shelter brand. 238 rooms, an excellent rooftop bar, locally-popular restaurant.

“Best design at mid-budget in Vinohrady.”

€100-220 / night Book →
Design
Hotel Sax
Jánský vršek 328/3, 118 00 Praha 1

Mid-century design hotel in Malá Strana — 22 rooms each with a different design era (50s, 60s, 70s, 80s).

“Quiet, unique, properly Prague.”

€120-280 / night Book →
Young & hip
Mosaic House Design Hotel
Odborů 4, 120 00 Praha 2

Design-hotel meets hostel — private rooms, dorms, and a properly stylish lobby/bar. Eco-friendly building, excellent music program.

“Best value design accommodation in central Prague.”

€50-180 / night Book →

Where to eat

Michelin
La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise
Haštalská 18, 110 00 Praha 1

One Michelin star. Chef Oldřich Sahajdák reinterprets a 19th-century Czech cookbook — venison, freshwater fish, foraged vegetables. The most thoughtful Czech tasting menu.

“Booking weeks ahead.”

€140-180 tasting menu Reserve →
Michelin
Field
U Milosrdných 12, 110 00 Praha 1

One Michelin star. Chef Radek Kašpárek's modern Czech — produce-led, with strong Scandinavian influences. The more playful sibling to La Degustation.

“Reservations a month ahead.”

€110-160 tasting menu Reserve →
Modern Czech
Eska
Pernerova 49, 186 00 Praha 8

Bakery-restaurant in a converted Karlín factory — modern Czech with house-baked breads. The kachna (duck) confit is the signature.

“Bib Gourmand from Michelin.”

€40-80 per person Reserve →
Traditional
Lokál Dlouhááá
Dlouhá 33, 110 00 Praha 1

The Lokál brand's flagship — traditional Czech pub food (goulash, schnitzel) done properly, with the freshest tank Pilsner Urquell in Prague.

“The most reliable beer-hall meal in the center.”

€10-25 per person Reserve →
Historic
Café Imperial
Na Poříčí 15, 110 00 Praha 1

1914 Art Deco café with ceramic-tiled walls — preserved as it was.

“The Czech classics, the Sunday brunch, the most photogenic dining room in Prague.”

€35-65 per person Reserve →
Modern Asian
Sansho
Petrská 25, 110 00 Praha 1

Modern Asian by chef Paul Day — Vietnamese-Czech-British, properly inventive. The Sunday roast is famous.

“The dim sum brunch is a Prague institution.”

€45-75 per person Reserve →
Traditional
U Modré Kachničky
Nebovidská 6, 118 00 Praha 1

'At the Little Blue Duck' — traditional Czech with game and duck as the speciality. Set in a 17th-century building with painted ceilings.

“Among Malá Strana's most romantic dinner spots.”

€45-85 per person Reserve →

Where to have breakfast

Grand café
Café Savoy
Vítězná 124/5, 150 00 Praha 5

1893 grand café — restored ceiling, marble columns, the eggs Benedict and the Café Savoy breakfast plate.

“Among Prague's most beautiful breakfast rooms.”

Historic café
Kavárna Lucerna
Vodičkova 36, 110 00 Praha 1

Inside the Lucerna Palace — the David Černý 'Upside Down Horse' sculpture hangs from the ceiling.

“Properly Prague café tradition with espresso, pastries, and a slightly arch atmosphere.”

Specialty coffee
Můj Šálek Kávy
Křižíkova 105, 186 00 Praha 8

Prague's most respected specialty coffee — Karlín location with a brunch menu. Multiple roasters represented; rotating single-origins.

“Best Karlín café.”

Bakery
Bakeshop
Kozí 1, 110 00 Praha 1

American-style bakery near Old Town Square — sourdough, properly-made bagels, the chocolate babka.

“The breakfast sandwich is the order.”

Brunch
Bistro Kontext
Komunardů 32, 170 00 Praha 7

Holešovice brunch spot — the most reliable Western-style brunch in Prague. Eggs done properly, sourdough toast, locally-roasted coffee.

“Weekend queues.”

Hidden bars and old-school spots

Cocktail
Hemingway Bar
Karoliny Světlé 26, 110 00 Praha 1

World's 50 Best Bars regular — Prague's most internationally respected cocktail bar. Absinthe-focused (Hemingway loved it), classic cocktails properly done.

“Reservations help.”

Classic cocktail
Bugsy's Bar
Pařížská 10, 110 00 Praha 1

Prague's most acclaimed classic cocktail bar — 1920s aesthetic, properly mixed drinks. World's 50 Best Bars regular.

