Jump to...
TogglePrague is one of those cities that rewards walkers, but it also punishes the cocky ones. One minute you’re floating across Charles Bridge like you’re in a moody European film, the next you’re sweating up a cobbled hill wondering why your shoes hate you.
This Prague walking tour starts high at Strahov, then works downhill through Prague Castle, Malá Strana, Charles Bridge, Old Town and the Jewish Quarter before finishing at Letná Beer Garden. That means you get the big Prague icons in a sensible order, with the best views spaced out nicely and a cold beer at the end rather than a pointless final climb back to the castle.
It’s not the shortest Prague walk, but it links up beautifully. You’ll get castles, monastery lanes, bridge towers, river views, medieval squares, Art Nouveau corners and enough beer-adjacent temptation to make “just one” feel like a proper itinerary strategy. If you’re planning a wider Czech trip, start with our Czech Republic travel guide and keep our Ultimate Prague Google Map Legend handy for extra pins, cafés and photo spots.
This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps fund the site and keeps our guides free. See our full affiliate disclosure for details.
Prague Walking Tour
🚗 Quick Trip Facts
✅ Route: Strahov Monastery → Prague Castle → Malá Strana → Kampa → Charles Bridge → Clementinum → Old Town Square → Jewish Quarter → Letná Beer Garden
✅ Start point: Pohořelec tram stop, near Strahov Monastery
✅ End point: Letná Beer Garden, with easy tram links back into the centre
✅ Total distance: Around 8.5 to 10 km, depending on detours
✅ Walking time only: Roughly 2.5 to 3 hours
✅ Realistic time needed: 6 to 8 hours with sightseeing, food, photos and beer
✅ Best time to start: 8:30am to 9:30am if you want the bridge before peak chaos
✅ Difficulty: Moderate, mostly because of cobbles, slopes and Prague’s talent for surprise staircases
✅ Best for: First-timers, couples, solo travellers, slow city wanderers and anyone who likes a route with a reward at the end
✅ Not ideal for: Heavy suitcases, brand-new shoes or a rushed half-day visit
✅ Map style: A one-way downhill-ish route from castle heights to river crossings and beer garden views
🚗 Recommended Car Rental if you’re Road Tripping Czechia: Discover Cars
🗺️ Our Full Guide: Prague Travel Guide: What to See, Where to Stay, and Tips for First-Timers
Prague Walking Tour Map Route
FREE Google Map further down the article.
Start at Pohořelec tram stop, which drops you near Strahov Monastery and saves you a fairly rude uphill walk from the river. From there, this Prague walking tour moves downhill through the castle district, slides into Malá Strana, crosses Charles Bridge, wanders through the old centre and ends at Letná. You can do it in half a day if you only skim the sights, but it is far better as a full slow day with snack stops and at least one “I’ll just take another photo of that roofline” moment.
For a bigger city plan, pair this walk with our 3 Days in Prague itinerary so you’re not trying to cram every museum, tower and beer hall into one heroic day. Prague deserves better than that. So do your feet.
| Stop | Walk From Previous Stop | Time To Spend | Why Stop Here |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strahov Monastery | Start | 45 to 75 mins | Views, monastery lanes, brewery |
| Nový Svět and Loreto | 0.7 km, 10 mins | 20 to 30 mins | Quiet lanes before the crowds |
| Prague Castle | 0.8 km, 12 mins | 90 to 120 mins | Castle courtyards, St Vitus, Golden Lane |
| Malá Strana | 1 km, 15 mins | 30 to 45 mins | Baroque streets and church views |
| Kampa and Lennon Wall | 0.7 km, 10 mins | 25 to 40 mins | River corners and a softer side of Prague |
| Charles Bridge | 0.5 km, 8 mins | 25 to 40 mins | The classic Prague crossing |
| Clementinum | 0.4 km, 5 mins | 20 to 45 mins | Library, towers and old Prague lanes |
| Old Town Square | 0.4 km, 5 mins | 45 to 60 mins | Astronomical Clock, Týn Church, big Prague drama |
| Jewish Quarter | 0.7 km, 10 mins | 45 to 75 mins | Synagogue exteriors, cemetery area, quieter streets |
| Letná Beer Garden | 1.2 km, 20 mins | 60 to 90 mins | Beer, skyline views, smug satisfaction |
Stop 1: Strahov Monastery and Brewery
Start point: Pohořelec tram stop
Walk from previous stop: Start
Time here: 45 to 75 minutes
Start at Strahov Monastery, partly because it makes route sense and partly because Prague looks ridiculously good from up here. The monastery area gives you a gentler opening than Prague Castle itself, with courtyards, old walls and those wide city views that make everyone suddenly quiet for a second. If you want to visit the famous Strahov Library, build in extra time and check entry before you go. If you’re more interested in the “beer” part of this route, the monastery brewery is nearby and makes a tempting early stop, though I’d keep it light unless you want the rest of the walk to become interpretive dance.
