Candlelit Prague turns into a medieval show. In a candlelit, tavern-style restaurant, you pair a 3- or 5-course meal with live music and actors doing swordwork, juggling, fire tricks, and belly dancing. It is the kind of night that feels made for groups, couples, and anyone who wants dinner with actual action.
I love the live medieval entertainment that keeps moving for hours, not just a short performance between courses. I also like the included drinks approach: beer, wine, and soft drinks are part of the deal, so you can focus on the show instead of tracking the bar.
One thing to plan for: the atmosphere is intentionally dark, and that can make eating and checking your plate a little tricky. A phone light helps, and it is smart to double-check your dish choices if you have dietary needs.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Prioritize Before You Book
- Krčma U Pavouka: Candlelit Prague Dining With a Medieval Tavern Feel
- 3 or 5 Courses at 4pm or 7pm: What Each Menu Actually Adds
- The 4pm option: the 3-course menu
- The 7pm option: the 5-course menu
- What you can choose when you book
- Kids’ menu (up to age 12)
- Unlimited Beer, Wine, and Soft Drinks: How the Refills Usually Go
- A tip for the dark room
- The Show Schedule: Live Music and Action on the Floor
- Seating, Shared Tables, and Light Levels: The Small Factors That Change the Night
- Communal tables
- Light and eating
- Tight timing and service flow
- Bathrooms and comfort basics
- Price and Value in Prague: Is $76.69 Worth It?
- Who This Medieval Dinner Works Best For
- A quick note on fish
- A Quick Checklist Before You Go
- Should You Book This Medieval Dinner Show?
Key Things I’d Prioritize Before You Book

- Krčma U Pavouka candlelit tavern vibe: shared, historically inspired tables set the mood right away
- Two dinner start times: 4pm for the 3-course menu, 7pm for the 5-course menu
- Choose your main and dietary option in advance: pork, poultry, fish, vegetarian, vegan, or gluten free
- Unlimited drinks are the point: beer, wine, and soft drinks are included with the meal selection
- A full medieval performance lineup: live music plus performers such as swordsmen, jugglers, fire twirlers, and belly dancers
- Large room, communal seating: you might share long tables, so come with a friendly mindset
Krčma U Pavouka: Candlelit Prague Dining With a Medieval Tavern Feel
Your evening starts at Celetná 595/17 in Prague 1, and from there you head to Krčma U Pavouka. This is not a quiet, formal dining room. It is built for atmosphere: candlelight, a tavern-style setup, and long wooden tables where you sit close to other people.
That matters more than you might think. If you want a relaxed, private dinner, this setup may feel crowded. But if you want a fun group-night vibe, it helps the whole room act like one big show audience. It also makes the meal feel less like a scripted process and more like a shared medieval experience.
You’ll also get your mobile ticket ready. That keeps the start smooth, especially at a busy time of day when everyone is arriving around the same window.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
3 or 5 Courses at 4pm or 7pm: What Each Menu Actually Adds

This tour runs for about 3 hours, with two different dining formats.
The 4pm option: the 3-course menu
If you book the 3-course meal at 4pm, it is soup + main course + dessert. This is a good choice when you want the entertainment but still plan to do other Prague things after dinner. It is also the simpler route if you have a tighter schedule.
The 7pm option: the 5-course menu
The 5-course menu at 7pm adds a few more bites and pacing changes. It includes a cold starter + soup + warm appetizer + main course + dessert. You’ll likely feel fuller after this one, and the extra courses can make the night feel more like a proper banquet instead of a performance-meal combo.
What you can choose when you book
When you select your meal, you pick a main that matches your needs, including pork, poultry (chicken), fish, vegetarian, vegan, or gluten free. The more time you take to get the selection right before you arrive, the easier the evening becomes—especially in a dim room where it is harder to notice details right away.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague
Kids’ menu (up to age 12)
If you are traveling with children up to 12, there is a separate children menu: potato soup, chicken leg with mashed potatoes, and homemade cake (bublanina). Drinks are unlimited soft drinks for kids, and children must be accompanied by an adult. This is a fairly family-friendly structure since the menu is pre-set and handled for you.
Unlimited Beer, Wine, and Soft Drinks: How the Refills Usually Go

The headline here is drink inclusion. With the meal, you get unlimited beer, wine, and soft drinks (and for the children menu, soft drinks only). This can be great value in Prague because it turns the night into one fixed price with fewer surprises.
In practice, the experience is built around people refilling as you go. Some nights run like clockwork, with drinks topping up frequently. Other moments can be slower during heavier performance segments or when staff are bouncing between tables. If you notice your glass is low, it is totally reasonable to flag a server early rather than waiting.
Also, keep in mind: the restaurant accepts cash payment only for extra services not included in the dining experience. So if you plan on adding anything beyond what is included, bring some cash just in case.
A tip for the dark room
Because the setting is intentionally dim, it can help to use a small phone light to check your plate and drink setup at the start. It sounds minor, but it saves stress later when you are trying to figure out what landed in front of you.
The Show Schedule: Live Music and Action on the Floor