“Often considered Prague's best.”

Speakeasy
Cash Only
Liliová 4, 110 00 Praha 1

Hidden Žižkov speakeasy — cash only (the name), no menu (describe what you want), properly Czech-funny.

“The cocktails are excellent.”

Rooftop
T-Anker
Náměstí Republiky 8, 110 00 Praha 1

Rooftop bar on top of the Kotva department store — panoramic view of the Old Town.

“Casual, well-priced, locally popular.”

Underground pub
U Sudu
Vodičkova 10, 110 00 Praha 1

Massive underground pub — multi-level cellars, hundreds of seats, very local. Cheap Czech beer, all the standards.

“The maze of cellars is part of the experience.”

Music venue
Lucerna Music Bar
Vodičkova 36, 110 00 Praha 1

Iconic Prague music venue in the Lucerna Palace — '80s/'90s parties (Friday and Saturday nights) are city institutions.

“Properly Czech-fun.”

Museums worth your time

DOX Center for Contemporary Art Contemporary art
Poupětova 1, 170 00 Praha 7

Czech contemporary art and architecture in a former Holešovice factory. The Gulliver airship (a David Černý sculpture) crowns the roof.

“Among Prague's most thoughtful exhibition programs.”

Visit website →
Lobkowicz Palace Family collection
Jiřská 3, 119 00 Praha 1

A family collection inside the only privately owned building in Prague Castle — Brueghel, Velázquez, Canaletto, plus original Beethoven and Mozart manuscripts. The Lobkowicz family lost everything twice (Nazis, Communists) and got it back.

“Audio guide narrated by Prince Lobkowicz himself.”

Visit website →
National Gallery (Trade Fair Palace) Modern + contemporary
Dukelských hrdinů 47, 170 00 Praha 7

Functionalist Trade Fair Palace (1928) — houses the National Gallery's modern and contemporary collection.

“Mucha, Schiele, Picasso, the most extensive Czech 20th-century collection.”

Visit website →
Mucha Museum Single-artist
Panská 7, 110 00 Praha 1

Alphonse Mucha's Art Nouveau collection — the Sarah Bernhardt posters, the original Slav Epic studies.

“Small but iconic; the most distinctly Czech artist's museum.”

Visit website →
Strahov Monastery Library Historic library
Strahovské Nádvoří 1/132, 118 00 Praha 1

Two of the world's most spectacular library halls — the Philosophical Hall and the Theological Hall — in a 12th-century monastery.

“The most photogenic library interior in Europe.”

Visit website →
Jewish Museum (multiple sites) Jewish heritage
U Staré Školy 1, 110 00 Praha 1

Six historic synagogues in Josefov (Old Jewish Quarter) plus the Old Jewish Cemetery.

“The most preserved pre-WWII Jewish quarter in Europe — saved when the Nazis ironically planned to make it a 'museum of an extinct race.'”

Visit website →

Only-here places

Prague Castle Castle complex
119 08 Praha 1

The largest ancient castle complex in the world — 70,000 m². The St. Vitus Cathedral, the Old Royal Palace, the Golden Lane (where Kafka briefly lived). The Changing of the Guard at noon.

“Buy the Circuit ticket; plan four hours.”

Visit website →
Charles Bridge at dawn Historic bridge
Karlův most, Praha 1

14th-century Gothic bridge with 30 Baroque statues — the most famous photo subject in Prague. Walk it at 5-6am for the empty version most visitors never see.

“The dawn light through the statues.”

Astronomical Clock (Orloj) Medieval clock
Staroměstské Náměstí, 110 00 Praha 1

1410 medieval astronomical clock on the Old Town Hall — the world's oldest still-operating. Every hour from 9am-11pm the Walk of the Apostles plays.

“Crowded; arrive 5 minutes ahead.”

Letná Park beer garden Beer garden + view
Letenské sady, 170 00 Praha 7

The hill across the river from the Old Town — vast park, with a beer garden at the eastern edge overlooking the city skyline. Where Praguers actually drink in summer.

“Bring kr 100 for a beer, sit on a bench, watch the sun set over the bridges.”

Vyšehrad Castle Historic complex
Vyšehrad, 128 00 Praha 2

The 'other' Prague castle — an older fortified hill south of the center. The Slavín cemetery (where Dvořák and Mucha are buried), the rotunda, the panoramic view of the Vltava bend.

“Free, far less crowded than the main castle.”

Visit website →
John Lennon Wall Graffiti wall
Velkopřevorské Náměstí, 118 00 Praha 1

A wall painted continuously with Beatles-and-peace graffiti since 1980 — under Communism, the Communist authorities repainted it white every night, and protesters repainted it the next day. Still being added to.

