REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague All-Inclusive Pass: 30+ Activities including Prague Castle
Book on Viator →Operated by Go City | Europe · Bookable on Viator
Prague rewards good planning, and this pass helps. The Go City Prague All-Inclusive Pass strings together big hits like Prague Castle and the Pilsner Urquell Experience plus a long list of museums and activities, all on a phone ticket. You’ll spend less time hunting entrances and more time moving through the city on your schedule.
I really like how much you can pack into a short visit without buying separate tickets every time. Two standout wins for me are the combination of Prague Castle highlights (Old Royal Palace, Golden Lane, St George’s Basilica, and St Vitus Cathedral) and the fun, structured add-ons like a 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus plus a one-hour Vltava river cruise. It’s a practical way to cover both “I must see this” and “let’s try something weird.”
One possible drawback: a few experiences can feel less all-inclusive than the name suggests, so it’s smart to check what your pass covers in the Go City app before you commit time on-site. Also, plan for walking—this is a city where your legs do a lot of the work, even with convenient public transit nearby.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- What You’re Really Buying for $76.90
- Using the Pass Like a Pro (Without Wasting a Day)
- Prague Castle: The Pass’s Real Anchor
- Pilsner Urquell Experience: Beer History With Hands-On Payoff
- Hop-On Hop-Off Bus: Your Prague Time-Saver
- Old Town + Jewish Quarter Walking Time (Orloj and Charles Bridge)
- Žižkov TV Tower: A Viewpoint That Changes Your Perspective
- Prague River Cruise: Skyline Time Without the Stair Climb
- Slivovitz Museum (R. Jelinek): Interactive Distilling + Tasting
- Steel Art, Illusion Art, Bricks, and Model Railways: Prague’s Fun Side
- Story of Prague Museum: History Through AR and Audio-Digital Effects
- Aquapalace Prague: The One Day That Resets Your Trip
- Prague Zoo and Other Longer-Day Options
- Food for Thought: When This Pass Feels Truly All-Inclusive
- Price and Value: Does $76.90 Make Sense for You?
- Should You Book This Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
- FAQ
- How long is the Prague All-Inclusive Pass valid?
- Is this pass a mobile ticket?
- Is the experience available in English?
- What are some of the biggest attractions included?
- Does the Prague Castle portion include specific sites?
- Does the pass include admission tickets?
- Is accommodation included in the pass price?
- Is transport to the attractions included?
- Are opening times and attraction details guaranteed?
- Can the pass be refunded or changed after booking?
Key things to know before you go
- Phone-first entry: A mobile ticket means you can scan and move on without digging for paper.
- Castle built into one big visit: Prague Castle comes with major components like Old Royal Palace, Golden Lane, St George’s Basilica, and St Vitus Cathedral.
- Beer plus bonus tasting stops: You get the Pilsner Urquell Experience and additional distilling/spirits themed options.
- Flexibility matters: A 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus plus a river cruise help you cover ground even when you’re tired.
- You can mix serious and silly: Illusion art, steel figures, LEGO bricks, and model railways sit right next to historic stops.
- Check the current lineup: Times and access details can change, and the app has the latest instructions.
What You’re Really Buying for $76.90

The headline here is value. At $76.90 per person, you’re not just getting one attraction—you’re getting a bundle that can cover a whole “core Prague” mini-itinerary. The pass is offered in English and works as a digital pass valid for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days, so you can match it to your trip length instead of forcing a rigid plan.
The smart part isn’t the number 30+. It’s that the list includes different types of time blocks:
- a major cultural anchor (Prague Castle)
- classic city views (TV tower, bus, river cruise)
- hands-on or interactive attractions (beer experience, illusion art, Story of Prague with AR)
- downtime options (Aquapalace water park, Prague Zoo)
- quirky indoor stops for rainy hours (steel art, bricks, railways)
That mix is what makes the pass feel “all-inclusive” in practice. You can hop between areas without feeling like every change costs another ticket purchase.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague.
Using the Pass Like a Pro (Without Wasting a Day)

Your biggest advantage is speed: you access everything with your phone ticket. That means no separate paper vouchers, and you can keep your plan fluid—especially helpful in Prague, where weather and crowds can change your rhythm fast.
A second practical advantage: the pass is built around “duration variety.” Some stops are short (30–60 minutes), while others are longer (aquatic park day, brewery experience, interactive museums). That lets you design days that don’t turn into a nonstop sprint.
Here’s how I’d pace it:
- Start one morning with Prague Castle (it’s the biggest anchor and benefits from earlier entry).
- Follow with one “nearby-ish” option or a viewpoint (TV tower or Old Town walking time).
- Save indoor museums for late afternoon when energy dips.
- Plan Aquapalace as a full-day reset, not a quick add-on.
Prague Castle: The Pass’s Real Anchor

