Quick Facts 🇨🇿 Czech Republic
~€66/day
10 days
Prague (Vinohrady), Český Krumlov
Czech Koruna (~25 CZK = €1)
Prague metro + CD trains
Budget travelers, history lovers
Czech Republic is having a serious moment in travel search — trending +149% on Pinterest in 2026. Most of that is Prague. But the real value for slow travelers is that once you leave Prague’s tourist core, prices drop dramatically and you get one of Central Europe’s best-preserved medieval landscapes almost entirely to yourself. This guide covers slow travel Czech Republic — Prague as a base, the day trips worth taking, and how to keep costs under €60/day.
Why Czech Republic is Trending (And What That Means for Budget Travelers)
The +149% trend reflects a post-pandemic rediscovery: Central Europe is cheaper than Western Europe, more historically preserved, and still recovering tourism volume. That means less crowding in secondary cities and towns, more apartment availability, and prices that haven’t caught up with demand yet.
Prague is expensive by Czech standards, but still 40–50% cheaper than Amsterdam, Paris, or Vienna for equivalent quality accommodation and food.
What Does Slow Travel Czech Republic Actually Cost?
Honest estimate for one person, 10 days (2026):
| Category | Per Day | 10-Day Total |
|---|---|---|
| Accommodation (apartment) | €32 | €320 |
| Food (local restaurants + some cooking) | €18 | €180 |
| Transport (metro + day trips) | €8 | €80 |
| Attractions & experiences | €8 | €80 |
| Total (excl. flights) | ~€66 | ~€660 |
Note: Czech Republic uses Czech Koruna (CZK), not the Euro. Current rate ~25 CZK = €1. A sit-down lunch at a local Czech restaurant is 150–250 CZK (~€6–10). A 0.5L beer is 50–80 CZK (~€2–3).
🏨 Where to Stay
Apartments in Prague’s quieter neighborhoods offer excellent value. Filter by “entire apartment” and “free cancellation” on Booking.com — weekly rates save 25–30%.
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The 10-Day Slow Travel Czech Republic Itinerary
One main base (Prague), three destination day trips, and two bonus nights in Česky Krumlov.
Days 1–5 — Prague: The Right Way
Prague’s Old Town is beautiful and worth seeing once. But slow travelers live in Vinohrady (walkable, residential, Art Nouveau buildings), Žižkov (cheap, local, a bit rough around the edges in the best way), or Smíchov (quieter, well-connected). These are all metro-close to the center.
- Day 1: Arrive, walk the neighborhoods around your apartment, evening beer at a local hospoda (pub). Kozel or Pilsner Urquell on tap for 50–70 CZK.
- Day 2: Old Town Square in the morning (7–8am before crowds), Charles Bridge walk, afternoon in Josefov (Jewish Quarter — the synagogues are genuinely worth the entrance fee of ~600 CZK). 🌍 Skip-the-line Jewish Quarter tours →
- Day 3: Prague Castle — book the circuit without the main cathedral for ~250 CZK (savings vs. full ticket at 400 CZK). Hradčany neighborhood is less visited than the castle itself.
- Day 4: Day trip to Kutná Hora (train, 55 min, ~€3). The Sedlec Ossuary (Bone Church) is one of the genuinely strangest and most memorable sites in Europe. The Cathedral of St. Barbara is often overlooked but stunning.
- Day 5: No-plan day — Letná Park (free, great city views), afternoon exploring Žižkov TV Tower, local lunch.
🏟 Prague Experiences Worth Paying For
Prague’s Jewish Quarter, a guided Prague Castle tour, the Bohemian beer spa experience, or a day trip to Karlštejn Castle — all available on GetYourGuide.
Browse Prague Tours on GetYourGuide →
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📍 Prague Neighborhoods
Stay in Vinohrady (metro A & C lines, beautiful streets, great restaurants), Žižkov (cheapest option, local pubs), or Holešovice (artsy, market district). Avoid Wenceslas Square — loud, expensive, tourist trap.
