The hour I knew it was working was somewhere inside the second bar, half a glass deep into a cherry vodka shot I hadn’t ordered, watching a Spanish guy from Madrid teach two Australians a drinking game involving a coin and a beer mat. The DJ was playing something I didn’t recognise. The wristband on my arm had stopped feeling sticky and started feeling like a passport. That’s the moment a Krakow pub crawl clicks: when the room stops feeling like a tour stop and starts feeling like your night.
This guide covers how to book one, where the crawls actually go in the Old Town and Kazimierz, and which of the three biggest tours I’d recommend depending on what kind of night you want.



- In a Hurry? My Three Picks
- What a Krakow Pub Crawl Actually Includes
- The Three Pub Crawls Worth Booking
- 1. Krakow Crawl: Pub Crawl with VIP Entry, Drinking Games & Photographer (around )
- 2. Krawl Through Krakow Pub Crawl (around )
- 3. Krakow: Pub, Bar & Club Crawl (around )
- Old Town vs Kazimierz: Where the Crawl Actually Goes
- The Old Town: where you start
- Kazimierz: where it gets weird
- The Open Bar Hour: How to Use It
- Drinking games during the hour
- The Welcome Shots
- VIP Entry: What It Actually Means
- What the Night Looks Like, Hour by Hour
- What to Wear and Bring
- Solo Travellers, Couples, Big Groups
- The Late-Night Food Stop
- Booking Logistics
- What Could Go Wrong
- Skip the Crawl: Self-Guided Alternative
- What I’d Pair It With
- The Real Take
In a Hurry? My Three Picks
Best overall: Krakow Crawl with VIP entry, drinking games and photographer (around $36). The fullest package, the longest night, and the photographer is the difference between remembering it and not.
Best original: Krawl Through Krakow Pub Crawl (around $32). The longest-running pub crawl in the city, very good guides, four bars and clubs in five and a half hours.
Best budget: Krakow: Pub, Bar & Club Crawl (around $31). Four hours, one open bar hour, and the cheapest of the three majors. A good shout if you want a shorter night.
What a Krakow Pub Crawl Actually Includes
The structure is fixed across operators because it works. You meet at a statue in the Old Town between 9pm and 9:45pm. You walk to the first bar for an hour of unlimited drinks (the “open bar hour” or “power hour”). You then walk between three or four more bars and clubs over the next three to four hours. At each new venue you get a free welcome shot and skip the queue. The night ends in a club after midnight, where you can stay as long as you want.

The price across the three biggest operators sits between 110 and 150 zloty (roughly $28 to $38). Bookings are paid online or in cash on the door. Most include free cancellation up to 24 hours before.
What’s never included: dinner, soft drinks beyond the open bar list, transport home, or drinks at the final club after the crawl wraps up. The open bar is one hour at the first venue, not the whole night.

The Three Pub Crawls Worth Booking
Krakow has more pub crawl operators than the city needs, and quality drops off sharply outside the top tier. Three operators are clearly worth your money. They’re not interchangeable. Each optimises for a different kind of night.
1. Krakow Crawl: Pub Crawl with VIP Entry, Drinking Games & Photographer (around $36)

This is the package I’d book first if I wanted the fullest version of the experience. Five hours, four to five venues, unlimited drinks at the first bar, free shots at every stop, drinking games during the open bar, and a professional photographer who follows the group. Our full review of the Krakow Crawl pub crawl goes deeper on the venue rotation and the guide style.
2. Krawl Through Krakow Pub Crawl (around $32)

The original. Five and a half hours, four venues, an hour of unlimited drinks, VIP entry, and the longest track record in town. Our Krawl Through Krakow review covers what makes the guides stand out (Benjamin and Elly come up by name in customer feedback over and over). Book this one if you want the most established product.
3. Krakow: Pub, Bar & Club Crawl (around $31)

The cheapest of the three big operators on GetYourGuide. Four hours, one hour of unlimited drinks, multiple bars and clubs, friendly guides. Our review of the Krakow Pub Bar Club Crawl notes that this one’s slightly more chilled than the other two: shorter night, smaller groups, a touch less of the chaos. Good if you want the experience without committing to the full five hours.

Old Town vs Kazimierz: Where the Crawl Actually Goes
Krakow’s nightlife runs in two distinct districts and a Krakow pub crawl will move between them. Knowing the geography in advance makes the night make more sense.

The Old Town: where you start
The Old Town (Stare Miasto) is the medieval core, ringed by the Planty Park where the city walls used to be. Almost every Krakow pub crawl meets here, then drinks at the first one or two bars within a five-minute walk of the main square. The bars in this district tend to be a mix of cellar bars (carved out of medieval basements with brick vaulting and low ceilings) and modern cocktail bars on the smaller streets running off Floriańska.


