Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets

Prague Jewish Quarter tour with a licensed guide, skip-the-line entries to 4 synagogues plus Old Jewish Cemetery. 150 min, $76.

4.7(3,729 reviews)From $76 per person

Prague’s Jewish Quarter (Josefov) is one of those places where the streets feel like a living museum. This 2.5-hour walking tour stitches together the Josefov story with synagogue interiors and a major stop at the Old Jewish Cemetery.

What I like most is the combination of a licensed guide who tells the human stories, plus real admission tickets for multiple synagogues and the cemetery. Based on what travelers say, guides like Peter, David, Steve, Yanna, and Vojtech Durt tend to keep it clear, engaging, and focused on context.

One consideration: synagogue entry has a strict dress code, so plan your outfit ahead and wear closed shoes (and keep your arms/shoulders/abdomen covered).

Richard

Ben

Ellen

Key Things That Make This Tour Worth Your Time

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Key Things That Make This Tour Worth Your Time
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - A 2.5-Hour Walk Through Josefov Starting at Maiselova 5
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Meeting the Guide at GET PRAGUE GUIDE (Maiselova 5)
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Maisel Synagogue: Where the Tour Gets Its Footing
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Pinkas Synagogue: The Power of Names and Memory
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Old Jewish Cemetery: Thousands of Tombstones and WWII Stories
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Old-New Synagogue: One Stop That Adds Depth
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Spanish Synagogue: Finishing at Španělská Synagoga’s Neighborhood Energy
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Why the Guides Matter So Much Here
Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Price and Value: What $76 Buys You
1 / 10

  • Four synagogues + Old Jewish Cemetery included with skip-the-line entry
  • Josefov walking route built for understanding, not just sightseeing
  • Guides often highlighted for knowledge and storytelling (names that come up: Peter, David, Steve, Yanna, Vojtech)
  • A somber stop at the Old Jewish Cemetery with many tombstones and WWII-era context
  • Multiple languages offered, including English and several others
  • Starts at Maiselova 5 near Maisel Synagogue and ends near Španělská Synagoga
You can check availability for your dates here:

A 2.5-Hour Walk Through Josefov Starting at Maiselova 5

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - A 2.5-Hour Walk Through Josefov Starting at Maiselova 5

The tour is paced for about 150 minutes, with visits to several key sites inside the Josefov area. You’ll start near the Maisel Synagogue and move through the neighborhood on foot, which is the best way to feel the layout and density of historic Prague.

This isn’t a long day of monuments. It’s a compact, guided route that gives you a framework for what you’re seeing and why it matters, especially once you reach the cemetery.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague

Meeting the Guide at GET PRAGUE GUIDE (Maiselova 5)

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Meeting the Guide at GET PRAGUE GUIDE (Maiselova 5)

Your meeting point is the office for GET PRAGUE GUIDE at Maiselova 5, Prague 1. The practical advantage of a fixed meeting spot is that you don’t waste time guessing where the group will form.

Jasleen

Diane

Kim

The tour includes a live guide in multiple languages: English, Czech, French, German, Italian, and Spanish. If language matters to you, this is a big plus because synagogue context can be hard to follow without a translator-level explanation.

Maisel Synagogue: Where the Tour Gets Its Footing

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Maisel Synagogue: Where the Tour Gets Its Footing

The route starts with a guided visit inside the Maisel Synagogue (about 25 minutes). This first stop is important because it sets the tone: you’re not just looking at architecture—you’re learning how the Jewish community in Prague formed its public and religious life around these spaces.

I like starting here because it helps you read the rest of the quarter with better context. After this introduction, later synagogues and the cemetery don’t feel random. They feel connected.

Pinkas Synagogue: The Power of Names and Memory

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Pinkas Synagogue: The Power of Names and Memory

Next is the Pinkas Synagogue (another guided 25-minute visit). This is the kind of place where the room itself carries meaning, and your guide’s job is to put that meaning into words without turning it into a lecture.

John

Tristan

Darshana

What tends to resonate with travelers is the balance: you get enough history to understand, and you also get the emotional weight that comes from persecution and survival stories tied to the 20th century.

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Old Jewish Cemetery: Thousands of Tombstones and WWII Stories

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Old Jewish Cemetery: Thousands of Tombstones and WWII Stories

Then you move to the Old Jewish Cemetery for a guided visit (about 25 minutes). This is one of the most important stops on the tour: it’s described as one of the oldest cemeteries in Central Europe, and you’re looking at thousands of tombstones.

The tour also focuses on touching stories of people persecuted by the Nazi regime. Even if you already know some of the broader history, having those stories spoken in the setting where remembrance happens can hit harder in a good way. It’s a somber stop, and it’s meant to be.

You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Prague

Old-New Synagogue: One Stop That Adds Depth

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Old-New Synagogue: One Stop That Adds Depth

After the cemetery, you visit the Old-New Synagogue (guided 25 minutes). This stop is about layering—how Prague’s Jewish Quarter changed over time, and how these houses of worship reflect continuity even when the community faced major pressure.

Jeremy

Ceki

Malka

I’d think of this as your “bridge” between what you learned early on and what you’ll see in the Spanish Synagogue later. You start to notice patterns in the way synagogues were designed for community life, not just worship.

Spanish Synagogue: Finishing at Španělská Synagoga’s Neighborhood Energy

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Spanish Synagogue: Finishing at Španělská Synagoga’s Neighborhood Energy

The tour ends with the Spanish Synagogue (guided 25 minutes), and your finish point is set at Španělská Synagoga. Even though the tour includes time inside the Spanish Synagogue itself, ending in that area helps you keep momentum afterward—so you can pair the tour with nearby cafés or a quick wander of the surrounding streets.