Days 6–7 — Kutná Hora Extended or Český Krumlov
If you want to go beyond day trips: Český Krumlov (southern Bohemia, UNESCO listed medieval town in a river bend) is one of Europe’s most photogenic small towns. Bus from Prague (~3 hours, €8). Stay 2 nights to beat the day-tripper crowds.
- Day 6: Afternoon arrival, Krumlov Castle and the surrounding village. No agenda.
- Day 7: Morning kayaking on the Vltava River (€15–20), afternoon castle gardens (free), evening bus back to Prague.
⛵ Český Krumlov Activities
River rafting, castle tours, and guided walks through one of Central Europe’s best-preserved medieval towns.
Browse Český Krumlov Experiences →
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Days 8–10 — Back in Prague (Living Like a Local)
Return to Prague for the final stretch. This is the slow travel payoff: you know the city now. Morning market run (Farmers Market at Náměstí Míru), long lunch at a hospoda, afternoon at Letná beer garden (~50 CZK for a 0.5L), evening in Vinohrady.
Getting Around Czech Republic Cheaply
- Prague metro: ~30 CZK (~€1.20) for 30-min ticket. Day pass: 120 CZK (~€4.80). Monthly: 550 CZK (~€22). Worth it for 5+ days.
- Regional trains (ČD): Cheap and reliable. Prague to Kutná Hora: 90 CZK (~€3.60). Prague to Brno: 230 CZK (~€9).
- FlixBus/RegioJet: Budget bus option for Prague–Brno, Prague–Český Krumlov. RegioJet has excellent free onboard Wi-Fi.
- Rideshares: BlaBlaCar is very popular in Czech Republic for inter-city travel. Often €3–6 vs €15+ on trains.
Where to Eat on a Czech Budget
The trick is to eat where Czechs eat, not where tourists eat. Rule of thumb: if the menu has photos and is translated into 4+ languages, the food is mediocre and overpriced.
- Hospody (Czech pubs): Roast pork, svíčková (beef with cream sauce), goulash. Usually 150–220 CZK for a full meal with beer.
- Vietnamese restaurants: Czech Republic has a large Vietnamese community. Pho and banh mi for 120–160 CZK are everywhere and excellent.
- Farmers markets: Náměstí Míru (Vinohrady, Wednesday & Saturday), Holešovice Market (weekend). Fresh produce, cheese, baked goods.
- Albert/Billa supermarkets: Good for breakfast and pantry staples. Czech bread, cold cuts, and dairy are excellent quality.
What to Pack for Czech Republic (10 Days)
- 40L carry-on backpack — Prague’s cobblestones are worse than Lisbon’s
- Waterproof walking shoes — spring and autumn can be wet
- A light down jacket — Prague evenings stay cool into June
- Type E/F adapter — Czech Republic uses European standard sockets
FAQ
Is Czech Republic in the Eurozone?
No — it uses Czech Koruna (CZK). Don’t exchange at the airport; use ATMs in the city (avoid Euronet ATMs which charge high fees — use bank ATMs like Česká spořitelna or ČSOB).
Is Prague safe?
Very safe by European standards. Pickpocketing on trams (especially tram 22 past Castle) and at tourist-heavy areas is the main concern. Standard precautions apply.
Is it worth going beyond Prague?
Yes, strongly. Kutná Hora (day trip), Český Krumlov (2 nights), and Brno (2 nights) each offer something Prague doesn’t: smaller crowds, lower prices, and a sense that you’re actually seeing the country, not just its most-photographed corner.
What’s the best time to visit?
May–June and September–October. July and August are peak season in Prague — summer school groups everywhere. Winter is atmospheric but cold; Christmas markets are beautiful but very crowded.
Final Thoughts
Czech Republic rewards the slow traveler more than almost anywhere in Europe. Prague’s center is genuinely beautiful — but it’s the side streets of Vinohrady, the bone church at Kutná Hora, and a beer garden overlooking the Vltava that you’ll actually remember. Slow down, stay longer, spend less.
Ready to Plan Your Czech Republic Trip?
Find your Vinohrady apartment, book a Bone Church day trip, and save this guide to Pinterest.
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