REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague All-Inclusive Pass: 30+ Activities including Prague Castle
Book on Viator →Operated by Go City | Europe · Bookable on Viator
Prague is a city you can plan a little, then wander hard. This pass is interesting because it packages Prague Castle plus a mix of classic sights and offbeat stops into one phone-friendly ticket. I especially like that you can spend your time where you want: great big-hits like St Vitus and Golden Lane sit next to smaller museums that help you fill gaps without constantly hunting for opening times.
Two things I like a lot: the mobile pass idea (scan and go), and the way the included experiences balance Prague’s top views with food-and-drink culture. One consideration: it is not always fully spend-free in practice. There have been complaints about an unexpected spending limit, so I recommend you check the fine print for anything involving extras.
In This Review
- Key Highlights That Matter Before You Buy
- How This Pass Works in Real Life (1 to 5 Days, English, Phone Ticket)
- Prague Castle: Old Royal Palace, St Vitus, St George’s, Golden Lane
- What you’ll experience inside the castle complex
- How to time it so you don’t lose the day
- One castle-style caution
- Beer on Wenceslas Square: Pilsner Urquell Experience + Tasting
- Who this fits
- Spirits With a Tech Twist: Slivovitz Museum (R. Jelinek)
- Timing note
- Getting Your Bearings Fast: Hop-On Hop-Off Bus + Vltava River Cruise
- The hop-on hop-off bus
- The river cruise
- Best way to use both on one trip
- Old Town and the Jewish Quarter: Astronomical Clock, Charles Bridge, Josefov
- A smart way to avoid repetition
- Žižkov TV Tower: Prague From 216 Meters Up
- Museums That Make Prague Feel Like More Than One District
- Illusion Art Museum Prague
- Gallery of Steel Figures Prague (recycled steel art)
- Kingdom of Railways
- Story of Prague Museum (audio-digital + augmented reality)
- Museum of Bricks (LEGO collection)
- Aquapalace Prague and Prague Zoo: Two Ways to Recharge
- Aquapalace Prague (water park day)
- Prague Zoo (2 hours, conservation-focused)
- Price and Logistics: Does $76.90 Really Make Sense?
- A practical way to plan your days
- Who This Pass Suits Best (and Who Might Find It Too Much)
- Should You Book This Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
- FAQ
- What is included in the Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
- How long is the pass valid?
- Is the ticket mobile, and what language is it offered in?
- Which major sights tied to Prague Castle are included?
- Does the pass include time for a boat cruise and bus sightseeing?
- What is not included in the pass?
- Where do I find the latest entry details?
Key Highlights That Matter Before You Buy

- Mobile ticket + Go City app: you use the phone pass and check the latest entry details in the app since schedules can change.
- Prague Castle is built-in: Old Royal Palace, St Vitus Cathedral, St George’s Basilica, and Golden Lane are part of the package.
- Beer and spirits included: Pilsner Urquell has an interactive exhibit plus a beer tasting, and Slivovitz Museum includes a tasting.
- Easy city pacing: the 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus and a 1-hour Vltava cruise help you see a lot without cramming every minute.
- Good variety for different weather: museums and indoor experiences sit right beside the zoo and water park.
How This Pass Works in Real Life (1 to 5 Days, English, Phone Ticket)

You buy a digital pass that works for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days. That choice matters. If you pick a short window, you’ll need a tighter plan, because Prague days can disappear fast once you add castle stairs, river walks, and tram hops. If you pick longer, you can breathe—use the pass as a menu, not a checklist.
The ticket is mobile, and it’s offered in English. After booking, you get confirmation, then you rely on the Go City app for the most up-to-date lineup, opening times, and instructions. I like this approach because Prague can shift hours by season, and museums can change entry rules. You don’t want to show up at the wrong time with your phone already loaded.
Also note the pass includes places that are spread around town and sometimes on different transit lines. The good news: the listing notes you’re near public transportation. The practical news: even with that, you’ll still walk. Plan for cobblestones and hills, especially when you stack Castle and Old Town on the same day.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague.
Prague Castle: Old Royal Palace, St Vitus, St George’s, Golden Lane

