REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague Craft Beer Tour: 8 Czech Beers, Taproom & Best Beer Garden
Book on Viator →Operated by Drunken Monkey · Bookable on Viator
A beer route that locals actually use. This Prague Craft Beer Tour strings together 8 Czech beers over three focused stops, plus snacks and a guide who explains how to drink like you belong. I also like the built-in beer-drinking etiquette, so you’re not just collecting cups, you’re learning what to do and why.
One thing to keep in mind: a few people reported their group only visited two venues instead of three. If you want the full Drunken Monkey → Sibeeria → Letná sequence, I’d ask your guide early how many stops your exact group will cover.
In This Review
- Key things I’d put on your radar
- Prague Craft Beer Tour: what you’re really paying for
- The meeting point and timing that matter (1:00 pm start)
- Stop 1 at Drunken Monkey: four beers plus beer etiquette
- Stop 2 at Sibeeria Tap Room: the “choose-your-own style” moment
- Stop 3 at Letná Beer Garden: panoramic views and the Pilsner Urquell finish
- The guide: where the tour earns its respect
- Beer snacks: why they make the tasting easier
- Group size and the social feel (max 30)
- Price and value: why this is a bargain even if you only like some beers
- Who should book this Prague beer tour
- Quick practical tips before you go
- Should you book this Prague Craft Beer Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How many beers are included in the Prague craft beer tour?
- How long is the tour?
- What time does the tour start?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- How many stops are on the itinerary?
- What beer is served at the end of the tour?
- Is the ticket mobile?
- What is the maximum group size?
- Is free cancellation available?
- Is the tour near public transportation and accessible for most people?
- How do I know my booking is confirmed?
Key things I’d put on your radar
- Up-to-8 tastings spread across multiple Prague spots, not one long, same-menu session
- Drunken Monkey start with beer etiquette and early group energy
- Sibeeria Tap Room where you can compare classics and experiments from a huge selection
- Letná Beer Garden finale with big-city views and a final Pilsner Urquell toast
- Small-ish group size (max 30) that keeps the stops from feeling like a cattle call
Prague Craft Beer Tour: what you’re really paying for

This tour is all about getting your bearings in Czech beer fast. In about 3.5 hours, you’ll move between three real hangouts and taste up to eight Czech beers, with food along the way. The value isn’t just that there are multiple pours—it’s that the tastings are organized with context, so you start noticing differences in styles and brewing choices instead of just chasing alcohol.
And yes, the price listed for this experience is astonishingly low (about $3). Even if you treat that number as “this is a deal,” the structure is still hard to beat: multiple venues, multiple beer samples, snacks, and a guide to connect the dots. If you’re thinking, I’d rather pay to learn than just buy another round, this fits that idea well.
If your goal is to become a homebrewer on the spot, you might want more technical depth than a casual tasting can offer. But if you want the practical, fun kind of beer education—plus local bar time—this tour is set up for that.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Prague
The meeting point and timing that matter (1:00 pm start)

The tour starts at Drunken Monkey Pub Crawl and Boat Party, at U Milosrdných 848/4 in Prague 1 (Staré Město). The listed start time is 1:00 pm, and the total duration is about 3 hours 30 minutes.
That afternoon timing matters. Compared to late-night crawls, you’re more likely to enjoy the full route without feeling rushed by closing hours. You also get to end the tour at Letná Beer Garden with natural light and wide views—Prague is especially photogenic around this time of day.
Plan for walking between stops. Prague’s center is compact, but you’ll still cover distance and spend time standing in bar settings. Comfortable shoes are a smart call, and you’ll want to pace yourself from the first tastings onward.
Stop 1 at Drunken Monkey: four beers plus beer etiquette

