REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague: Craft Beer Tour 8 Czech Beers, Taproom & Beer Garden
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Drunken Monkey Prague · Bookable on GetYourGuide
If you like beer with stories, this tour fits. Prague craft beer isn’t just drinking, it’s tasting, learning, and picking up local etiquette as you go. I especially like the mix of eight Czech microbrews and the calm, organized pace with a personal group guide.
What I like even more is the lineup: the tour pushes you into Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room for a big selection, then ends at Letná Beer Garden for local hangout vibes and famous views. One thing to consider: it’s designed for adults (not suitable for children under 18), and you’ll be walking between stops—comfortable shoes matter.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel During This Tour
- Prague Craft Beer Tastes Better When You Know What You’re Drinking
- Meeting at Drunken Monkey: The “Calm and In Control” Start
- Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room: When 100+ Beers Turns Into a Real Lesson
- Pub Stops and Beer Etiquette: The Small Things That Make It Feel Local
- Letná Beer Garden Finish: Views, Local Hangouts, and Food When You Want It
- The $66 Value Question: Eight Tastings Plus Real Experience Time
- Who Should Book This Prague Craft Beer Tour
- A Few Practical Tips Before You Go
- Should You Book the Prague Craft Beer Tour With Sibeeria and Letná?
- FAQ
- Where does the tour start?
- How long is the Prague craft beer tour?
- How many beers will I taste?
- What are the main stops?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Is it suitable for children?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel During This Tour

Eight beer tastings in one 3-hour route so you sample without spending the whole day hopping bars.
Sibeeria Tap Room visit with 100+ beers on hand and hands-on moments like learning brewing techniques and pouring your own pint.
A guide focused on Czech beer culture and etiquette which helps you order and drink like locals.
Letná Beer Garden as the finish with hot food and snacks available to keep you going while you enjoy views.
An alternate brewery if weather turns so your plan doesn’t get wrecked by rain.
Free cancellation up to 24 hours ahead for peace of mind if your schedule shifts.
Prague Craft Beer Tastes Better When You Know What You’re Drinking

Prague is one of those cities where beer culture is a normal part of everyday life, not a “special activity.” This tour leans into that. Instead of treating beer like a random checklist of drinks, you learn how Czech breweries think about flavor, balance, and style—so the tasting starts making sense fast.
The tour is built around eight carefully selected Czech microbrews, which is a sweet spot. Too few tastings and you don’t get variety. Too many and you lose the thread of what you’re noticing. Here, you get diversity across styles and strengths while still having time for questions and comparisons.
I also like that the experience doesn’t feel like a lecture. You’re sampling as you learn: you’ll hear about Czech brewing traditions and local customs, then you can use what you learn in real time at the venues.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Prague
Meeting at Drunken Monkey: The “Calm and In Control” Start

Your day kicks off at Drunken Monkey, U Milosrdných 848/4, 110 00 Praha 1-Staré Město. It’s the kind of meeting point that’s easy to find in the center of Prague (and easy to repeat later if you want to come back).
The tour runs about 3 hours, so it’s not one of those all-day beer marathons. That matters because Prague has lots of distractions, and you’ll want to stay sharp for tasting notes and comparisons. The good part here is pacing: you’re moving, but it doesn’t feel rushed.
You’ll also want to dress for short walking segments between stops. The route includes a walk to Letná Beer Garden, and you’ll be standing and moving more than you might expect. Bring comfortable shoes and keep water in mind between tastings—your taste buds will thank you.
Finally, this is an English-language tour with a live guide, which is ideal if you want cultural context without a language barrier.
Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room: When 100+ Beers Turns Into a Real Lesson

The biggest “wow” stop is Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room. The venue is known for having a huge selection—100+ beers on offer—so your brain may want to wander toward everything at once. The tour helps you focus. You’re not just picking whatever looks fun; you’re tasting with purpose.
One of the best parts is that you’re there with guidance on what to look for and how to appreciate the brews. You’ll also learn brewing techniques and you’ll get a chance to pour your own perfect pint. That might sound like a gimmick, but it actually changes how you experience the beer: you become more aware of serving, aroma, foam, and texture.
Because the tap room has so many options, this stop is also where people usually start to understand the range of Czech beer. You’ll see how different styles sit side by side, and the earlier tastings start to feel like they’re building into a bigger picture rather than isolated sips.
Practical note: with so many beers around, it’s easy to overdo it if you get excited. Trust the planned tastings. Save curiosity for later—if you fall in love with a style, you can always go back to try more at your own pace.
Pub Stops and Beer Etiquette: The Small Things That Make It Feel Local