Travelers often appreciate that the route doesn’t stop abruptly once the story becomes heavy. You still get a clear final chapter that helps the walk feel complete.

Why the Guides Matter So Much Here

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Why the Guides Matter So Much Here

A lot of walking tours can feel like you’re following someone through a list of buildings. This one stands or falls on the guide, and that’s exactly what many travelers highlight.

GetYourGuide

Agnes

Jessica

Names that come up repeatedly include Peter, David, Steve, Yanna, and Vojtech Durt. What people seem to value is how the guide connects the Jewish Quarter’s story to real people—so the synagogues and cemetery don’t feel like disconnected tourist stops.

If you want a tour where you can ask questions and actually get thoughtful answers, this style is a strong match.

Price and Value: What $76 Buys You

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets - Price and Value: What $76 Buys You

At $76 per person for 150 minutes, you’re paying for more than a guide. You’re getting included admissions to:

  • Maisel Synagogue
  • Pinkas Synagogue
  • Old Jewish Cemetery
  • Spanish Synagogue
  • Old-New Synagogue

You also get skip-the-ticket-line entry, which is a practical time-saver in a place that can get crowded.

For many travelers, the value comes from the bundle: you don’t have to coordinate separate tickets, and you get context for each site while you’re inside. That’s where the money turns into understanding.

Timing, Lines, and Group Pace

The tour moves through multiple indoor sites, so timing can be affected by crowd flow. Some travelers mention that queues can slow things down at peak moments, especially around later stops.

Group size also comes up as a factor. One traveler noted a larger group (around 18). That’s not necessarily a deal-breaker, but it can affect how much personal attention you get and how easily you can step aside during transitions.

Dress Code and Practical Entry Rules (This Is Non-Negotiable)

Synagogue entry has strict rules. If you show up unprepared, you risk being refused entry.

The guidance you should follow includes avoiding clothing that exposes:

  • arms
  • shoulders
  • abdomen
    and not entering in swimsuit attire or without required coverage. Shoes are also part of the rules, since being barefoot is not acceptable.

My practical tip: bring a light layer you can put on quickly. It makes a big difference when the weather shifts and when you’re trying to meet dress requirements without stressing.

Comfort Tips: Shoes, Umbrella, and Weather-Ready Clothing

This is a walking tour, so comfortable shoes matter. The tour also recommends bringing an umbrella and wearing weather-appropriate clothing.

If you’re visiting in colder months, consider how you’ll handle synagogue dress requirements while staying warm outside. The goal is to be comfortable enough to keep pace for the full 2.5 hours.

Accessibility Notes Before You Book

This experience is not suitable for people with mobility impairments. That matters because the tour is a walking route with multiple indoor stops and transitions.

If mobility is a concern, it’s worth looking for a different format (for example, a mostly seated option). But if you can walk comfortably, this route is a straightforward way to cover a lot of Josefov in one guided go.

Languages and What That Means for Understanding

You can choose among several languages: English, Czech, French, German, Italian, and Spanish. That matters because synagogue visits are more than visuals. You’ll want the guide’s phrasing to land correctly, especially when the stories shift from centuries of community life to the brutal realities of the Nazi period.

If English is your preference, you’re covered. If you’re traveling with a multilingual group, you’ll also have flexibility in how you book.

Who Should Take This Tour (And Who Might Skip It)

You’ll likely enjoy this tour if:

  • you want a guided route through Josefov with real site admissions
  • you appreciate learning the human story behind historic places
  • you’re okay with a somber topic, including Nazi-era persecution

You might skip it if:

  • you need an itinerary-friendly option that’s designed for limited mobility
  • the dress code is hard for you to meet on short notice
  • you prefer longer, museum-style pacing rather than a compact route

Should You Book the Jewish Quarter Walking Tour?

If your priority is value, this is a strong choice. For $76, you get a licensed guide and included entry to four synagogues plus the Old Jewish Cemetery, with skip-the-ticket-line benefits.

I’d book it if you want clarity fast: you’ll leave with a better grasp of Josefov’s layout, the synagogues’ role in community life, and why the cemetery stop carries such weight. Just plan your outfit for the dress code, wear comfortable shoes, and check that your travel day works since the tour doesn’t run on Saturdays or during Jewish Holidays.

Ready to Book?

Prague: Jewish Quarter Walking Tour with Admission Tickets



4.7

(3729 reviews)

FAQ

Where does the tour start?

The tour meets at the GET PRAGUE GUIDE office at Maiselova 5, 110 00 Prague 1, near Maisel Synagogue.

How long is the walking tour?

The duration is 150 minutes (about 2.5 hours).

What is the price per person?

The price is $76 per person.

What sites are included?

Included admissions cover Maisel Synagogue, Pinkas Synagogue, Old Jewish Cemetery, Old-New Synagogue, and Spanish Synagogue.

Where does the tour finish?

The tour finishes at Španělská Synagoga.

Which languages are available for the live guide?

The live guide is available in English, Czech, French, German, Italian, and Spanish.

Is there a dress code for synagogue entry?

Yes. Inappropriately dressed visitors are prohibited from entering, including people without outer clothing, with exposed arms/shoulders/abdomen, in a swimsuit, or without shoes.

What are the cancellation and booking rules?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. You can also reserve now and pay later.

You can check availability for your dates here:

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