“Quietly iconic.”

Náplavka Saturday Farmers Market Riverside market
Náplavka, Praha 2

Saturday morning market along the Vltava embankment — Czech farmers, organic vegetables, hot food from regional producers. Locals' favorite.

“Stand by the river with a coffee, watch the swans.”

Tours & things to do in Prague

In partnership with GetYourGuide, Locals Insider recommends these tours and things to do in Prague.

Nature & quiet

Petřín Hill Park / view
Petřín, 118 00 Praha 1

The forested hill above Malá Strana — funicular up, with a small Eiffel Tower replica at the top. Rose garden, mirror maze, panoramic view across the Old Town.

“Best in spring when the blossoms peak.”

Riegrovy sady Park
Polská, 120 00 Praha 2

Vinohrady's main park — where Prague drinks beer outdoors in summer. The Riegrovy Sady beer garden has the city's best sunset view of Prague Castle.

“Locals' favorite.”

Stromovka Royal park
Stromovka, 170 00 Praha 7

Prague's biggest park (95 hectares) in Holešovice — a former royal hunting ground from 1268. Lakes, footbridges, the planetarium.

“Where locals spend Sundays.”

Český Krumlov day trip UNESCO town
Český Krumlov, Czech Republic

2.5 hours south by bus — a perfectly preserved medieval town wrapped in a bend of the Vltava. UNESCO World Heritage.

“The most-photographed Czech town outside Prague.”

Karlštejn Castle day trip Castle
Karlštejn, 267 18 Karlštejn

40 minutes by train — Charles IV's 14th-century castle built to hold the Crown Jewels of the Holy Roman Empire. Half a day from Prague.

“The hilltop walk-up is the experience.”

City festivals

  • April-June
    Prague Spring International Music Festival

    Czech Republic's most prestigious classical music festival — since 1946. Three weeks of major orchestras and soloists at the Rudolfinum and Municipal House. Opens May 12 each year with Smetana's Má vlast.

  • December (whole month)
    Prague Christmas Markets

    Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square — mulled wine, trdelník chimneys, ornaments, the giant Christmas tree. Among Europe's most-photographed Christmas markets.

  • April-May
    Witches' Night (Pálení čarodějnic)

    Czech version of Walpurgis Night (April 30) — bonfires across the city, traditional 'burning of the witches.' Petřín Hill has the main central celebration.

  • Summer
    Český Krumlov International Music Festival

    July-August — open-air classical concerts in Český Krumlov castle's courtyard. The most picturesque summer music festival in Central Europe.

  • June
    Prague Pride

    Mid-August — Czech Republic's biggest Pride parade and week-long festival across central Prague.

Travel safety & inclusivity

Safety index
8/10

Very safe by global standards. Pickpocketing in Old Town Square and on tram 22 (the major tourist tram) is the main risk. Taxi scams from Old Town — use Uber or Bolt, or take public transport (excellent and cheap).

LGBTQ+ friendliness
7/10

Czech Republic recognises registered partnerships (2006) but not same-sex marriage. Prague is liberal by Central European standards — Pride parade in August, gay scene in Vinohrady. Public attitudes are accepting in the capital.

Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.

Frequently asked about Prague

Where do locals eat in Prague?

Three picks across the spectrum of how Praguers actually eat.

For the iconic Czech beer hall: Lokál Dlouhááá, at Dlouhá 33, 110 00 Staré Město. The Ambiente group's modern take on the traditional Czech pivnice — unfiltered Pilsner Urquell straight from the tank (the freshest in Prague), proper Czech classics (svíčková, smažený sýr, goulash), tiled walls and long communal tables. Reservations recommended; locals fill it by 7pm.

For the modern, contemporary pick: Sansho, at Petrská 25, 110 00 Praha 1. Chef Paul Day's modern Asian-meets-Czech tasting menu — six- or eight-course chef's choice using British and Czech farmers' produce. Among the most consistently top-rated restaurants in Prague.

For the affordable, locals' standard: Café Savoy, at Vítězná 5, 150 00 Praha 5. The 1893 Belle Époque café that reopened in 1992 after Communist-era closure — the painted neo-Renaissance ceiling alone is worth the visit. Proper Czech breakfast, Czech classics for lunch, the Vienna-style coffee programme. Walk-in friendly for breakfast; reservations for dinner.

Where can I get the best seafood with champagne or sparkling wine in Prague?