📍 Things to do:
- Look over Prague from the viewpoint near the monastery
- Wander the monastery courtyards
- Visit Strahov Library if you’re happy paying for a ticket
- Pause at Strahov Monastic Brewery for a beer or coffee
- Photograph the walk down towards Hradčany
Stop 2: Nový Svět and Loreto
Walk from Strahov Monastery: Around 0.7 km, 10 minutes
Time here: 20 to 30 minutes
From Strahov, drift towards Nový Svět, one of Prague’s prettiest little pockets and still somehow calmer than it has any right to be. This area feels like the city has tucked a tiny village behind the castle district and hoped the tour groups wouldn’t notice. You’ll pass pastel houses, narrow lanes and the Loreto area before the route starts getting busier near the castle. It’s the kind of stop I like because nothing screams for attention; it just sits there being quietly lovely.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk slowly through Nový Svět’s small lanes
- Look out for the house signs and old details above doorways
- Pass the Loreto exterior
- Stop for coffee if somewhere catches your eye
- Take your time before entering the castle crowds
Stop 3: Prague Castle and St Vitus Cathedral
Walk from Nový Svět/Loreto: Around 0.8 km, 12 minutes
Time here: 90 to 120 minutes
Prague Castle is the big headline stop, and yes, it is busy. Still worth it. The castle complex is less “one castle building” and more a collection of courtyards, churches, palaces, views and queues pretending to be a neighbourhood. St Vitus Cathedral is the showstopper, all Gothic height and stained glass drama, while Golden Lane gives you the smaller-scale, storybook side of the complex. I’d choose a few highlights rather than trying to inspect every corner, because this is a walking tour, not a medieval admin shift.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk through the castle courtyards
- Visit St Vitus Cathedral
- Add Golden Lane if you have a ticket and enough time
- Look out over the red rooftops from the castle viewpoints
- Take the Old Castle Stairs or a downhill route towards Malá Strana
🔹 Tinker’s Tip: Don’t start this route in Old Town unless you actively enjoy unnecessary uphill punishment. Prague is far nicer when gravity is quietly doing some of the work.
🗺️ FREE Road Trip: Fairytale Europe Road Trip: Turrets, Timber & Alpine Backdrops 🚗
Where to Stay in Prague
Stop 4: Malá Strana and St Nicholas Church
Walk from Prague Castle: Around 1 km, 15 minutes downhill
Time here: 30 to 45 minutes
The walk down into Malá Strana is classic Prague: steep lanes, polished cobbles, rooftops, church towers and little glimpses of the river. This is where the city starts to feel softer after the castle’s grandness. St Nicholas Church dominates the area with its huge dome and Baroque confidence, while the surrounding streets are made for slow wandering. Watch your footing here, especially if it has rained, because Prague cobbles enjoy humbling people in public.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk down from the castle into Malá Strana
- Pause at Malostranské náměstí
- Visit St Nicholas Church if you enjoy dramatic interiors
- Browse the side streets rather than charging straight to the bridge
- Stop for lunch around Malá Strana if you’re hungry
Stop 5: Kampa Island and the Lennon Wall
Walk from Malá Strana: Around 0.7 km, 10 minutes
Time here: 25 to 40 minutes
Before you cross Charles Bridge, dip down towards Kampa. This gives the route a breather and gets you closer to the river without joining the bridge crowd too soon. The Lennon Wall is colourful, messy and touristy, but still worth a quick look if you haven’t been. Kampa itself is the better prize for me, with riverside corners, leafy paths and views back towards the bridge that feel less frantic than the bridge itself.
📍 Things to do:
- Visit the Lennon Wall
- Wander through Kampa’s quieter corners
- Look for river views towards Charles Bridge
- Pause near the canal known as Čertovka
- Grab a snack or coffee before crossing the bridge
Stop 6: Charles Bridge
Walk from Kampa/Lennon Wall: Around 0.5 km, 8 minutes
Time here: 25 to 40 minutes
Charles Bridge is Prague’s most famous crossing, and it knows it. Go early and it feels atmospheric. Go midday and it becomes a slow-moving river of elbows, selfie sticks and couples stopping without warning. Still, the views are brilliant: Prague Castle behind you, Old Town ahead, statues lining the bridge and the Vltava doing its reflective little trick below. Take it slowly, look back often, and don’t treat it like a commute.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk from the Malá Strana side to Old Town
- Look back for one of the best castle views
- Stop at the statues, but don’t block the whole walkway
- Climb the Old Town Bridge Tower if you want a paid viewpoint
- Take photos from both ends of the bridge, not just the middle
⏰ Timing tip: For photos, go early morning. For atmosphere, sunset is lovely but packed. For sanity, avoid peak midday if you can.
