REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague Audioguide – TravelMate app for your smartphone
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by MyWoWo Srl · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Prague can be loud and confusing fast. This audio guide keeps you moving at your pace, with a real sense of what you’re looking at. You get 34 professionally made audio stops you can replay anytime, plus text on screen when you want to read along.
I love that it’s truly ticket-free and paperless: no waiting for a pickup, no fiddling with devices you don’t own. You’re also not rushed—your guide stays valid for a long time, so you can revisit Prague highlights without paying again.
One thing to consider: it works best if you’re comfortable using your phone in the street. If you prefer a live guide and constant human guidance, this will feel more hands-on-yourself than “we’ll take care of everything.”
In This Review
- Key things to know before you press play
- Travel on Your Terms: the TravelMate Prague Audioguide in Your Pocket
- How it Works Without Tickets or Checkpoints
- Your 34 Audio Stops: How to Use the 100 Minutes Like a Pro
- Old Town Square and Charles Bridge: Get Oriented Fast
- Mala Strana and Prague Castle Hill: Where Views Pay Off
- Dancing House and Municipal House: City Style Spotters Will Love This
- National Theatre and Loreto Sanctuary: Culture and Meaning
- Jewish Quarter: Stories You’ll Remember After You Leave
- Petrin Hill and Vysehrad Hill: Viewpoints Without Guesswork
- Wenceslas Square: The Big Avenue Explained
- Price and Value: $4.53 for 100 Minutes That You Can Reuse
- Who This Audioguide Fits Best (And Who Might Feel Frustrated)
- Final Verdict: Should You Book This Prague Audioguide?
- FAQ
- Do I need a meeting point for the Prague audioguide?
- How much audio content is included?
- How long is the guide valid?
- Can I listen online and offline?
- Can I read the audio content text in the app?
- What languages are available?
- Do I need a ticket to collect at the start?
- Is there a quiz in the app?
- Where do I find the activation code after booking?
- Is it wheelchair accessible?
Key things to know before you press play

- No meeting point. Download the app and start your Prague day anywhere you want.
- Offline or online listening. Use the audio even when reception gets spotty.
- 100 minutes, split into 34 tracks. You can run it all or cherry-pick neighborhoods and monuments.
- Read the text too. If audio is too much walking-level multitasking, switch to reading.
- Valid for 1095 days from first activation. You can come back or finish later without stress.
- Includes a quiz section. Short questions help you lock in what you heard.
Travel on Your Terms: the TravelMate Prague Audioguide in Your Pocket

This Prague audioguide is built for independence. You download the TravelMate app, enter your activation code, and start listening straight away—no line, no rendezvous, no ticket to misplace. It’s the kind of setup that fits real travel days: the weather changes, your feet decide your route, and you don’t want to be trapped by a rigid schedule.
The audio itself is professionally made. You’re not getting a thin narration. It’s created by a group of high-level authors and interpreted by people from television and radio. That matters because Prague is full of details—dates, styles, names, and legends—and a good voice turns that into something you actually want to pay attention to while you’re walking.
I also like that you use your own phone (and your own headphones, if you have them). That means you’re not sharing earbuds or touching third-party devices that have been through a hundred hands. It sounds like a small thing, but after enough travel, it becomes a big thing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
How it Works Without Tickets or Checkpoints

Here’s the practical flow.
First, you book, then you download the TravelMate app. On Android, look for TRAVELMATE in the Play Store. On iOS, search for TRAVELMATE TM in the App Store. After that, you activate using the code from your email (or from the GetYourGuide app if you’re using that).
The activation code is a 10-digit number. It sits just under the barcode inside the orange-framed area labeled for activity details. Once activated, you can replay the audio as many times as you want. It doesn’t expire in the typical short-tour way.
If you’re the kind of traveler who hates tech confusion, here’s your comfort zone: the experience is meant to be simple. No meeting point means no waiting. And the guide includes audio in multiple languages—English, Italian, French, Spanish, German, Chinese, and Russian—so you can match what you actually feel like listening to that day.
Your 34 Audio Stops: How to Use the 100 Minutes Like a Pro

