Prague keeps its best stories underground. Walk through Old Town Square on any given afternoon and you’re standing on top of a city that was literally buried — raised by several metres in the 13th century to protect against Vltava flooding. The original Romanesque ground floor of every building became a basement overnight. Cellars became dungeons. Streets became tunnels. And most visitors walk right over all of it without knowing it’s there.
I first went below Prague’s surface on a whim during a rainy October afternoon, expecting something touristy and forgettable. Instead I spent ninety minutes ducking through doorways that were built when the city was still young, standing in rooms where medieval courts handed down sentences, and hearing stories about the people who lived and died in those spaces. It changed how I saw the rest of Prague entirely.




Best overall: Oldtown, Medieval Underground & Dungeon History Tour — $31. The most thorough underground experience at 85 minutes, covering Romanesque cellars, medieval dungeons, and Old Town history.
Best for history buffs: Medieval Underground and Dungeon Historical Tour — $33. Ninety minutes focused on the archaeological layers beneath Old Town with detailed historical commentary.
Best for atmosphere: Ghosts, Legends, Medieval Underground & Dungeon Tour — $31. Mixes underground exploration with Prague’s ghost stories and legends. The spookier option.
- What These Underground Tours Actually Cover
- The Best Prague Underground Tours to Book
- 1. Prague: Oldtown, Medieval Underground & Dungeon History Tour —
- 2. Prague Old Town, Medieval Underground and Dungeon Historical Tour —
- 3. Prague: Ghosts, Legends, Medieval Underground & Dungeon Tour —
- What to Expect Underground
- When to Book
- Getting to the Meeting Point
- Tips That Will Save You Time
- What Else to Do in Prague
What These Underground Tours Actually Cover

The Prague underground tours all follow roughly the same principle: you enter through an unassuming door in the Old Town area, descend a flight of stone steps, and emerge into the Romanesque-era ground level of medieval Prague. What’s down there varies by tour, but the core experience includes original 12th and 13th century rooms, medieval cellar networks, and in some cases genuine dungeon spaces where prisoners were held.
The reason this underground layer exists at all comes down to a practical decision made around 1230. Prague’s Old Town sat in a flood plain, and after repeated devastating floods from the Vltava, the city decided to raise the ground level by filling in the lowest areas with rubble and earth. Over the course of decades, the existing ground floors of buildings became basements. Doorways that once opened onto streets now opened onto earth. An entire layer of the city was entombed.
What survived down there is remarkable. You can still see original Romanesque archways, Gothic doorframes, well shafts, and in some spots the original cobblestone street surface. Several of the underground rooms were repurposed as prisons and torture chambers during the medieval period, and the guides make sure you hear every grim detail about what happened there.
The tours typically last between 75 and 90 minutes. Group sizes range from 10 to 25 people depending on the operator. All three tours I’m recommending are led by live English-speaking guides rather than audio devices, which matters in these dark, atmospheric spaces where a good storyteller transforms the experience.
The Best Prague Underground Tours to Book
I’ve narrowed the options down to three tours that each take a slightly different approach to the same underground spaces. All three are well-established operations that run year-round.
1. Prague: Oldtown, Medieval Underground & Dungeon History Tour — $31

This is the most popular underground tour in Prague and it deserves the reputation. At 85 minutes, it’s the longest of the three options and covers the most ground — literally. You’ll descend into the Romanesque cellars beneath Old Town, walk through interconnected medieval passages, and visit dungeon rooms where the guides explain the justice system that operated down there.
The tour starts with a walking portion through Old Town where the guide sets the historical context before taking you underground. That above-ground section is actually useful — you learn about the buildings you’re standing on before you go beneath them, which makes the underground portion hit harder. The guide points out architectural details at street level that suddenly make sense when you’re looking at the same building from below.
What sets this tour apart is the pacing. Eighty-five minutes gives the guide time to actually tell stories rather than rush between rooms. You stop in several chambers, hear about the people who lived and worked (and suffered) there, and get a genuine sense of what daily life looked like in Prague’s earliest centuries. The dungeon section doesn’t shy away from the darker history, but it’s handled with historical seriousness rather than cheap horror gimmicks.

