REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague: Tandem Skydiving 14,000ft over Prague with Transfers
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by JUMP-TANDEM SkyCentrum · Bookable on GetYourGuide
One minute of free fall can change your whole mood. Over Prague, you jump from 14,000 ft for a rare mix of big adrenaline and serious professionalism. I love that it’s a short transfer from central Prague (about 40 minutes), and the day is paced so you’re guided step-by-step.
The main consideration is that the actual free-fall time is about one minute, and the included extras like video/photo cost extra if you want more than the included celebration package.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Care About
- Starting at Vodičkova 15: the Prague Pickup That Keeps It Simple
- Gear, Harness, and the Briefing: Where Nerves Get Managed
- Boarding the Plane: a Short Sightseeing Flight at Altitude
- The Jump From 14,000 ft: a Proper Big-Altitude Moment
- One Minute of Free Fall: What It Feels Like (and What It Doesn’t)
- Parachute Flight for About Seven Minutes: Quiet, Control, and Views
- Landing and the After-Jump Celebration in Prague’s Time Zone
- Safety and Credentials: What the Operator Gives You on Paper
- Price and Value: What $319 Really Buys (and What Costs Extra)
- Who This Tandem Jump Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
- Language and Communication: You Can Get Through This Comfortably
- What the Reviews Line Up With: Friendly Staff and a Calm Waiting Pace
- Should You Book Prague Tandem Skydiving With Transfers?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the transfer?
- How long is the full experience?
- Does the price include transfers?
- What altitude do you jump from?
- How long is free fall and how fast do you go?
- How long is the parachute flight, and can you steer?
- Who isn’t allowed to participate?
- Are photos and videos included, and what do add-ons cost?
Key Highlights You’ll Care About

- 14,000 ft jump height for maximum altitude during a Prague tandem day
- About one minute of free fall reaching speeds around 200 kph
- Roughly 7 minutes under canopy, with the chance to steer
- City-center pickup at Vodičkova 15 near Václavské náměstí for an easier start
- Pro safety framework with instructor credentials and aviation authorizations
- Optional media upgrades available if you want selfie/video/photo sets
Starting at Vodičkova 15: the Prague Pickup That Keeps It Simple

You meet at Vodičkova street 15, right by McDonald’s in the city center. It’s an easy walk from major metro stops like Václavské náměstí (line A and B) or Muzeum (line A and C). Trams also stop right outside McDonald’s, so you’re not hunting across neighborhoods with a racing heart.
What I like about this kind of setup is that it respects your time. You’re not spending your day stuck in traffic before you even get to the sky part. The drive to the airfield is about 40 minutes from the center, so you get the experience without turning it into an all-day saga.
The minivan pickup is also a practical perk. You’ll be going with an operator that handles your transfer, which means one less thing for you to manage on arrival in Prague.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Prague.
Gear, Harness, and the Briefing: Where Nerves Get Managed

Once you arrive at the airport area, you go through a standard but reassuring rhythm: jumpsuit and harness. The goal is simple. You get fitted properly and you understand what happens next.
Before boarding, your tandem instructor gives a briefing on the whole flow: time in the plane, when the jump happens, what free fall is like, what parachute flight feels like, and what landing is like. This isn’t the kind of talk that sounds like a lecture. It’s the kind of guidance that helps your body stop guessing. When you know what each phase feels like, fear usually shrinks to manageable size.
A detail I appreciate: instructors handle fears right there. That matters because skydiving isn’t only about physics. It’s also about you relaxing enough to enjoy it.
Boarding the Plane: a Short Sightseeing Flight at Altitude

After you board, you’re looked after from start to finish. Then comes the sightseeing flight up toward your jump altitude.
You’re going high enough to see Prague from above in a way you can’t get from a viewpoint bar or a tower. And even if you’ve seen photos, it hits differently when you’re actually in the air and heading upward. The plane ride also gives you a buffer. You’re not immediately forced into the jump moment.
This is one of those parts where the pacing is smart. It gives you a chance to settle in, listen, and get comfortable with the sensation of height before anything happens.
The Jump From 14,000 ft: a Proper Big-Altitude Moment