The guide totals 100 minutes of audio spread across 34 content pieces. That’s not a mega marathon. It’s enough to give you orientation and context, but short enough to use without ruining your day.
My best advice: don’t treat it like a single route. Treat it like a menu. If you’re passing Old Town Square and your legs are already in the mood, hit the tracks for that area. If Charles Bridge is packed, you can step to the side and listen without committing to the crowd.
Also, don’t ignore the text option. The app lets you read the text of the audio files. That’s useful when you’re standing in bright sun, when you’re tired of holding your phone up, or when you want to catch a key detail without replaying the same minute of audio.
Finally: earphones are recommended. In Prague’s center, sound carries, and you’ll get more from the narration if you can actually hear it.
Old Town Square and Charles Bridge: Get Oriented Fast

Starting with Old Town Square is smart because it’s one of the easiest places to connect the dots. You’ll be surrounded by landmarks, but the audio helps you understand how the square fits into Prague’s story—so you’re not just looking at buildings, you’re learning why they’re there and what they mean.
Then there’s Charles Bridge. It’s iconic, and it can feel like a giant postcard from a distance. The value of the audio here is that it slows your brain down. You get guidance on what to notice as you walk—how the bridge relates to nearby areas and why it’s such a powerful symbol of the city.
A practical note: because the guide is in segments, you don’t have to force yourself to listen through every crowded second on the bridge. If people block your view, pause, step aside, and let the narration catch up when you can actually see what it’s talking about.
Mala Strana and Prague Castle Hill: Where Views Pay Off

Mala Strana and Prague Castle are the two big “okay, we’re really in Prague” zones. Mala Strana feels like a quieter world compared with the Old Town buzz, and the audio makes that shift make sense. You get context that helps you understand how these areas relate to each other and why people always aim for these streets and viewpoints.
Then comes the Castle track. Prague Castle can overwhelm you if you just walk in circles. The audio helps because it breaks the space into understandable chunks—so your visit feels like you’re following a plan, even though you’re walking on your own.
The payoff is not only learning. It’s the ability to look up from your phone and actually see details. With a bit of narration in your head, you’ll notice more: the city layout, the sense of height and position, and the way buildings dominate sightlines from nearby paths.
Dancing House and Municipal House: City Style Spotters Will Love This

Prague isn’t all medieval stone. The audio covers modern architecture too, which is a gift if you’ve been expecting the whole trip to be cobblestones and castles.
The Dancing House track is a great example. It helps you see the building as a designed idea, not just a strange shape in the skyline. That’s useful because you might otherwise walk past it thinking you either like it or don’t. The narration gives you a framework for why it looks the way it does.
Municipal House brings you into a more “civic pride” vibe. The audio helps connect the look of the space to the role the building has played in the city. If you’re the type who loves interior details, this kind of track makes you more attentive when you’re actually standing in front of the façade.
If you’re unsure which style you prefer, do both. That’s where an audioguide shines: you can sample without committing to a whole guided tour theme.
National Theatre and Loreto Sanctuary: Culture and Meaning

The National Theatre track adds another layer: performance and public life. It’s the kind of stop that can turn into a quick glance if you’re rushing. With the audio, you’re more likely to slow down long enough to recognize the building as part of Prague’s cultural identity.
Loreto Sanctuary offers a different tone—more reflective, more spiritual in atmosphere. The audio helps by explaining what you’re seeing in context, so it’s not just a pretty structure. You understand why it matters.
This is one of the reasons I like self-guided audio in places like Prague: you can choose the mood. Want something energetic? Pick the theater and central streets. Want something quieter? Switch to sanctuary-level tracks.
Jewish Quarter: Stories You’ll Remember After You Leave

The Jewish Quarter is one of those areas where the experience can feel heavy if you don’t know what you’re looking at. The value of the audio here is that it gives you context, so you’re not just absorbing scenery. You’re learning the human story attached to the place.
I also like that the guide handles it as a full stop, not a side comment. That encourages you to treat the area with the attention it deserves—even if you only spend part of a day in the neighborhood.
If you’re visiting on a busy day, you can still manage it. Listen in short chunks, pause when you need a break, and don’t feel you must get every detail in one single pass.
Petrin Hill and Vysehrad Hill: Viewpoints Without Guesswork