Prague Castle is the headline because it’s a whole world. With this pass, the castle visit includes key sites that travelers usually treat as separate tickets: Old Royal Palace, Golden Lane, St George’s Basilica, and St Vitus Cathedral. That’s ideal if you want the dramatic Gothic views and royal-era rooms without doing extra ticket math.
What you can expect at the castle stop:
- A structured, multi-part visit with palaces and churches from different eras
- Enough content to justify a longer block of time (this stop is listed at 3 hours)
- Architectural variety: Gothic power at St Vitus, older church layers at St George’s, and the storybook feel of Golden Lane
One consideration: even when you have a ticket, castle areas still involve lots of walking and stair climbing. If you’re sensitive to that, go early and keep your “short stops” for calmer hours.
Pilsner Urquell Experience: Beer History With Hands-On Payoff
Beer fans and curious non-beer fans both get value here. The Pilsner Urquell Brewery experience at Wenceslas Square (listed as a 2-hour visit) is built like an interactive story: you learn how the world’s first golden beer became a legend, and you do it with audio guides and video mapping.
Then comes the best practical part—time-efficient fun: a beer-tasting session. It’s the kind of stop that feels worth it even if you don’t have time to do a longer brewery tour.
If you want a simple day formula, this is it:
- Brewery experience in the afternoon
- Follow with either a river cruise or bus ride to loosen the legs
- Add one smaller museum afterward
Hop-On Hop-Off Bus: Your Prague Time-Saver

The City Sightseeing Prague hop-on hop-off bus gives you a full 24 hours. That’s huge because Prague can be tiring if you insist on walking between every highlight.
What makes this option useful:
- You can treat it as a moving sightseeing intro.
- You can get off at stops that fit your day, then re-board later.
- It helps you build a mental map fast—so the next walk feels smarter.
When it’s most valuable: your first day, or any day you feel “I want to see more but I can’t do more walking.”
Old Town + Jewish Quarter Walking Time (Orloj and Charles Bridge)

This tour style is the best kind of guided walk: a local expert framework plus landmark focus plus room for lesser-seen context. The walk combines classic Prague icons with the Jewish Quarter area, including the Astronomical Clock (Orloj) exteriors, Charles Bridge, and the 13th-century Josefov neighborhood.
It’s also structured for story:
- medieval era context
- Bohemian kings
- how the Second World War shaped the area
- historical threads you might miss if you wander with no plan
Length is listed at 2 hours, so it fits well as a morning or early afternoon outing. One consideration: it’s a walking tour, so wear shoes you’re willing to break in.
Žižkov TV Tower: A Viewpoint That Changes Your Perspective

The Žižkov Television Tower is a contrast stop—modern architecture set above historic Prague. You’re going up to 216 meters for a viewpoint, listed at 1 hour.
Why it’s worth it in a pass:
- It gives you a visual reset after hours of streets, churches, and museum walls.
- You can see how neighborhoods stack and angle around the river.
- It’s a straightforward block of time—easy to slot between other activities.
If you’re planning photos, aim for a time when lighting looks good to you. The pass doesn’t guarantee timing for views, so check the day-of schedule in the Go City app.
Prague River Cruise: Skyline Time Without the Stair Climb

The one-hour Prague Boats river cruise is one of those “I’m glad I did it” activities. It takes you along the Vltava River, with views of towers, spires, and castle silhouettes.
The practical benefit: you get major scenery while conserving energy. After you’ve walked plenty, the cruise is a low-effort way to experience Prague’s feel at a different angle.
This stop is listed at 1 hour with admission included, so it’s easy to plan around your other museum times.
Slivovitz Museum (R. Jelinek): Interactive Distilling + Tasting