Then you’re out the door and it becomes real.
This tandem jump is set up for max possible altitude, with an 14,000 ft jump height. That’s the kind of number that changes expectations. The height doesn’t just make things more dramatic. It also helps shape the timing of your experience: the fall lasts, the parachute phase has time to breathe, and you get a fuller feel for the whole arc of the jump.
You’ll feel the instructor controlling the tandem setup, while your main job is to follow the plan—stay calm, hold where you’re told, and let the experience happen.
And yes, you’ll hit high speed during free fall. They state about 200 kph during the free-fall phase.
One Minute of Free Fall: What It Feels Like (and What It Doesn’t)
The highlight is the free fall: about one full minute. For most people, that’s the portion they remember most clearly afterward, because it’s intense and fast and unlike anything else in daily life.
It’s not a long, slow thing. It’s a committed burst. Think of it like a guided roller-coaster moment, but with the ground dropping away and the sky doing the heavy lifting.
Here’s the practical upside: even though you’re only in free fall for roughly a minute, you’re doing it from a height that makes the sensation clean and complete. You’re not jumping from something low where you’re already “done” before you’ve mentally caught up.
If you’re chasing a long free-fall window, this is built for that. The experience also markets the longest free fall angle for Prague tandem skydiving, so if you’re comparing options, that’s a key point to weigh.
Parachute Flight for About Seven Minutes: Quiet, Control, and Views

After the parachute opens at around 1,500 m, the feel changes. The noise drops. The pace slows. You go from “survive the speed” mode into “watch the world” mode.
You’ll be under canopy for about 7 minutes. They also mention that you can steer the parachute, which is a big deal for the value of the experience. It’s not just sitting there as a passenger. It’s you doing one meaningful action during the peaceful phase.
This part is where you can actually process what you’ve done. You have time to look around and feel the air rather than fight it. It’s also the portion that tends to satisfy people who were nervous but still wanted the full adrenaline story.
If you like the idea of adrenaline plus a calmer “cool down” window, this timing works well.
Landing and the After-Jump Celebration in Prague’s Time Zone

Landing is described as feeling like stepping down from the first step of a staircase. That’s a useful mental picture: it suggests the landing is managed, controlled, and not some dramatic thud into chaos.
Right after landing, you can celebrate before you’re done for the day. They provide a video and photographs for you to review. You can then head back to your original pick-up point in Prague.
A key practical note: only certain photo/video packages are included. You’ll get the base materials that come with the celebration process, but additional selfie video, outside photos/videos, or VIP bundles are extra.
If you’re someone who likes to share proof right away, plan for optional add-ons to fit your budget. The listed upgrade prices are 80€ for selfie video + photo, 110€ for outside photo + video, and 130€ for VIP video + photo + selfie.
Safety and Credentials: What the Operator Gives You on Paper

With skydiving, you don’t want hype. You want competence.
This operator lists a credential and authorization set that’s worth reading. They say their instructors are members of the United States Parachute Association, and they’re authorized by the Civil Aviation Authority and the Ministry of Transport, plus certification under European Aviation Safety Agency rules (EC 2042/2003).
They also repeatedly emphasize safety in how the experience is run, including the claim of 100% safety. While you should always trust but verify when it comes to sport, the bigger point is that they present safety as a system: qualified instructors, regulated oversight, and standardized procedures like harness fitting and briefing.
For you, that matters because it can change how your mind handles fear. When the process is structured and the staff are confident, you’re more likely to enjoy the ride instead of mentally wrestling with it the whole time.
Price and Value: What $319 Really Buys (and What Costs Extra)