Petrin Hill is a classic viewpoint. The problem with viewpoints is you often end up just staring and taking photos, then forgetting what you were supposed to notice. The audioguide helps you do better than that.
The track guides you through what makes the view meaningful—so your photos come with context, not just skyline shapes.
Vysehrad Hill is another viewpoint, with a different atmosphere. The audio helps you treat Vysehrad as its own experience rather than another hill with a view. It also gives you a more grounded sense of place, which is handy if you’re walking between areas and trying to keep track of geography.
This is where offline-friendly listening helps most. If you’re on a hill path, you may lose data signal. With offline listening, your narration stays steady, and you can focus on the city around you.
Wenceslas Square: The Big Avenue Explained
Wenceslas Square is Prague’s main avenue energy. It can feel like a straight line of storefronts and traffic unless someone helps you understand what you’re seeing.
The audio track frames the square so it feels less random. Instead of treating it like just a transit route, you can walk it with awareness—why this space matters and how it fits into the city’s bigger pattern.
If your feet are tired, this is a good place to listen while you walk slowly. You don’t need to sprint from one landmark to another to get value. The narration gives the place meaning even when you’re not doing intense sightseeing.
Price and Value: $4.53 for 100 Minutes That You Can Reuse
At $4.53 per person, you’re buying access to 100 minutes of audio you can replay as much as you want. That’s the real value: repeatability. Many paid attractions are one-and-done. This guide is long-valid, meaning you can finish the experience later, revisit areas, or use it across multiple trips without paying again.
It’s also a good fit for cost-conscious travelers who still want more than a guidebook and fewer crowds than a group tour. You’re spending less money than you would for a typical organized tour, while still getting professional narration designed to give context.
Is it “cheaper than free”? Well, yes if you don’t have to buy anything else. But it does require your smartphone and headphones. If you already plan to use your phone for navigation, this becomes an easy add-on.
Who This Audioguide Fits Best (And Who Might Feel Frustrated)
This works best for you if:
- You like going at your own speed and don’t want to coordinate with others.
- You prefer learning in small doses while walking.
- You want a guide you can replay later or use on multiple days.
- You like having a backup option (audio plus text) when you’re tired.
It may frustrate you if:
- You want live Q&A, flexible routing, or a human who adapts to your interests on the fly.
- You dislike smartphone use while sightseeing.
- You need a guide that includes detailed instructions for exactly where to stand at each moment (this is designed more as commentary than micromanaged direction).
The good news: Prague is forgiving. You can listen while you wander, and the city still makes sense.
Final Verdict: Should You Book This Prague Audioguide?
If you’re planning to see the big-ticket areas—Old Town Square, Charles Bridge, Prague Castle, Mala Strana, plus viewpoints like Petrin Hill and Vysehrad—this app is an efficient way to add meaning without adding logistics. The price is low, the guide is professionally produced, and the long validity window makes it feel like a tool, not a one-day purchase.
Book it if you want independence with solid narration. Skip it if you’re craving a live guide presence. For most self-guided Prague visitors, this is a practical, low-stress way to turn walks into learning.
FAQ
Do I need a meeting point for the Prague audioguide?
No. There is no meeting point. You download the app and start your experience wherever you prefer.
How much audio content is included?
The audioguide includes 34 audio content items with a total duration of 100 minutes.
How long is the guide valid?
It is valid for 1095 days from the first activation.
Can I listen online and offline?
Yes. You can listen to the audio contents online or offline.
Can I read the audio content text in the app?
Yes. You can read the text of the audio files in the app.
What languages are available?
The audio is available in English, Italian, French, Spanish, German, Chinese, and Russian.
Do I need a ticket to collect at the start?
No. You can organize your experience in complete autonomy with no paper tickets to collect.
Is there a quiz in the app?
Yes. There is a quiz section with short questions to play and learn about the city.
Where do I find the activation code after booking?
In your email. Look for the activity details, then show your tickets here, open the barcode area, and use the 10-digit small number just under the barcode. You can also access it via the GetYourGuide app.
Is it wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the activity is wheelchair accessible.




