Stop 7: Clementinum and Mariánské Square
Walk from Charles Bridge: Around 0.4 km, 5 minutes
Time here: 20 to 45 minutes
Once you come off Charles Bridge, resist the urge to bolt straight to Old Town Square. The lanes around the Clementinum are worth a slow wander, especially if you like old libraries, towers and that slightly secretive side of Prague. The Clementinum complex sits between the bridge and the old square, so it slots neatly into the route without a detour. Even if you don’t go inside, the surrounding streets help you transition from river drama into the older city centre.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk through the lanes around the Clementinum
- Consider a tour if the library or tower is high on your list
- Pause around Mariánské Square
- Look for quieter side streets before Old Town Square
- Use this as a coffee or toilet stop if needed
Stop 8: Old Town Square and the Astronomical Clock
Walk from Clementinum: Around 0.4 km, 5 minutes
Time here: 45 to 60 minutes
Old Town Square is Prague turned up to full volume: towers, pastel facades, horse-drawn carriages, tour groups, camera clicks and the Astronomical Clock pulling everyone into a little hourly ritual. The clock show is short, and honestly, people sometimes expect fireworks and get medieval mechanics instead. I still think it’s worth seeing once, mainly because the crowd reaction is part of the theatre. After that, step back and admire the square properly, especially the Church of Our Lady before Týn rising behind the buildings like something from a very dramatic bedtime story.
📍 Things to do:
- Watch the Astronomical Clock on the hour
- Photograph the Church of Our Lady before Týn
- Walk around the square rather than standing in one place
- Consider the Old Town Hall tower for a paid view
- Take a side street when you need a break from the crowds
Stop 9: Jewish Quarter and Pařížská
Walk from Old Town Square: Around 0.7 km, 10 minutes
Time here: 45 to 75 minutes
From Old Town Square, move north into Josefov, Prague’s Jewish Quarter. This section of the walk has a more reflective feel, especially around the synagogue exteriors and cemetery area. You can keep this as a gentle exterior walk, or come back another day for proper museum and synagogue visits if you want to give the history the time it deserves. Pařížská adds a different mood entirely, with designer shops and elegant buildings leading you towards the river.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk past the Old-New Synagogue exterior
- See the area around the Jewish Cemetery
- Wander along Pařížská for grand architecture
- Visit the synagogues and museum sites if you have time
- Continue towards the river for the Letná climb
✋🏼 Must do: Treat this part of the route with a bit of respect. It is not just another pretty Prague backdrop; it carries heavy history.
🗺️ Recommended Reads: All Guides to the Czech Republic
Not sure where to go next?
Take our 60-second quiz — 7 questions, 21 destinations, one perfect match.
Stop 10: Letná Park and Letná Beer Garden
Walk from Jewish Quarter: Around 1.2 km, 18 to 25 minutes, with an uphill push
Time here: 60 to 90 minutes
Finish by crossing towards Letná and climbing into the park for one of Prague’s best skyline views. This is the moment the whole route clicks together: castle behind you, bridges below, Old Town stretched across the river and a beer in hand if the garden is open. Letná Beer Garden is casual, outdoorsy and much less polished than some central bars, which is exactly the point. After a day of towers, churches and cobbles, sitting under trees with a drink feels like the correct final chapter.
📍 Things to do:
- Walk up into Letná Park
- Find the viewpoint over the bridges
- Stop at Letná Beer Garden if it’s open
- Watch golden hour over the city
- Take a tram back down when your feet give you that look
💷 Money saver: Ending at Letná can be cheaper and more relaxed than drinking on the main Old Town tourist streets. You also get the view, which is doing a lot of emotional support work.
🗺️ Recommended Read: Karlovy Vary Guide: Czechia’s Prettiest Spa Town
Recommended Tours and Tickets From Get Your Guide
Grab the Map
Access to the map
No sign up required and totally FREE. Literally just using Google Maps to plot your route! Saves you messing! We don't gatekeep here! Enjoy.
Map will be located under "YOU" and then under "MAPS".
ℹ️ Add the map to your Google Maps app.
After opening Google maps, click YOU and then scroll down to MAPS. It should be located there. Any issues, just get it touch, it’s no problem!
Where To Stay For This Prague Walking Tour
For this route, I’d stay in Old Town, Malá Strana, Prague 1 near the river, or slightly outside the centre if you want better value. Old Town is the easiest for first-timers, but it can be noisy and expensive. Malá Strana feels more romantic and puts you close to the castle side of the walk. If you’re watching the budget, look at areas near tram or metro links and use the savings for food, tours and beer that does not taste like regret.
For more route ideas and planning help, our travel itinerary generator is useful if you want to build a Prague weekend around this walk.
Best areas for this route:
- Old Town: Best for first-timers who want to be close to the main sights.
- Malá Strana: Best for charm, quieter evenings and castle-side wandering.