Prague Castle is not one stop. It’s a whole day’s worth of architecture, churches, and courtyards—and this pass treats it like that. You get entry to major pieces of the complex, including Old Royal Palace, St Vitus Cathedral, St George’s Basilica, and Golden Lane.
What you’ll experience inside the castle complex
- Old Royal Palace: the Gothic palace portion and the famous Vladislav Hall, where royal ceremonies and events were held.
- St Vitus Cathedral: construction began under Charles IV in 1344, and it’s presented as Prague’s most important cathedral. If you care about Gothic design, the soaring spires and details are the point.
- St George’s Basilica: a Romanesque-looking church today, tied to the castle grounds and rebuilt after a major fire in 1142.
- Golden Lane: small, colorful houses dating to the late 15th century, linked to folklore and literary legend—Franz Kafka lived in this area.
How to time it so you don’t lose the day
If you’re going for the big cathedral and the smaller lanes, don’t rush. Castle Day can feel like moving through several different centuries in one breath. I’d plan for at least a couple of hours inside the complex, then leave extra time to wander outside. The views over the city are part of the attraction, even if your ticket focus is the interiors.
One castle-style caution
Castle areas can get crowded, and the complex is spread out. If you try to pair Castle with another far-away stop, you’ll feel your energy drop. This is a pass where Castle works best as a center of gravity.
Beer on Wenceslas Square: Pilsner Urquell Experience + Tasting

Beer lovers get a standout inclusion here: the Pilsner Urquell Experience. You’ll spend about 2 hours at an interactive exhibition tied to the original golden lager story. It includes audio-style guidance and video mapping effects that help show the brewing process, plus a beer-tasting session.
This is valuable because it’s not just a museum wall. It’s built to keep you moving while you learn. And the tasting is the payoff—an easy way to turn knowledge into something you actually like.
Who this fits
If you want beer culture with a bit of showmanship, you’ll likely enjoy this. If you dislike tastings, you can still get value from the brewing story, but the experience is clearly designed with drinking in mind.
Spirits With a Tech Twist: Slivovitz Museum (R. Jelinek)

Prague’s not only about beer. The pass includes the Slivovitz Museum by R. Jelinek, with a 55-minute interactive tour. You’ll see exhibits and screenings about the history and tradition of fruit spirit distilling, and you’ll get a 5D virtual experience as part of the program.
The tasting is a big part of the value. You get three R. JELÍNEK kosher products plus three different finger foods to try. That pairing makes it easier to enjoy the flavors without feeling like you’re being rushed through a lecture.
Timing note
Two hours is the slot for this stop in the pass. That gives you time for the show, the tech experience, and the tasting without feeling like you need to sprint to your next ticket.
Getting Your Bearings Fast: Hop-On Hop-Off Bus + Vltava River Cruise

Two included “see-a-lot” items make Prague easier: the 24-hour hop-on hop-off sightseeing bus and a 1-hour river cruise on the Vltava.
The hop-on hop-off bus
You get a full day, with the freedom to hop on and off at stops you choose, then return at your leisure. This is especially useful on a first visit when you don’t yet know which corners you want to linger in. It can also reduce the stress of planning transit all day long.
The river cruise
The cruise is a classic Prague moment: pass under a skyline full of towers and spires, with castles visible from the water. You can’t photograph your way through Prague; you need at least one experience that reframes the city. This does that fast, with minimal effort.
Best way to use both on one trip
I like using the cruise to set a visual template for the city, then using the bus to reach specific neighborhoods you want to explore after. If you flip it, you can still work it out, but the first approach helps you understand what you’re seeing once you’re back on land.
Old Town and the Jewish Quarter: Astronomical Clock, Charles Bridge, Josefov

Walking tours are where you go beyond postcards. This pass includes an Old Town-style guided walk focused on the Jewish Quarter area, with key landmarks and story-led detours.
You’ll see:
- the Orloj Astronomical Clock (exteriors)
- Charles Bridge
- Josefov, the Jewish Quarter, dating to the 13th century
The tour also focuses on context: Medieval-era life, Bohemian kings, and the impact of the Second World War, plus lesser-known paths that you might miss if you just follow the main square crowd.
A smart way to avoid repetition
There are multiple Old Town-oriented walking items in this pass lineup (including one that mentions the bridge tower area). If you’re short on time, pick one guided walk that matches your interests instead of doing two similar ones back-to-back. You’ll get more from variety than from doubling up on the same sights.
Žižkov TV Tower: Prague From 216 Meters Up

The pass includes the Žižkov Television Tower, with an impressive height of 216 meters. This is a good counterweight to Prague Castle and Old Town. From up high, the city layout becomes clearer, and you can spot where areas connect—especially helpful if you’ve been bouncing between neighborhoods.
A tower view also resets your energy. After a day of walking, a higher vantage point feels like you’re using your time creatively, not just burning steps.
Museums That Make Prague Feel Like More Than One District