Your first stop is Drunken Monkey Prague Pub Crawl and Bar. This is where the tour sets its tone: the guide gives you a quick foundation on Czech beer culture and how to handle the tasting properly.
What you’ll do here:
- Sample 4 unique craft beers
- Learn essential beer-drinking etiquette
- Get the early “how this works” briefing so the rest of the route is easier
Why this stop is useful: the etiquette part helps you avoid the common newbie mistakes—like treating a tasting as a solo drinking challenge. The etiquette isn’t about being stiff. It’s about understanding the rhythm of Czech beer culture so your brain stays engaged while you’re sampling.
A big plus from the experience reports is that guides can make this first stop feel lively and friendly. Names that came up include Tatiana and Parsa, both described as friendly, supportive, and clear in English. Another frequent theme was that the guide didn’t just point out beers, they helped people connect what they were tasting to the wider city scene.
Possible drawback: one review mentioned the Drunken Monkey experience felt like it had plenty of beer but not as much information as expected. So if you’re specifically hunting for hardcore brewing instruction from day one, you may find this first stop more “tasting + Prague context” than “professional brewing lecture.”
Stop 2 at Sibeeria Tap Room: the “choose-your-own style” moment

Next you head to Sibeeria Tap Room, an actual haven for beer lovers with a huge range on offer. Here, the tour focuses on a smaller selection inside that massive variety: you’ll enjoy three handpicked beers.
What you’ll likely get out of this stop:
- A guided tasting of 3 specific beers
- Staff help if you want to ask questions about what you’re tasting
- A tour discount for any extras you want to take home
This is the point where the tour becomes more than a checklist. You start comparing styles and learning how Czech craft ideas differ from what you may be used to. Even if you don’t consider yourself a beer expert, you’ll be able to sort what you like—lagers, bolder hop styles, or more unusual experiments—because Sibeeria’s lineup encourages that kind of comparison.
And staff interaction is part of the value. The tour is set up so you’re not wandering a taproom alone. You’re sampling with a guide, then you’re in a place that makes it easy to continue exploring after the tasting ends.
Small practical tip: this is a good stop to slow down and ask for a recommendation if you find one beer you love. The discount can make it cheaper to bring a favorite back to your hotel or apartment.
Stop 3 at Letná Beer Garden: panoramic views and the Pilsner Urquell finish

The tour wraps up at Letná Park’s beer garden. This is one of Prague’s famous outdoor beer spots, and the setting is half the reason to make it this far.
What you get here:
- The panoramic views: Prague Castle, Old Town, and Charles Bridge
- A classic finale: a Pilsner Urquell toast at the end
Important context: Pilsner Urquell isn’t a craft beer in the way a small brewery might label it. The tour intentionally uses it as a “golden finale” after your tastings. Think of it like the Czech beer baseline—so you can better appreciate what you tasted earlier, and why the brewing style matters.
Why this stop works so well for most people:
- You finish outside, not stuck inside a bar
- The views help the whole experience feel like more than a drink crawl
- It’s a natural place to recharge, take photos, and compare notes with other people from the group
If you’re sensitive to crowds, aim to get settled quickly. Beer gardens can get busy, especially when the weather is good. You’ll still enjoy it even if it’s lively—just don’t plan on having a private viewpoint.
You can also read our reviews of more drinking tours in Prague
The guide: where the tour earns its respect
This is a tasting tour, so the guide matters. The strongest praise in the experiences attached to this tour wasn’t just about beer variety. It was about how guides handled the group, explained the beer, and shared advice about Prague beyond beer.
Names that came up as standouts include:
- Dasha (praised for friendliness, strong English, and even speaking German)
- Tatiana (praised for professionalism and knowledge of history and culture)
- Felix (noted for fun vibes and helping people connect)
- Alicia and Nala (praised for being sweet and making the city feel easy)
- Taylor and Alex (praised for great guideship and not rushing)
What you should expect from a good guide, based on how people described the experience:
- You don’t feel rushed from place to place
- The tastings come with stories that connect the beer to place
- The group feels supported, not just processed
Is every group the same? Not always. One person felt the information at the first stop didn’t match their expectation set from other beer tours they’d done. So if your personal style is to learn only from deep brewing technicalities, this may not fully scratch that itch. But if you want an easy-going education that still feels grounded, the guide factor is a big reason this tour scores well.
Beer snacks: why they make the tasting easier

