A private tour of Prague means one thing: the city belongs entirely to you. No shared bus, no waiting for 30 strangers to finish their photos, no rushed schedule. Just you, a local expert guide, and the streets, squares and hidden courtyards of one of Europe's most beautiful capitals. This guide covers everything you need to know before booking a private tour of Prague in 2026.
What Is a Private Tour of Prague?
A private Prague tour is a guided experience arranged exclusively for your group — typically a couple, family, or small group of friends. Your guide meets you at an agreed location, and the itinerary, pace and focus are shaped entirely around what you want to see. If you want to spend an extra 20 minutes in the Jewish Quarter because your grandmother emigrated from Prague, you can. If you want to skip the Astronomical Clock because you've seen it in pictures and prefer to explore Lesser Town's backstreets instead, your guide will take you there.
This is fundamentally different from a group tour, where you are one of 20–40 people following a flag through pre-set stops on a fixed clock.
Why Book a Private Guide in Prague?
Prague rewards those who go deeper. The Old Town is magnificent, but the real character of the city lives in the second courtyard of a Renaissance palace, in a Gothic cellar turned wine bar, in the stories behind the buildings that most tourists walk past without noticing. A private guide unlocks all of this.

Here's why private tours consistently outperform group experiences in Prague:
- Complete flexibility — start when you want, stop when you want, change plans if the weather turns
- Personal depth — your guide can go as deep into history, architecture or food as your interest allows
- No language barriers — guides speak fluent English and tailor their narration to your background
- Children-friendly — pace and content adjust to keep younger travellers engaged
- Hidden gems — locals know streets that don't appear on any tourist map
What's Included on a Prague Private Tour?
A well-structured private Prague tour typically covers the essential landmarks of the historic centre while weaving in context and stories that make the stones come alive. Depending on the duration you choose, expect to visit areas such as Old Town Square, the Charles Bridge, the Jewish Quarter (Josefov), Lesser Town (Malá Strana), and Prague Castle — or focus on just two or three neighbourhoods in rich detail.
Your guide will walk with you, explain the historical context at each stop, answer your questions, and point out details that are easy to miss: the medieval flood marks on a church wall, the inscription above a guild house, the view through an archway that has looked exactly this way since 1600.
Half-Day vs Full-Day Private Tour — Which Is Right for You?
This is the most common question when planning a private Prague tour, and the honest answer depends on two things: how much time you have and how deeply you want to explore.

A half-day private tour (3–4 hours) is ideal for first-time visitors who want a comprehensive introduction to Prague's highlights. You'll cover the essential landmarks, understand the city's layered history, and leave with a solid mental map of the centre. The half-day format is also popular with families with younger children, or travellers arriving mid-afternoon who want to make the most of the rest of their day.
A full-day private tour (6–7 hours) is for travellers who want to go beyond the highlights. You'll explore neighbourhoods that rarely appear on standard itineraries, have time for a sit-down lunch with your guide, and emerge from the day with a genuine feel for what makes Prague one of Central Europe's great cities.
If you're in Prague for just one or two days, the half-day tour is usually the smarter choice — it leaves you time to explore independently in the afternoon, armed with all the local knowledge your guide has shared.
The Best Time to Take a Private Tour of Prague
Prague is a year-round destination, but the experience varies significantly by season. Spring (April–June) offers mild weather, blooming gardens, and relatively manageable crowds. Summer (July–August) brings the most visitors and the longest days — start early to beat the worst of the crowds around Old Town Square. Autumn (September–October) is arguably Prague's most atmospheric season: chestnut-coloured streets, thinner crowds, and perfect walking temperatures.
Winter is underrated. Prague in December, with Christmas markets filling the squares and frost on the baroque rooftops, has a magic that summer simply cannot replicate. Smaller crowds mean your guide can take you places that are genuinely too packed to enjoy in July.
Regardless of season, booking a morning start (8–9 AM) is the single best practical tip for any private Prague tour. The historic centre before the main tourist rush is a different city.
How to Book a Private Tour of Prague

Booking a private Prague tour is straightforward. The important thing is to plan at least a few days in advance, particularly during the spring and summer high season when the best guides fill up quickly. Here's what to do:
- Choose your duration — half-day (3–4 hours) or full-day (6–7 hours)
- Note your group size — private tours are priced per group, not per person, which makes them surprisingly good value for pairs and families
- Share any special interests — architecture, food, WWII history, Jewish heritage, photography spots — your guide will incorporate them
- Confirm the meeting point — typically a central, easy-to-find location in Old Town
Our guides are born-and-raised Prague locals with years of experience guiding international visitors. Every tour is designed to feel like exploring the city with a knowledgeable friend — not a scripted lecture.
Prague Private Tour Prices: What to Expect
Private Prague tours are priced per group rather than per person. This means a private tour for a couple often costs less than two individual group tour tickets — while delivering a fundamentally better experience. For a family of four, the value comparison becomes even more compelling.
When comparing prices, look beyond the headline number. A reputable private tour operator offers a licensed, experienced guide, a flexible itinerary, and personal attention that no group tour can match. The difference in experience justifies the investment many times over.
Tips for Getting the Most from Your Prague Private Tour
A few practical tips to make sure your tour is as good as it can be:
- Wear comfortable shoes — Prague's cobblestones are beautiful but uneven. Flat-soled shoes with good grip make a significant difference over 3–4 hours of walking.
- Bring a water bottle — especially in summer. Your guide will know every good fountain and café, but staying hydrated from the start helps.
- Tell your guide what matters to you — before you set off, share any specific interests, mobility considerations, or must-see places. The more they know, the better they can tailor the experience.
- Ask questions — your guide's knowledge goes far deeper than any guidebook. The best tours are conversations, not lectures.
- Be flexible about the route — sometimes a spontaneous detour down an alley reveals something more memorable than a listed highlight.
A private tour of Prague is one of the best investments you can make in your trip. The city has more layers than almost anywhere in Europe — a guide who knows them changes what you see, what you understand, and what you take home.
Private Prague Tour — Key Facts
- Duration: Half-day (3–4 hrs) or Full-day (6–7 hrs)
- Group size: Private — your group only
- Languages: English (fluent)
- Meeting point: Central Old Town, Prague
- Booking: Advance booking recommended
- Best season: Year-round; spring & autumn ideal