The price is $319 per person for a 3-hour experience that includes:
- Transfer to and from the airport from the city meeting point
- Sightseeing flight to 14,000 ft
- Tandem jump with about one minute free fall
- T-shirt
That’s a lot of “real costs” baked into the base price: plane time, staff, jump operation, and transportation. For Prague specifically, the short drive from central areas also makes the whole day feel efficient.
What isn’t included is important:
- Selfie video + photo (80€)
- Outside photo + video (110€)
- VIP video + photo + selfie (130€)
So the value depends on what kind of souvenir you want. If you’re fine with the standard post-landing video/photos and you just want to experience the jump, the base price is already doing most of the heavy lifting. If you want more cinematic outside footage or selfie-centric content, those add-ons can increase total spending quickly.
My practical advice: decide before you land. Want bragging rights for social media, or do you just want the memory? Either choice is valid, but choosing ahead of time prevents surprise spending in the post-jump emotional fog.
Who This Tandem Jump Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
This is not a casual activity. It has clear restrictions.
It’s not suitable for:
- Children under 8
- Pregnant women
- People with heart problems
- People with epilepsy
- People over 254 lbs / 115 kg
And it’s also not allowed to be under the influence: no alcohol and drugs.
Wheelchair accessibility is listed, so if you need mobility support, you’ll want to check how your needs are accommodated. The listing says wheelchair accessible, which is a good starting point.
Who I think this is best for:
- You want a big headline experience in a short day.
- You like the mix of adrenaline and calmer parachute flight.
- You don’t want to spend half your trip just getting to the jump site.
Who might feel disappointed:
- You’re expecting a long, extended time in free fall. This is built around about one minute, followed by about seven minutes under canopy.
Language and Communication: You Can Get Through This Comfortably
Your instructor can speak Czech, English, and German. That’s a big practical plus. Skydiving relies on clear instructions at high stakes moments, so being able to understand your briefing matters.
Even if you’re not fluent, you’ll usually be given direct cues at the right time. The operator also states they address fears during instruction, which tends to reduce language-related anxiety because you can ask what you don’t get.
What the Reviews Line Up With: Friendly Staff and a Calm Waiting Pace
Across the experience, one theme is clear: you get treated well.
People highlight that the staff are friendly, and that safety feels real. Another repeated point is that the time waiting is pleasant, not stressful. That aligns with how a well-run skydiving day should feel. The wait can’t be eliminated, but it can be made comfortable with good organization and patient guidance.
So if you’re worried about being anxious while you wait, you’ll likely find the day is handled with enough care that you’re not left spiraling.
Should You Book Prague Tandem Skydiving With Transfers?
If you want the classic Prague sky experience without a long logistical headache, I’d book it.
It checks the boxes that matter most for this kind of thrill:
- Central Prague pickup at Vodičkova 15 near McDonald’s
- A short drive (about 40 minutes)
- A high-altitude 14,000 ft jump
- A full tandem experience with about one minute free fall and about seven minutes under canopy
- Strong operational safety credentials and a guided briefing
I would skip it if you fall into the listed medical categories, if you’re seeking much longer free-fall time than about a minute, or if you know you’ll be tempted by the optional photo/video packages and want to keep spending tight.
If your goal is to do something bold, well-run, and genuinely memorable from Prague, this is one of the straightforward ways to do it.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the transfer?
You meet at Vodičkova street 15, in front of McDonald’s. It’s about a 5-minute walk from the Václavské náměstí metro stations (line A/B) or from Muzeum (line A/C).
How long is the full experience?
The duration is listed as 3 hours.
Does the price include transfers?
Yes. The tour includes transfer from the meeting point to/from the airport.
What altitude do you jump from?
The jump is from 14,000 ft (4,000 m).
How long is free fall and how fast do you go?
You get about one minute of free fall, reaching speeds of around 200 kph.
How long is the parachute flight, and can you steer?
After opening at about 1,500 m, the parachute flight lasts about 7 minutes, and you can steer the parachute.
Who isn’t allowed to participate?
It’s not suitable for children under 8, pregnant women, people with heart problems, epilepsy, or people over 254 lbs / 115 kg.
Are photos and videos included, and what do add-ons cost?
A video and photographs are provided after landing, but additional packages cost extra: 80€ for selfie video + photo, 110€ for outside photo + video, and 130€ for VIP video + photo + selfie.
