For Prague seafood with serious Champagne (Czech wine production focuses on still wines from Moravia rather than sparkling, so Champagne dominates the bubbles list), the destination is La Bottega Bistroteca, at Dlouhá 39, 110 00 Praha 1.

An Italian-leaning small-plates restaurant with serious oysters (twice-weekly Brittany delivery), crudo, raw bar, and a Champagne list with grower-producer focus (Egly-Ouriet, Larmandier-Bernier, Pierre Péters). One of the city's most consistent picks for an apéritif-into-dinner evening. Sister to La Bottega the Italian grocer; same group operates several adjacent venues on Dlouhá.

Reservations recommended. For a more historic-setting alternative, Mlýnec at Novotného lávka 9, 110 00 Praha 1 on the Charles Bridge embankment has the Vltava view and a strong Champagne list to match its modern Czech menu.

Which historical boutique hotel should I stay at in Prague?

For an old-world boutique stay in Prague, the reference is Hotel Paříž Prague, at U Obecního domu 1, 110 00 Praha 1, directly next to the iconic Municipal House.

Opened in 1904 as a luxury hotel built in late Neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau style by architect Jan Vejrych — the building has been a designated National Cultural Monument since 1984. 86 rooms, the iconic Art Nouveau Café de Paris (with Alfons Mucha-style design throughout), the Sarah Bernhardt restaurant (named for the actress who stayed in 1904), and an ornate Art Nouveau facade that's among the most photographed buildings in central Prague. Walking distance to the Old Town Square.

Pricing from around €200/night. Bookings via the official site. For a smaller more aristocratic alternative, Augustine, a Luxury Collection Hotel at Letenská 12 (housed in a 13th-century Augustinian monastery in Malá Strana — the monks still brew beer in the in-house brewery) is the heritage-luxury choice.

What is the LGBTQ+ scene like in Prague?

The Czech Republic has been progressively LGBTQ+-friendly — registered partnerships since 2006, though full same-sex marriage is still pending. Prague has the most active LGBTQ+ scene in Central Europe outside Berlin. Prague Pride takes place in mid-August (around 60,000 attendees).

The neighborhood: Vinohrady (Prague 2-3, around Náměstí Míru) is the central gay neighborhood — leafy Belle Époque residential streets with the highest concentration of gay bars and cafés in the city. Žižkov (Prague 3) has the alternative-queer scene.

The bars: Friends Bar at Bartolomějská 11, 110 00 Praha 1 is the long-running classic gay bar in the centre — relaxed, mixed, friendly. For nightclub energy, Termix at Třebízského 4a, 130 00 Vinohrady is the iconic Vinohrady gay nightclub. Termax next door is the after-hours.

Saunas: Sauna Babylonia at Martinská 6, 110 00 Praha 1 in Old Town is the central men's sauna — sauna, steam, jacuzzi, gym, bar.

What unique small museum, new 2024-2026 landmark, or 1-3 day itinerary should I plan for Prague?

The famous-person small museum: Mucha Museum, at Panská 7, 110 00 Praha 1. The world's first museum dedicated to Alfons Mucha (1860-1939), the Czech Art Nouveau painter who defined the Belle Époque visual style with his Sarah Bernhardt posters. Small, single-floor, properly atmospheric — original lithographs, drawings, photographs, and a documentary on the Slav Epic (his monumental 20-canvas history cycle, now exhibited separately at the Veletržní palác). Among Prague's most concentrated single-artist museums. Closed never.

The 2024-2026 must-see: Kunsthalle Praha opened in 2022 at Klárov 5, 118 00 Malá Strana — a major new contemporary art institution in a converted 1930s electrical substation by The Pudil Family Foundation. The most architecturally significant new art venue in the Czech Republic in decades. The rooftop terrace gives one of Prague's best free panoramic views over the Vltava and Old Town. Pair with the historic Strahov Monastery Library (Theological and Philosophical Halls) for an easy half-day in Malá Strana.

1-3 day itinerary: Day 1 — Old Town (Astronomical Clock, Old Town Square, Charles Bridge at dawn for the photos, Jewish Quarter Josefov), evening Czech beer dinner at Lokál. Day 2 — Prague Castle morning (St. Vitus Cathedral, the Castle Gardens), Malá Strana afternoon (Strahov Monastery, Kunsthalle Praha), dinner at Café Savoy. Day 3 — Vinohrady morning (Vyšehrad fortress and views), Mucha Museum afternoon, evening Prague-pub crawl in Žižkov.

Read more

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Articles in this section are written by the Locals Insider editorial team. Got a Prague tip we missed? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com — we read every one.

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