2. Prague Old Town, Medieval Underground and Dungeon Historical Tour — $33

This 90-minute tour takes a more archaeological approach. Where the first option balances storytelling with history, this one leans harder into the structural and historical significance of what you’re seeing. The guide explains how archaeologists have dated different layers of construction, points out where original Romanesque stonework meets later Gothic additions, and helps you read the architectural evidence in the walls around you.
At $33 it’s a couple of dollars more than the others, and the extra cost reflects the slightly longer duration and the depth of the historical commentary. If you’re the kind of traveler who reads the information panels at museums rather than skimming them, this is your tour.
The dungeon portion here focuses more on the legal and social systems that created these spaces than on sensational stories. You learn about medieval Czech law, how trials were conducted, what offences warranted imprisonment versus worse punishments, and how the dungeon system connected to Prague’s broader power structures. It’s genuinely educational in a way that many “dungeon tours” in European cities are not.
One practical note: the underground sections can feel cramped when the group is at full capacity. If you have any issues with tight spaces, the morning departures tend to have smaller groups.

3. Prague: Ghosts, Legends, Medieval Underground & Dungeon Tour — $31

This 75-minute tour takes the same underground spaces and wraps them in Prague’s rich tradition of ghost stories and legends. At $31 it’s the same price as the first option but shorter, and the trade-off is that you spend less time on pure history and more time on the folklore that grew up around these spaces.
The guide weaves together genuine historical events with the legends they spawned. You’ll hear about the spirits said to haunt particular rooms, the curses attached to certain buildings, and the real events — murders, betrayals, plague deaths — that gave rise to those stories. It’s not a Halloween haunted house experience. The tone is more campfire storytelling: atmospheric, sometimes darkly funny, and grounded enough in real history that the legendary elements feel earned rather than silly.
This works particularly well as an evening tour. The above-ground walking portion passes through Old Town after dark, when the narrow streets and Gothic architecture provide their own atmosphere without any help from the guide. By the time you descend underground, the mood is properly set.
If you’re traveling with teenagers or anyone who finds pure historical tours a bit dry, this is the one to book. The ghost angle keeps the energy up without dumbing down the actual content. And at 75 minutes, it doesn’t overstay its welcome.
What to Expect Underground

A few practical things that the booking pages don’t always mention clearly.
Temperature: It’s noticeably cooler underground, even in summer. The cellars sit at a fairly constant 10-12 degrees Celsius year-round. Bring a light layer even if it’s warm above ground. In winter, you’ll be coming from cold to cold so it’s less of a shock, but the dampness underground can make it feel colder than the air temperature suggests.
Ceiling height: Some passages are low. If you’re over 185cm (about six feet) you will need to duck in several spots. The guides warn you in advance, but it’s worth knowing before you book if you have any discomfort with enclosed spaces.
Lighting: The underground spaces are dimly lit by design — partly for atmosphere, partly because these rooms were always dark. Your eyes adjust quickly, but the footing can be uneven. Wear shoes with some grip. Heels and smooth-soled dress shoes are a bad idea on the stone floors.
Accessibility: Unfortunately, none of these tours are wheelchair accessible. The entry involves steep narrow staircases and the underground passages are not adapted for mobility devices. If you have knee problems, the stairs may also be challenging — there are typically 30-40 steps down and the same back up.
Photography: Allowed on all three tours, but flash photography is generally discouraged. The low light means your phone camera will struggle without a steady hand. A few seconds of video tends to capture the atmosphere better than still photos in these conditions.