This one adds flavor in more ways than one. The Slivovitz Museum – R. Jelinek runs about 55 minutes in its interactive format, with screenings and exhibits focused on fruit spirit distilling traditions and how the process works. You also get a 5D virtual experience, which is a nice change from pure reading and display cases.
Then you get the part people talk about: a premium tasting. The tasting includes three R. JELÍNEK kosher products plus three finger foods.
It’s listed at 2 hours, so don’t schedule it back-to-back with another long walk unless you’re comfortable with a full day.
Steel Art, Illusion Art, Bricks, and Model Railways: Prague’s Fun Side
One reason this pass feels good is that it doesn’t lock you into only churches and palaces. You get multiple options that work as “light relief” between big-ticket sights.
Here’s the lineup and what each one gives you:
- Steel Art Museum Prague (Gallery of Steel Figures): Built around recycled steel figures inspired by pop culture, fairytales, and the automotive world. Listed at 2 hours. Great for hands-on curiosity and photos.
- Illusion Art Museum Prague: Dedicated to trick art and illusions in a prime spot between Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square. Listed at 2 hours.
- Kingdom of Railways: A model railway exhibition with around 80 train sets—including moving vehicles and metro-like sections. Listed at 1 hour.
- Museum of Bricks: LEGO-focused, with about 9,000 exhibits and roughly 10 million pieces. Listed at 1 hour.
What to watch for: these are usually high-energy, hands-on places. If you’re tired, pick one and let it be your anchor for that half-day instead of stacking two.
Story of Prague Museum: History Through AR and Audio-Digital Effects
This is a modern approach to the city story. The Story of Prague – Museum uses audio-digital elements and a bespoke augmented reality app, with exhibits across three floors and interactive photo points. It’s listed at 1 hour 30 minutes.
Why it works for many people:
- You get a structured overview of about 800 years of Prague history.
- AR-based moments can make indoor time feel less like “just reading labels.”
- The interactive photo points help you capture your visit without trying to force it.
This is a strong option on a rainy day or when your feet need a break.
Aquapalace Prague: The One Day That Resets Your Trip
If your trip includes a hot day—or you just want a break from walking—Aquapalace Prague is a smart match. It’s a full-day water park entry, listed at 1 day.
The space is huge: 9,150 square meters under the umbrella of Water World. That scale matters because a water park can feel repetitive if it’s small, but a bigger footprint makes it easier to find new areas and keep changing your day plan.
Prague Zoo and Other Longer-Day Options
The pass also includes Prague Zoo, listed at 2 hours. You’re looking at 680+ species and conservation-related framing, plus animal exhibits from around the globe.
This is ideal for:
- a family-style day (even if you’re traveling solo)
- a “sit and roam” alternative to nonstop historical sites
- when you want something calmer than museum crowds
Food for Thought: When This Pass Feels Truly All-Inclusive
From my read of the experience, this pass is best when you use multiple included activities in one trip window. If you focus only on one major site, the value shrinks. If you combine a big anchor (Prague Castle), one or two major attractions (beer experience, bus or river cruise), and a couple of indoor museums, it starts to feel like you’re really getting the price back.
That “how you use it” piece matters because one caution popped up in the experience record: some people report a spending limit that wasn’t clear at booking. I’d treat that as a reason to check the Go City app close to your travel dates, before you plan your day around the assumption that everything is fully covered with no extras.
Price and Value: Does $76.90 Make Sense for You?
At $76.90 per person, this is a solid deal when your trip includes:
- Prague Castle (you’re already committing to it)
- at least one “major Prague experience” (beer tasting, hop-on bus, river cruise)
- a second or third attraction that matches your taste (zoo, water park, or multiple quirky museums)
If your plan is mostly free time wandering and only one ticket purchase, you might be better off with fewer paid entries. But if you want structure, flexibility, and a packed calendar without ticket-line stress, this pass is designed for that exact style of trip.
Should You Book This Prague All-Inclusive Pass?
Book it if you want a phone-friendly, multi-day plan that covers both the famous stuff and the fun detours. It’s especially good if your itinerary includes Prague Castle plus at least a couple “big block” experiences like the Pilsner Urquell visit, a 24-hour hop-on hop-off bus, and the Vltava river cruise.
Skip or rethink it if:
- you hate walking and plan to avoid anything that requires stairs or long strolls
- you want only one paid attraction
- you’re the type who hates any uncertainty about what’s included, so you’d rather confirm details in the Go City app before you go
If you’re willing to plan with the pass and check the latest access notes in the app, this is a strong way to get a lot of Prague for one clear price.
FAQ
How long is the Prague All-Inclusive Pass valid?
The digital pass is valid for 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days, depending on the option you choose.
Is this pass a mobile ticket?
Yes. It’s provided as a mobile ticket.
Is the experience available in English?
Yes. The pass is offered in English.
What are some of the biggest attractions included?
Included highlights include Prague Castle, the Pilsner Urquell Experience & Beer tasting, Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Prague (24 hours), a one-hour River Cruise, Aquapalace Prague, and entry to the Prague Jewish Quarter.
Does the Prague Castle portion include specific sites?
Yes. The Prague Castle visit includes Old Royal Palace, Golden Lane, St George’s Basilica, and St Vitus Cathedral.
Does the pass include admission tickets?
Yes. The pass includes admission to 30+ attractions.
Is accommodation included in the pass price?
No. Accommodation is not included.
Is transport to the attractions included?
No. Transport to and from attractions is not included.
Are opening times and attraction details guaranteed?
Attractions and tours are subject to change, and the Go City app has the most up-to-date line-up and instructions.
Can the pass be refunded or changed after booking?
No. It’s non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.
