The tour includes snacks with the tastings. That matters more than people think. Beer tastes can shift quickly when you’re hungry or when alcohol hits faster than you expected.
Snacks help you:
- Keep your palate steady across multiple beers
- Enjoy stronger flavors without feeling overwhelmed
- Keep the experience comfortable for 3.5 hours of stop-and-sip drinking
Also, snacks mean you don’t have to “pre-game” with a huge meal. You can eat normally before you meet, then let the tasting snacks do the supporting work.
If you know you’re sensitive to certain flavors (one experience mentioned disliking a fruity beer but accepting it as part of the tasting), pacing helps. A tasting works best when you give each sample a fair chance without forcing it to become a favorite.
Group size and the social feel (max 30)
The tour caps at 30 travelers. That’s a useful limit: you get a group experience without it turning into pure chaos.
In practice, this size helps the guide manage:
- Short explanations at each stop
- Everyone lining up and getting served
- Enough time to talk, ask questions, and meet people
If you’re traveling solo or you don’t want to do Prague’s nightlife completely alone, this social structure is a real plus. Several descriptions praised meeting new people and having a fun group vibe.
Price and value: why this is a bargain even if you only like some beers

With a listed price of about $3, you’d expect the tour to cut corners. Instead, you’re paying for multiple elements: several beer tastings at different venues, snacks, and a guide to connect it all.
Even if you don’t love every beer style (that’s normal), the structure still has value:
- You taste a range: classic Czech styles plus things that may be more experimental
- You learn enough context to make better choices later in Prague
- You end with a view-and-toast finale, not just more drinking
So the “value” here isn’t only quantity. It’s also decision-making. After this tour, you’re less likely to wander into the wrong beer and pay for something you won’t enjoy.
Who should book this Prague beer tour
This tour is a great match if you want:
- A guided Prague introduction that starts with Czech beer
- A route with multiple venues instead of one bar session
- A mix of tastings plus city advice from the guide
- An afternoon plan that ends in a scenic beer garden
It also suits you if you’re the kind of person who likes to learn while having fun. The tour isn’t just about chugging; it’s set up around tasting, etiquette, and quick cultural context.
If you’re extremely picky about beer styles, you might still enjoy it—just pace yourself. Tastings include different styles, and one person did mention a beer that wasn’t their taste. But that’s part of how tasting tours work: you discover what you like by comparing options.
Quick practical tips before you go
- Eat something before you meet, then use the tour snacks to stay comfortable.
- Expect walking and standing in bars and a beer garden. Comfortable shoes matter.
- Bring a lightweight jacket if the afternoon shifts cooler; you’ll end outdoors.
- Pace your first two stops. By Letná, you’ll want to enjoy the views, not just chase the next sip.
Should you book this Prague Craft Beer Tour?
If you want an easy, social, beer-focused introduction to Prague, I’d say yes. The combination of up-to-8 Czech beer tastings, snacks, and a finish at Letná Beer Garden with Pilsner Urquell and big skyline views is a strong package for the price shown.
Just make one choice up front: you’re booking for tasting and guidance, not a strict brewing-deep-nerd masterclass. If you can accept that, you’ll get a fun afternoon, a better sense of Czech beer styles, and a route that takes you beyond the most obvious tourist stops.
FAQ
FAQ
How many beers are included in the Prague craft beer tour?
The tour includes tastings of up to eight Czech beers across multiple locations, plus snacks.
How long is the tour?
It runs for about 3 hours 30 minutes.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is listed as 1:00 pm.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Drunken Monkey Pub Crawl and Boat Party in Prague 1 (U Milosrdných 848/4) and ends at Letná Lookout Beer Garden in Letná Park (Letenské sady, Prague 7-Holešovice).
How many stops are on the itinerary?
The route is described as three stops: Drunken Monkey, Sibeeria Tap Room, and Letná Beer Garden.
What beer is served at the end of the tour?
The final toast is Pilsner Urquell at Letná Beer Garden.
Is the ticket mobile?
Yes, the tour uses a mobile ticket.
What is the maximum group size?
The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is the tour near public transportation and accessible for most people?
It is near public transportation, and most travelers can participate. Service animals are allowed.
How do I know my booking is confirmed?
Confirmation is received at the time of booking.



