When to Book

Prague underground tours run year-round, which is one of their advantages over outdoor activities that get disrupted by weather. Rain, snow, or scorching heat — none of it matters once you’re below street level.
Peak season (June through September) sees the most visitors, and afternoon tours can fill up 2-3 days in advance. Book at least 48 hours ahead during these months, especially for weekend departures. Morning slots tend to have more availability and smaller groups.
Shoulder season (April-May and October-November) is genuinely the best time for these tours. The groups are smaller, the guides can take more time, and the cooler weather above ground means the transition to underground temperatures is less jarring.
Winter (December through March) is the quietest period, and you can often book the day before without issues. The Christmas market season in December brings a brief spike in visitors, but underground tours aren’t the first thing most Christmas market travelers think of, so availability stays reasonable.
Best time of day: It depends on which tour you’re taking. For the history-focused tours (options 1 and 2), morning departures give you smaller groups and more attentive guides. For the ghost tour (option 3), an evening departure is worth the wait — the above-ground walking portion after dark is half the experience.

Getting to the Meeting Point
All three tours meet in or near Old Town Square, which is about as central as Prague gets.
On foot: From most Old Town hotels, you’re looking at a 5-15 minute walk. The meeting points are usually at a specific landmark or building entrance that the booking confirmation identifies. Arrive 10 minutes early — the guides start on time and underground tours can’t easily accommodate latecomers once the group has descended.
By metro: The nearest station is Staromestska (Line A, green line), which puts you about a 3-minute walk from Old Town Square. From the station, head south past the Rudolfinum concert hall and you’ll hit the square.
By tram: Lines 17 and 18 stop at Staromestska, which is the same area as the metro station. Tram 2 stops at Namesti Republiky, about a 5-minute walk east of the meeting points.
Tip: Prague’s Old Town streets are a maze of narrow lanes that all look similar, especially at night. Pull up the exact meeting point on Google Maps before you leave your hotel, and give yourself an extra five minutes for getting turned around. The street numbering system in Prague uses two different number sequences (red for street numbers, blue for registration numbers), which confuses everyone who isn’t local.

Tips That Will Save You Time

Book online, not through a street hawker. Old Town Square is thick with people selling “underground tours” and “ghost walks” from small stands. Some are legitimate, many are not. The three tours listed here are all bookable online with instant confirmation and free cancellation. The street vendors charge more and you have no recourse if the tour is substandard.
Combine your underground tour with a walking tour of Old Town. The underground portion makes far more sense when you’ve already seen the above-ground context. Do a morning walking tour, have lunch, then head underground in the afternoon. The historical layers click together in a way that makes both experiences better.
Wear layers. You’ll go from whatever the street temperature is to roughly 10 degrees underground, then back up again. A packable jacket or sweater solves this easily.
Use the bathroom before you descend. There are no facilities underground, and the tours run 75-90 minutes without a break. The guides are polite about it, but leaving mid-tour means navigating back through narrow passages on your own, which isn’t ideal.
The underground tour pairs perfectly with a medieval dinner. Several restaurants in Old Town serve traditional Czech food in actual medieval cellars. After spending 90 minutes learning about what life was like underground in the 13th century, sitting down for roast duck and dark beer in a similar space feels like a proper continuation of the experience. We’ve written a separate guide to booking a medieval dinner in Prague that covers the best options.

What Else to Do in Prague


An underground tour covers maybe two hours of your day, which leaves plenty of time for Prague’s other highlights. The natural next step is Prague Castle — after seeing the Romanesque foundations underground, walking through the Gothic and Baroque layers of the castle complex above gives you the full architectural timeline of the city. The castle sits across the river on the hill above Mala Strana, and the walk there over Charles Bridge is one of those Prague experiences that never gets old no matter how many times you do it.
A Vltava river cruise offers the opposite perspective. Where the underground tour takes you below the city, a river cruise puts you at water level looking up at the castle and the bridges. The evening cruises in particular are worth building into your itinerary if you’re spending more than a day or two in Prague.
And as I mentioned above, a medieval dinner in one of Old Town’s cellar restaurants is the ideal way to end a day that started underground. The food is hearty, the portions are large, the beer is Czech, and the vaulted stone ceilings around you will look very familiar after your tour.


Prague is one of those cities that rewards you for going past the obvious attractions. The underground tour is exactly that kind of experience — something that most visitors skip entirely, but that fundamentally changes how you understand the city you’re walking through. The layers of history here aren’t metaphorical. They’re literally beneath your feet, preserved in stone, accessible for the price of a modest lunch. Go see them.