- Josefov: Best for a central, polished stay near Old Town and the river.
- New Town: Best for better value, food options and transport links.
- Vinohrady: Best for a more local base with cafés, restaurants and easy trams.
- Holešovice or Letná: Best if you want a cooler neighbourhood feel and don’t mind using trams.
Pit Stops & Side Detours 🚗✨
Prague is dangerous for detours. Not in a scary way, more in a “how did I just lose 90 minutes photographing doorways?” way. Keep these as optional extras rather than stuffing them all into the main walk.
- Petřín Hill: Add before or after Strahov if you want more views and don’t mind extra walking.
- Nerudova Street: A beautiful castle-to-Malá Strana route with old house signs and plenty of photo stops.
- Vrtba Garden: A lovely paid garden near Malá Strana if you want a calmer, polished pause.
- Old Town Bridge Tower: Worth it for the Charles Bridge view if your legs can handle more steps.
- Clementinum Tower: A good add-on for old Prague rooftops and library lovers.
- Rudolfinum: A handsome riverside stop near the Jewish Quarter.
- Letná Metronome: Pair it with the beer garden for big city views and a bit of Cold War-era symbolism.
- Beer spa or brewery tour: Tourist-friendly, yes, but fun if you’re building a Prague beer weekend. Browse Prague tours and experiences if you want to add something guided later.
🍽️ Local Eats Worth Chasing
This route passes plenty of places to eat, but the trick is not falling into the first menu with laminated photos and suspiciously enthusiastic English translations. Prague has brilliant food and beer, but the most obvious places around Old Town Square and Charles Bridge are not always the ones you’ll remember kindly.
- Chlebíčky: Czech open-faced sandwiches. Great for a light lunch that doesn’t derail the whole route.
- Svíčková: Creamy sauce, beef, dumplings and cranberry. Heavy, comforting and very Czech.
- Goulash with dumplings: A solid cold-weather choice, especially after the castle.
- Koláče: Sweet pastries that make excellent walking fuel.
- Trdelník: Fun to try once, but not the ancient local secret some stalls make it sound like.
- Pilsner-style lager: The classic beer move. Keep an eye on strength if you’re walking hills.
- Strahov Brewery: A handy early route stop if you want beer with monastery atmosphere.
- Letná Beer Garden: Best saved for the finish, because ending with that view is the whole point.
Walking Tour Essentials
Prague is easy to explore, but a few small choices make the day much better. The wrong shoes will turn charming cobbles into a personal feud, and low phone battery is deeply annoying when every second street looks map-worthy.
- Comfortable trainers or walking shoes with decent grip
- A refillable water bottle
- A light waterproof jacket in spring, autumn or winter
- Sunglasses and sun cream in summer
- A small day bag rather than a tote that attacks your shoulder
- Offline Google Maps, plus your saved Prague pins
- A portable charger
- Some Czech koruna for small purchases, toilets or cash-only spots
- Contactless card for most restaurants, shops and transport
- An eSIM from Airalo if roaming is awkward
- Travel insurance if Prague is part of a bigger trip, especially if you’re adding activities or multi-country travel
- A tram ticket or transport app for the ride back after Letná
- Patience for crowds, especially on Charles Bridge and Old Town Square
🌦️ Weather note: Prague is moody in the best way. A sunny morning can turn into a grey, windy bridge crossing by lunch, so dress for layers rather than vibes alone.
What to know How to Plan or Save for a Trip? Here are our best:
Recommended Websites and Resources:
Travel Planning Resources
Ready to book your next trip? These trusted resources have been personally vetted to ensure a smooth travel experience.
Book Your Flights: Kick off your travel planning by finding the best flight deals on Trip.com. Our years of experience with them confirm they offer the most competitive prices.
Book Your Hotel: For the best hotel rates, use Booking.com . For the best and safest hostels, HostelWorld.com is your go-to resource. Best for overall Hotel ratings and bargains, use TripAdvisor.com!
Find Apartment Rentals: For affordable apartment rentals, check out VRBO. They consistently offer the best prices.
Car Rentals: For affordable car rentals, check out RentalCars.com. They offer the best cars, mostly brand new.
Travel Insurance: Never travel without insurance. Here are our top recommendations:
- EKTA for Travel Insurance for all areas!
- Use AirHelp for compensation claims against flight delays etc.
Book Your Activities: Discover walking tours, skip-the-line tickets, private guides, and more on Get Your Guide. They have a vast selection of activities to enhance your trip. There is also Tiqets.com for instant mobile tickets.
Book The Best Trains: Use Trainline to find the most affordable trains or Rail Europe for rail passes!
Travel E-SIMS: AiraloWorldwide! Use your mobile phone anywhere!
Need More Help Planning Your Trip? Visit our Resources Page to see all the companies we trust and use for our travels.


