Prague: Tandem Skydiving 14,000 feet / free transfers

REVIEW · PRAGUE

Prague: Tandem Skydiving 14,000 feet / free transfers

  • 4.98 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $72
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Operated by JUMP-TANDEM SkyCentrum · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.9 (8)Duration3 hoursPrice from$72Operated byJUMP-TANDEM SkyCentrumBook viaGetYourGuide

Prague tandem skydiving without a long day? Yes. This jump is built to be efficient: you’re going up to 14,000 feet for a real, dramatic first-timer thrill, and the operator promises 100% safety. I like that the whole thing is capped at about 3 hours, and it’s one of the shortest skydiving trips from Prague, with a roughly 40-minute drive from the center.

One heads-up before you book: the price you see (around $72) is a reservation fee, and you’ll pay the remaining amount on the spot. Also, the photo and video add-ons can add up fast if you want the selfie and premium packages.

The Most Exciting Parts in Plain Sight

  • 14,000 feet jump height: Maximum altitude experience, with a sightseeing flight included.
  • 1-minute free fall at about 200 kph: Fast, focused, and long enough to feel like a whole event.
  • Parachute opens around 1,500 meters: Then you switch from noise-and-speed to calmer glide time (about 7 minutes).
  • You can steer the parachute: Not just hanging on for the ride.
  • Tight 3-hour schedule with city-center pickup: A rare skydiving day that doesn’t eat half your vacation.
  • Professional credentials and oversight mentioned by the operator: Including authorization and certification references.

Why This Prague Tandem Jump Feels So Efficient

What I like most is the time math. From pick-up to drop-off, you’re looking at a maximum of 3 hours, so you can plan around it without turning your whole day into a logistics puzzle. That’s a big deal in Prague, where you probably already have tram lines, walking routes, and dinner reservations doing their own schedules.

The other efficiency win is the altitude focus. This is a tandem jump from 14,000 feet (about 4,200 m), and you’re also guaranteed the “max possible altitude” approach. That matters because a higher jump isn’t just bragging rights. Higher altitude usually means more time for the sky to feel big before the parachute portion starts.

Now the practical reality: it’s still a skydiving operation, so your body will be suited up, briefed, and then timed with the aircraft. The upside is that the flight isn’t a token “we left the ground, bye.” You get a sightseeing flight before the jump, so you’re not just rushing straight into adrenaline.

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

Meeting Point: Vodička 15 and the McDonald’s Grab-and-Go

Your day starts in a super central spot: Vodičkova street 15, right in front of a McDonald’s. The meeting point is described as very close to Václavské náměstí, and it’s easy to reach by metro and tram.

Here’s what you should do:

  • If you’re on metro, aim for the Mustek area (line A/B) or Muzeum (line A/C), then walk toward Vodičkova.
  • If you’re taking tram, several lines stop basically right at the McDonald’s (the tram stop is stated as in front of the restaurant).

Once you’re there, you wait at street level in front of McDonald’s until the air-conditioned minivan shows up. The instructions are simple: you’re picked up right there, then transferred to the airport. For a first-time activity like this, I like meeting points that don’t require “text the driver and guess the car” energy.

Before the Jump: Suit-Up, Harness Fit, and a Calm Briefing

After pick-up and transfer, you arrive at the dropzone/airport area and get ready for the tandem jump. The flow is straightforward:

  • You put on the flight suit.
  • A tandem harness gets fitted.
  • Your tandem instructor gives a briefing.

The briefing covers what you can expect in each phase: time on the plane, the jump moment, free fall, parachute flight, and landing. For a lot of first-timers, the biggest fear isn’t flying in general. It’s the unknown timing. This setup helps because you’re told what comes next, in order.

Instructor language is listed as Czech, English, and German. That’s genuinely useful if you want to understand the safety guidance without playing guessing games. The operator also mentions they’ll address fears so they don’t turn into panic.

Also, I strongly suggest you wear sports shoes and sportswear. Loose items aren’t discussed, but comfortable basics are a good rule since you’ll be suiting up and waiting around longer than you expect.

The Plane Ride: A Sightseeing Flight to 14,000 Feet

Once you board, the tandem instructor stays involved with your experience. You still get looked after, and then you enjoy a sightseeing flight before the tandem jump.

You’re going up to the altitude target, so the plane time isn’t wasted. It’s your buffer for:

  • getting used to the harness feel,
  • asking questions while everyone’s still calm, and
  • taking in the views as Prague shrinks below you.

I like that the flight is described as “adequate sightseeing,” not just boring seat time. When you’re spending money on adrenaline, you still want the sky part to feel like it counts, and this is clearly designed that way.

Jump Time: One-Minute Free Fall, 200 kph, Then Quiet Under Canopy

This is the core of the experience, and the sequence is very specific.

Free fall phase

You jump and then experience about one full minute of free fall, reaching a speed of around 200 kph. That’s a clear “you’ll remember this” window. It’s also long enough to feel like more than a quick drop. It’s fast, it’s intense, and it’s exactly what you came for.

Parachute opening and steering

The parachute opens at around 1,500 meters. After that, you get about 7 minutes of parachute flight described as silent and endless-feeling. You’re not stuck in one position the whole time, either. The operator states you can steer the parachute.

That steering detail changes the vibe. Instead of just surviving the fall, you also get a moment where you feel like an active passenger in control of where you’re going under canopy. For many people, that’s the part that makes the experience feel “beautiful” rather than only terrifying.

Landing sensation

Landing is described with a simple comparison: it can feel like landing from the first step of a staircase. That wording is meant to reduce mental tension. Still, remember that adrenaline turns your senses up. You’ll be happier if you listen to the landing instructions and stay focused on what your instructor says in the final moments.