The walking distances inside the Old Town are short. From the Adam Mickiewicz Monument you can be at any of the standard first-stop bars in under five minutes. Take photos here. Everyone still looks neat.
Kazimierz: where it gets weird
Kazimierz is the old Jewish Quarter, about a 12-minute walk south from the main square. It’s where the most interesting bars actually are: dive bars in old shopfronts, a courtyard at Plac Nowy where everyone smokes outside, and bars whose personality is being deliberately scruffy. Most crawl groups end up here in the second half of the night, and the energy shift is sharp.



The geographic stretch between Old Town and Kazimierz is where the night divides. Visitors who came to Krakow for cobbled medieval Europe stay in the Old Town. People who came for actual nightlife end up in Kazimierz. A good crawl moves between both on purpose so you see the contrast.

The Open Bar Hour: How to Use It
This is the most valuable part of the booking and the place most people get the strategy wrong.

Here’s the part nobody tells you: the bar isn’t pretending, but the staff are slammed. The practical ceiling is whatever you can physically order in 60 minutes: four to six drinks per person if you go hard, two to three if you pace.
Three things I’d do differently next time. First: order in rounds for the whole group, not individually. Bartenders are faster making four drinks at once than four one at a time. Second: pick one drink for the hour and stick with it. Switching between vodka, beer, and rum is how people end up in the Vistula. Third: drink one glass of water for every drink. The guides will tell you this and you won’t listen, and you’ll regret it at 8am the next day.

Drinking games during the hour
This is what separates the structured crawl from showing up to a bar yourself. The guides run games during the open bar hour and they actually work. Standard rotation:
- Flip cup: two teams, line up at the bar, flip the empty cup off the edge in sequence.
- Drinking Jenga: blocks with rules written on them, pull the wrong one and the group drinks.
- Horse race: a card-game variant where the guide deals out a deck and the group bets on “horses”.
- Coin tricks: two-person games involving a coin, a bar mat, and someone losing.
The games exist to break up the awkward first 20 minutes when nobody knows anybody else. By the third game, the group is socialised. Sounds clinical, but it works every time.

The Welcome Shots
At every venue after the first one, the bar gives the group a free welcome shot at the door. This is the deal between bar and operator: the crawl brings 20 to 50 people in, the bar takes a hit on the shots and gets the cover sales for the rest of the night.

You can skip them. Take the glass, hold it, tip it into a plant on the way past. The guides won’t notice and your liver will thank you. If you don’t drink at all, tell the guide at the meeting point: most operators have a non-alcoholic option that still gives you the rhythm.


VIP Entry: What It Actually Means
Krakow’s bigger clubs charge a cover and run a queue on weekends. The queue can hit 30 to 45 minutes by 11pm on a Saturday. A pub crawl wristband gets your group walked past the queue and waved in by the bouncer. The cover is also waived.

On a busy Friday or Saturday this is the part of the package worth real money. Doing the same route on your own would cost 30 zł cover at three or four venues, plus an hour standing in line. VIP entry doesn’t mean a separate room or velvet rope inside. You’re in the same space as the regular punters, you just got there 30 minutes faster.
What the Night Looks Like, Hour by Hour

9:00pm, meeting point. You arrive at the statue. The guide checks your booking, hands out wristbands, and waits ten minutes for the rest of the group.
9:15pm, walk to bar one. Five-minute walk. The guide runs a quick name-game with the group on the way.
9:30 to 10:30pm, open bar hour. The engine of the night. Drinking games, unlimited drinks, strangers becoming drinking buddies.

10:30pm, walk to bar two. Group cohesion is at its peak. The guide takes head counts and makes sure nobody’s lost.
11:00pm, bar two. Welcome shot at the door. Smaller Old Town place. Drinks are paid for individually now. Smaller clusters start forming.
11:45pm, walk to Kazimierz or stay in Old Town. Depending on operator and night, the group either walks south to Kazimierz (12 to 15 minutes) or stays in the Old Town for a bigger venue.

12:30am, the big bar or first club. Biggest venue of the night. The group thins (some go home, some pair off). Welcome shot at the door, dance floor opens up.
2:00am onwards, the final club. The official crawl ends here. The wristband gets you in free and skips the queue. Whoever’s still standing stays as long as they want. Some Krakow clubs run until 4am or 5am on weekends.

What to Wear and Bring
Dress code is nightclub-casual. Krakow’s clubs aren’t strict, but they will turn away obvious red flags: shorts, gym shoes, T-shirts with offensive slogans. Practical answer: jeans or trousers, a clean shirt or top, decent shoes. Polish nightlife dresses slightly smarter than UK or US standards. Kazimierz is the most relaxed, the bigger Old Town clubs the strictest.
Bring: ID (Polish bouncers do check), some cash for after the open bar, a phone with battery, and weather-appropriate outerwear. Winter walks between venues hit minus 10°C in January. Don’t bring big bags (cloakroom fees stack up), expensive cameras (the photographer covers it), or your passport (a driver’s licence or national ID is enough).

Solo Travellers, Couples, Big Groups
Solo travellers: Krakow pub crawls are excellent for solo travel. The whole point of the format is forced socialisation: you arrive alone, you meet 20 to 30 strangers in the first 30 minutes, and by midnight you’re in a group of new friends. The guides run intros at the start specifically so solo people don’t stand in a corner.