Between the big landmarks, the tour spends time in classic pub environments and uses a city-walk format to connect everything. The guide’s job isn’t just to point you toward the next glass. It’s to explain Czech beer culture and etiquette, which is where tours like this can either feel generic or feel genuinely Prague.
Here’s what that means in practice: you’ll pick up how to think about beer ordering, serving, and how to behave in a way that fits the local vibe. Even if you’re not a beer expert, these are the kinds of details that make you feel comfortable instead of self-conscious.
Another thing I like: this isn’t just about drinking. It’s about comparison. When you’re sampling multiple Czech microbrews, the guide can help you notice what changes from beer to beer—bitterness balance, malt character, aroma, and how easy (or not) a style is to drink.
And because you’re in a group, you’re not stuck figuring it out alone. You can ask quick questions and get straight answers, then you’re back to tasting.
Letná Beer Garden Finish: Views, Local Hangouts, and Food When You Want It
The walk ends at Letná Beer Garden, and this is the part where the experience turns from “beer lesson” into “Prague memory.” Letná is famous because locals go there to relax with a drink, and you get some of the best city views.
This matters because beer tours can get repetitive. You spend time standing near taps, then you sit back and finally take in the atmosphere. Even better, Letná gives you a built-in way to balance your evening: you can buy hot food and snacks while you enjoy your beer and the view.
That food option is practical, not fancy. After multiple tastings, you’ll appreciate something warm and filling. One theme from the overall experience is that the stops help keep you going, and Letná is a natural place to slow down and actually enjoy the setting rather than just move on to the next drink.
Weather note: if it’s bad outside, the tour includes an alternate brewery instead of forcing the plan to break. You won’t lose the structure—you’ll lose the outdoor views, but you still keep the beer experience.
You can also read our reviews of more drinking tours in Prague
The $66 Value Question: Eight Tastings Plus Real Experience Time

Price matters, especially in a city like Prague where you can find beer pretty much everywhere. So here’s how I’d judge the value of this tour at $66 per person:
- You get eight Czech microbrew tastings, not one or two “token” pours. That’s a lot of beer for a fixed amount of money.
- You visit at least two major beer settings: Sibeeria Tap Room plus Letná Beer Garden (or an alternate brewery if weather is rough). Those aren’t equivalent to buying your way into one bar at random.
- You get a personal group guide who focuses on beer culture and etiquette, which is the part people forget to price. Without the guide, you’d still be drinking, but you’d probably miss context that makes the tasting more meaningful.
- The timing is compact: 3 hours is enough to feel like an event, not enough to drain your whole day.
So is it a deal? If you’re the type who likes craft beer and wants a structured way to sample rather than guessing, $66 feels fair. If you’re just after casual drinking with no interest in learning, you might be able to build something cheaper on your own. But if you want a guided, organized tasting with standout stops, the value is there.
Who Should Book This Prague Craft Beer Tour

This tour is best for adults who like beer and want a guided tasting that feels thoughtful instead of chaotic. It’s also a good fit if you want to combine drinking with a real neighborhood walk in central Prague.
You’ll likely enjoy it most if you:
- love trying different Czech styles and want help noticing differences
- like learning local etiquette so you feel comfortable ordering and sampling
- want views without turning the day into a long sightseeing marathon
- prefer a 3-hour plan that’s easy to plug into a tight itinerary
It’s not suitable for children under 18, so it’s firmly an adult experience.
A Few Practical Tips Before You Go

To get the best day possible, keep it simple:
- Wear comfortable shoes for the walking segments and standing time at venues.
- Bring a passport or ID card.
- Pace yourself. Eight tastings go quickly, and the goal is to enjoy the flavors, not just finish cups.
- If the weather looks iffy, expect the plan to adjust (the tour includes an alternate brewery).
Also, since this tour is offered in English and the guide is part of the value, come in with a curious attitude. Ask questions as you taste. That’s when the tour turns from drinking into learning.
Should You Book the Prague Craft Beer Tour With Sibeeria and Letná?
If you’re choosing between a casual bar crawl and a guided craft beer tasting, I’d steer you toward this one. The big reasons are the structure (3 hours, eight tastings), the standout stop at Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room, and the finish at Letná Beer Garden where the views and food options help you slow down.
One last check before you decide: the tour has an adult age limit and involves walking. If that fits your style, book it. If you want something more active than beer sipping or you dislike guided tastings, you might prefer a different kind of tour.
With a 4.5 rating based on available reviews, the overall signal is clear: people come for the beer variety and the calm, informative format, then leave feeling like they actually understood what they tasted.
FAQ
Where does the tour start?
The tour starts at Drunken Monkey, U Milosrdných 848/4, 110 00 Praha 1-Staré Město, Czechia, and it ends back at the meeting point.
How long is the Prague craft beer tour?
The tour duration is 3 hours. Starting times vary, so you’ll need to check availability for the specific time you want.
How many beers will I taste?
You’ll taste eight varieties of Czech microbrews as part of the tasting tour.
What are the main stops?
The tour includes a visit to Sibeeria Brewery Tap Room and then continues to Letná Beer Garden (or an alternate brewery if the weather is bad).
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes. The live tour guide speaks English.
Is it suitable for children?
No. The tour is not suitable for children under 18 years.


