The performance is a big reason to book. You get over two hours of live medieval music, and it is not only music in the background. Performers add movement and moments you can watch while you eat.
Expect a mix of acts, including:
- actors in medieval character
- jugglers
- swordsmen / swordwork
- fire twirlers / fire show elements
- belly dancers
The pacing is what makes it work. The entertainment keeps coming while dishes arrive, so the meal never feels like it drags. It also means you can react in real time—clapping, watching the sword and fire acts, and leaning in when something special happens in front of the room.
One practical point: not every segment lands equally for every person. If you prefer one specific style of show (music, dance, or weapon choreography), you might find some parts more fun than others. But the overall format is built so the night stays lively from start to finish.
Seating, Shared Tables, and Light Levels: The Small Factors That Change the Night

This is one of those experiences where the details shape your comfort.
Communal tables
You dine in a communal, tavern-style setup, so you may share long tables with other people. Sometimes that makes the night more social. If you are the type who likes meeting people, it is a perk. If you want privacy, it can feel busy.
If you are booking with family or friends, and you made the reservation under different names but want to sit next to each other, you should let the organizers know when you book. That single note can prevent a lot of awkward table shuffling.
Light and eating
The restaurant leans into candlelight for mood. That is romantic on paper, and sometimes it is simply dark at the table. A phone light is the easy fix, and it also helps when you want to spot your dish right away.
Tight timing and service flow
The venue is designed for speed between courses and performance moments. Food can arrive in a sequence that feels efficient, but it can also mean you are not always served the moment you feel like it. If you are watching the show intensely, plan to pause to eat at each course because the entertainment keeps pulling attention.
Bathrooms and comfort basics
Facilities are not the main attraction here. Some diners have noted the bathrooms can feel basic and may not meet everyone’s cleanliness expectations. If that matters to you, go early and set expectations accordingly.
Price and Value in Prague: Is $76.69 Worth It?

At $76.69 per person for roughly 3 hours, you are buying three things at once: a multi-course dinner (3 or 5 courses), included drinks, and a live medieval performance.
Whether it feels like a “deal” depends on your expectations for the food quality. This is not a gourmet tasting menu. The meal is meant to be hearty and satisfying in a show environment. If you treat it like that, it often feels worth it because you get a full evening plan without building one yourself.
Where you can judge value quickly:
- If you were going to pay for dinner and a separate show, the bundled price looks more reasonable.
- If you only care about great food, the meal may feel basic compared to stand-alone restaurants.
- If drinks matter to you, this is where the package really pays off, assuming refills match the unlimited promise.
So my rule is simple: book it if you want a playful night out with action and atmosphere. Skip it if you want a top-tier culinary experience and quiet dining.
Who This Medieval Dinner Works Best For

This is a strong fit for:
- couples who want a fun, easy plan for an evening
- friend groups who like shared tables and watching live acts
- families looking for an organized dinner-and-show format (kids menu is available)
- anyone who wants Prague in a more theatrical, “night out” way rather than a museum-and-café pace
It is less ideal if you want:
- a quiet, private meal
- a fully customizable à la carte dining experience
- guaranteed hands-on service at every single moment (in a room built for performance, flow matters)
A quick note on fish
If you choose fish, be aware that it may come with bones that take some care while eating. If that would annoy you, pick a meat option instead.
A Quick Checklist Before You Go

This is the stuff that makes your night smoother:
- Decide whether you prefer the 4pm 3-course or 7pm 5-course format.
- When booking, take dietary options seriously: gluten free, vegan, vegetarian and the chosen main.
- If you wear contacts, have glasses, or just need clear sight at the table, bring them. The light is part of the vibe.
- Plan to hang out for the whole show. The best moments come when you stop trying to rush the dinner.
- Bring a small amount of cash for any extra services you might want beyond what’s included.
- If you need to sit with your group, mention the reservation names so seating gets handled correctly.
Should You Book This Medieval Dinner Show?
If you want an evening that is straightforward to plan and built for atmosphere, I think this is an easy yes. The combo of candlelit tavern dining, a multi-course menu, and nonstop live medieval performances is exactly the kind of Prague night that feels different from restaurant hopping.
That said, go in with the right mindset. You are trading some culinary polish for entertainment value and a lively room full of people. If you can enjoy it as a show first and a dinner second, you’ll likely have a memorable night.
Book it if you:
- like live performance
- want included drinks with your meal
- are okay with communal seating and dim lighting
Skip it if you:
- need quiet, private dining
- only care about top-quality food, not the overall spectacle
If you’re aiming for a fun Prague night that feels like theatre rather than dinner-with-background-music, this is a strong match.




