Safety and the Rules That Keep This Real

The operator repeatedly emphasizes safety and professional authorization. They specifically mention:

  • members of the United States Parachute Association
  • authorization by the Civil Aviation Authority and the Ministry of Transport
  • certification references connected to EASA-related regulation (European Commission Regulation EC 2042/2003)

You should still treat any skydiving day as serious business. The rules section backs that up.

Who should not book

The activity is listed as not suitable for:

  • children under 10
  • pregnant women
  • people with mobility impairments
  • people with heart problems
  • people with epilepsy
  • people with altitude sickness
  • people over 243 lbs / 110 kg

That’s a clear set of medical and safety limitations. If any of them apply to you, skip the booking. Even if you feel fine that morning, this isn’t the category where you gamble.

Wheelchair access note (important)

The data also states wheelchair accessible. But it also says not suitable for people with mobility impairments. If accessibility is a concern for you, your best move is to ask the provider directly what “wheelchair accessible” means in their actual process (transfer, harness fitting, and boarding). Don’t rely on the label alone.

Price Reality: Reservation Fee vs. What You Pay On the Spot

Here’s the part you absolutely need to understand before you budget.

  • The listed price shown is $72 per person as a reservation fee.
  • Then you pay the rest on the spot, and the amount is stated two ways in the provided details:
  • 4,227 CZK (189€), or
  • 5,000 CZK (189€ to 200€)

Because the spot amount is given slightly differently in the information, I’d treat it as: you pay a remaining balance on the day, and it’s around the 4,200–5,000 CZK range (roughly 189–200 euros). When you confirm your booking, check the exact number you’ll be asked to pay at the airport.

What makes the value better than it looks

The included package is more substantial than a lot of “just jump” deals:

  • transfer to and from the airport
  • briefing and instructor-led tandem jump
  • flight suit lending
  • sightseeing flight to altitude
  • taxes and insurance included
  • a t-shirt and a certificate of completion

That means you’re not paying extra for the core experience pieces. You’re mainly paying for the jump itself, plus the logistics of getting you there and back.

Photo and video add-ons

If you want keepsakes, plan for extra cost:

  • selfie video + photo: 80€
  • photos + videos from an external cameraman: 110€
  • VIP video + photo + selfie: 130€

Also note: the day includes video and photographs being ready after landing, but the explicit pricing above is for the upgrade-style bundles. So you’ll likely get something standard either way, but the packages are clearly where you can choose more content.

If you’re cost-sensitive, I’d treat the “must-have” keepsake as the decision point. A single package usually beats buying everything out of excitement.

What to Bring (and What to Leave at Home)

Keep it simple. The required items are:

  • sports shoes
  • sportswear

And there are clear restrictions:

  • no weapons or sharp objects
  • no alcohol and drugs

This isn’t a complicated packing list, which is nice. You’re not dealing with a gear rental spreadsheet. Wear something you can move in, and you’ll be fine.

If you’re thinking about bringing extra items like phones or cameras, the rules here don’t mention them directly. Since the activity is safety-heavy, I’d avoid relying on extras that aren’t explicitly addressed.

Who Should Book This Prague Tandem Skydiving

This is best for you if you want:

  • a high-altitude first tandem jump without a full-day commitment
  • a clear structure (briefing, plane, jump, parachute, landing)
  • central Prague pickup and straightforward transfers
  • a chance to steer the canopy, not just experience the ride

It’s also a good option if you’re traveling with limited time and you’d rather spend more hours doing Prague sightseeing on the ground.

It’s less ideal if:

  • you fall into any of the medical or eligibility limits listed above
  • you dislike uncertainty and need every detail, because the only timing certainty you get is that it’s run within the overall 3-hour maximum (exact scheduling can vary with flight operations)

Final Call: Should You Book the 14,000-Foot Tandem Jump?

I’d book it if your goal is a real skydiving experience that respects your vacation schedule. The combination of 14,000 feet, a one-minute free fall, and the tight 3-hour structure makes this feel like value for time, not just money.

Before you click confirm, do two quick checks:

  1. Confirm the exact on-the-spot balance amount for your booking, since the details provided list a couple close numbers in CZK/euros.
  2. Review the eligibility rules honestly. If you’re in any restricted category, don’t “hope it works out.”

If those two boxes are good, this is one of the most practical ways to get a serious adrenaline hit from Prague without turning the whole day into logistics hell.

FAQ

How long does the Prague tandem skydiving experience take?

The whole experience is scheduled for a maximum of 3 hours.

Where is the meeting point in Prague?

The meeting point is Vodičkova street 15 in the city center, in front of McDonald’s. You wait there for the pickup minivan.

Is the $72 price the full cost?

No. The $72 is a reservation fee. You pay the rest on the spot (the details mention 4,227 CZK or 5,000 CZK, depending on the information provided).

How high is the jump?

You jump from 14,000 feet (about 4,200 m).

How long is the free fall and how fast do you go?

You experience free fall for about one minute and reach about 200 kph.

What happens after the parachute opens?

The parachute opens at around 1,500 meters, and you then fly under parachute for about 7 minutes. You can also steer the parachute.

Are photos and videos included?

Video and photographs are prepared after landing, but the additional packages for selfie video + photo, external cameraman photos/videos, and VIP bundles are listed as optional add-ons with separate prices.

Who is this not suitable for?

It’s not suitable for children under 10, pregnant women, people with mobility impairments, people with heart problems, people with epilepsy, people with altitude sickness, and people over 243 lbs / 110 kg.

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