This pass is loaded with smaller attractions that break the “church, castle, church” cycle. They’re also great when weather turns or when you want something lighter than monuments.
Illusion Art Museum Prague
A museum dedicated to illusions and trick art. It’s located between Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square, so it works as a friendly stop while you’re moving between those zones. If you like interactive fun, this one is a natural fit.
Gallery of Steel Figures Prague (recycled steel art)
This museum focuses on art made from recycled steel parts. The figures are inspired by pop culture, fairytales, and the automotive world. It’s the kind of place that feels playful, but still gives you something to look at longer than you expect.
Kingdom of Railways
A model railway exhibition with around 80 train sets, including moving cars, trams, cable cars, and a metro. It’s one of those attractions that works for adults because it has movement and detail, not just static displays. Kids often love it too, which can make planning easier when family members have different energy levels.
Story of Prague Museum (audio-digital + augmented reality)
This museum uses audio-digital elements and a bespoke augmented reality app to tell 800 years of Prague history. You explore three floors, with exhibits and interactive photo points. If you enjoy history but don’t want a dry lecture, this style can help you process the city in a more personal way.
Museum of Bricks (LEGO collection)
If LEGO is your thing, this is a standout. The museum claims the world’s largest LEGO collection, with 9,000 exhibits and around 10 million pieces. Even if you’re not a superfan, the scale alone usually makes it worth the hour.
Aquapalace Prague and Prague Zoo: Two Ways to Recharge
This pass includes big “time blocks” that can anchor a full day.
Aquapalace Prague (water park day)
Aquapalace is described as the ultimate water park adventure in Central Europe, with Water World covering 9,150 square meters of aquatic fun. The included entry is for a full day, which is key: you don’t feel like you’re rushing to fit it between other tickets.
This works best if you’re traveling in warmer months or if you want an intentional break from museums. It also helps when you have mixed ages in your group.
Prague Zoo (2 hours, conservation-focused)
Prague Zoo is included with time for about 2 hours. You’ll see over 680 species, and it’s described as being known for conservation efforts. Zoos take time because you’ll want to stop and watch animals longer than planned. The pass slot helps you avoid the trap of trying to see the entire zoo in one go.
Price and Logistics: Does $76.90 Really Make Sense?
At $76.90 per person, the value depends on how you travel and how many included stops you actually use. The pass is designed for people who want to avoid paying again and again at the ticket desk.
Here’s where the math usually works in your favor:
- You plan at least 3 to 5 paid attractions across the same trip window.
- You’re the type who likes a mix of major landmarks and smaller museums.
- You want convenience: a single phone scan experience instead of keeping paper tickets organized.
Where you should be careful:
- Some costs can show up as add-ons or may not be as fully included as you expect. There’s at least one case where the experience didn’t match the all-inclusive promise due to a spending limit. Before you commit your whole plan around the pass, check the details that apply to anything involving extra purchases.
A practical way to plan your days
I’d structure days like this:
- Day 1: Old Town + one museum stop (Illusions or Steel Figures), then a bus ride to orient yourself.
- Day 2: Prague Castle as the main event, with Golden Lane as your later, calmer walk.
- Day 3: Beer (Pilsner Urquell) or spirits (Slivovitz) plus either the zoo or a second museum cluster.
If you have 4 or 5 days, you can spread the indoor museums out and still keep time for slower neighborhood wandering.
Who This Pass Suits Best (and Who Might Find It Too Much)
This pass fits best if you:
- want a low-friction way to access many different attractions
- enjoy mixing big sights (Castle, cathedral) with smaller, quirky places (illusions, steel art, rails)
- like experiences that include food or tastings (beer tasting, slivovitz tasting)
It might not be ideal if you’re the kind of traveler who wants to pick only one or two major paid sights and then roam freely with no scheduled structure. In that case, you could end up using fewer parts of the pass and paying more overall.
Should You Book This Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
Yes, if you’re trying to cover a lot of Prague without turning your trip into spreadsheets. The strongest reasons are the Prague Castle entry, the beer and spirits tastings, and the pairing of hop-on bus + river cruise for fast orientation.
Before you buy, do one simple checklist:
- decide how many days you’ll realistically be in Prague (pick the shortest window that matches your pace)
- open the Go City app to confirm the latest schedules and entry instructions
- double-check any possible exceptions around extras so you don’t feel surprised later
If you want a convenient, variety-heavy Prague plan, this pass is a very workable way to do it.
FAQ
What is included in the Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
The pass includes admission to 30+ attractions, such as Prague Castle, the Prague Jewish Quarter tour, the hop-on hop-off bus (24 hours), Pilsner Urquell Experience with beer tasting, a 1-hour river cruise, and Aquapalace Prague.
How long is the pass valid?
You can choose a pass valid for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days.
Is the ticket mobile, and what language is it offered in?
Yes, it’s a mobile ticket, and the experience is offered in English.
Which major sights tied to Prague Castle are included?
Included Castle experiences reference Old Royal Palace, St Vitus Cathedral, St George’s Basilica, and Golden Lane.
Does the pass include time for a boat cruise and bus sightseeing?
Yes. It includes a 1-hour river cruise and a 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus.
What is not included in the pass?
Not included are accommodation and transport to and from attractions.
Where do I find the latest entry details?
The instructions and up-to-date lineup, including opening times and how to access each attraction, are provided in the Go City app.





