Couples: mixed. The crawl format pulls the group apart, and the games are designed for individuals. Couples who can roll with that have a great night. Couples who want to spend the night staring into each other’s eyes are better off picking two bars in Kazimierz and doing it themselves.
Big groups (5+): most operators are happy to take big groups but call ahead so they can plan capacity. Stag and hen parties are common but not universally welcome (the longer-running operators screen them; the budget options often don’t).

The Late-Night Food Stop
Every Krakow pub crawl ends within a 10-minute walk of zapiekanki at Plac Nowy. If you don’t know about this, you do now.

If you don’t make it to Plac Nowy, kebab from any of the late-night spots on Floriańska does the same job.
Booking Logistics
Every operator sells through GetYourGuide or Viator, plus direct booking on their own sites. The big platforms tend to match direct prices and add free cancellation flexibility.
When to book: most nights of the year you can walk up at 9pm and join. Friday and Saturday nights in summer (June to August) and the big weekends (Halloween, New Year’s Eve) sell out a few days ahead. Book online a day or two before if you’re going on a busy weekend.

The confirmation email gives you the meeting point and start time. Bring the voucher (printed or on phone). Guides check in 15 minutes before. If you turn up at 9:01pm you can usually catch up because the group hasn’t left yet, but don’t push it.
Cancellation: most operators offer free cancellation up to 24 hours before, some right up to the start time. Read the platform’s small print before you book.
Discounts: several operators give a discount for a second night in a row (just keep your wristband). Worth doing on longer Krakow trips: different group, different bars, different vibe.
What Could Go Wrong
Not every crawl is brilliant. Some failure modes:
The “no group” problem. On quiet nights (Mondays, Tuesdays in winter, the dead week between Christmas and New Year), the group can be tiny. Five people feels less like a party and more like a guided drinking session.
The lazy guide. Most pub crawl guides are great. Some aren’t. The biggest predictor is the operator. Longer-running operators train guides hard. The cheaper ones sometimes hire someone the day before. If yours is phoning it in, vote with your feet at the next venue and stay there.

The over-promised drinks. A few operators define “unlimited” loosely (cheap beer only, slow pours). If the open bar feels stingy, you got the wrong operator. Read booking platform reviews, not the operator’s own site, before you commit.
The hangover. Polish vodka is strong and Polish servings are generous. Plan a chill morning. If you have an Auschwitz tour booked for 8am, do not crawl the night before. The combination is brutal.
Skip the Crawl: Self-Guided Alternative
A pub crawl isn’t for everyone. Krakow’s nightlife is good enough for a self-guided version that hits 80% of the same notes: dinner in the Old Town around 8pm, drinks at one Old Town bar, walk to Plac Nowy in Kazimierz around 11pm, do three or four bars there, finish at a bigger Kazimierz dance bar after 1am. Cheaper than the crawl, same geography. What you lose is the social engineering: solo travellers will not meet anyone this way.


What I’d Pair It With
A Krakow pub crawl isn’t a standalone trip. It works best as one night out of three or four in the city. For a three-day trip with one big nightlife night, the cleanest version: Day 1 morning, the Krakow Old Town walking tour to get the geography under your belt before you walk it drunk; Day 1 afternoon, Wawel Castle; Day 1 evening, the pub crawl. Day 2 morning, recover. Day 2 afternoon, the Wieliczka Salt Mine if you can manage the underground (the salt actually helps a hangover, weirdly). Day 3, the heavier day-trips: Auschwitz from Krakow if you’ve got the headspace, or Zakopane and the Tatras if you’d rather end outdoors.
For a calmer evening alternative, the Vistula River cruise at sunset takes you under Wawel Castle. A morning Krakow bike tour works as a hangover cure: ground covered without aerobic effort. The combined Auschwitz and Wieliczka day trip is the efficient way to do the two heaviest sites in one sweep, but I wouldn’t combine it with a pub crawl the night before.
The serious history side runs through Schindler’s Factory in Podgórze, across the river from Kazimierz. If you wake up in Kazimierz the morning after, the museum is a 15-minute walk and its heaviness will sober you up faster than coffee.

The Real Take
Most Krakow pub crawls are fine. A few are great. The difference is the guide and the night you happen to be on, not the operator’s marketing. Booking the most-reviewed operators (the three above) gets you out of “fine” and into “good” reliably.
What pushes it from “good” to “great” is the group dynamic of 30 strangers, which nobody can engineer. Some nights every random sticks with you. Some nights people splinter at the second bar and you finish with three people who don’t really click. You can’t control it.

What I’d do, looking back: book the Krakow Crawl with the photographer (the photos are worth the extra). Aim for shoulder season (April, May, September, October) when the groups are big enough to be lively but not so packed the bars get unworkable. Eat a full meal before. Drink water during. Wear shoes you can walk three kilometres in. And don’t book anything before 11am the next day.

Affiliate disclosure: some of the booking links in this article are affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. The recommendations are based on our editorial assessment of the operators, not the affiliate rate.
