Prague combined tickets — bundles worth buying in 2026

Prague combined tickets — bundles worth buying in 2026

Are Prague combined tickets worth buying?

The Jewish Museum combined ticket (550 CZK, 5 sites) is excellent value — you cannot buy individual synagogue entry, so it's the only option. The Castle + Lobkowicz Palace combo saves modestly. Multi-sight GYG bundles save time by eliminating queue stops.

How combined tickets work in Prague

Prague does not have a single mega-pass covering every attraction in the city (the city passes come closest — see our full pass comparison). Instead, several individual attractions and operators offer their own combined bundles. Most are designed to save you queue time rather than significant money.

This page covers the worthwhile bundles. It skips the ones that are gimmicks.

The Jewish Museum combined ticket — the most essential bundle

Price: 550 CZK (≈ €22) adult

The combined ticket operated by the Jewish Museum in Prague (Židovské muzeum v Praze) is not optional — it is the only way to access the five core Josefov sites. Individual entry is not sold for Pinkas Synagogue, Maisel Synagogue, Spanish Synagogue, Ceremonial Hall, or the Old Jewish Cemetery. You buy the combined ticket or you don’t visit.

Included: Pinkas Synagogue (Holocaust memorial with 77,297 names), Maisel Synagogue (medieval and Renaissance Jewish history), Spanish Synagogue (Moorish Revival, most visually striking interior), Ceremonial Hall, and the Old Jewish Cemetery. See the full Jewish Quarter ticket guide for details.

What’s separate: Old-New Synagogue (200 CZK / ≈ €8, sold independently because it is separately managed and still an active prayer house).

Verdict: buy it. There’s no pay-as-you-go alternative.

Prague Castle + Lobkowicz Palace combination

Standard: Prague Castle Circuit B (250 CZK) + Lobkowicz Palace (390 CZK) = 640 CZK (≈ €26) separately.

The official combo ticket for Castle + Lobkowicz is not significantly discounted, but GYG offers a bundled option that pre-books both and skips separate queue stops at each:

Prague: Prague Castle and Lobkowicz Palace entry tickets — pre-booked bundle covering Circuit B + Lobkowicz admission. Saves the queue stop at each separate desk.

Why add Lobkowicz? The palace is the only privately owned building within the Castle complex. Its collection includes Beethoven and Mozart original manuscripts (with handwritten corrections), a collection of old masters (Bruegel, Cranach, Canaletto), and an extraordinary display of Bohemian royal artefacts. The audio guide (narrated by the Lobkowicz family themselves) is unusually personal. Adult ticket alone: 390 CZK (≈ €16).

Verdict: the Castle + Lobkowicz combo is the best quality add-on at the Castle complex. If you’re spending a full day at Prague Castle, Lobkowicz is the most rewarding paid extra.

Castle + Jewish Quarter + Old Town Hall — the three-sight bundle

For visitors who want all three of Prague’s major ticketed sights in one booking, GYG offers a combined admission package:

Prague: Prague Castle, Jewish Quarter, and Clock Tower admission — covers Castle Circuit B, Jewish Museum combined ticket, and Old Town Hall tower. This bundle covers the three highest-value ticketed attractions in Prague’s historic centre.

Combined pay-as-you-go equivalent: Castle B (250 CZK) + Jewish Museum (550 CZK) + Old Town Hall (250 CZK) = 1,050 CZK (≈ €42). Check the GYG bundle price — when it offers savings or simply pre-books all three to skip individual queues, it is a strong option for a 2-day first visit focused on the main sights.

Verdict: excellent if you want all three without managing three separate ticket desks and three separate queues.

Clementinum library + Astronomical Tower

The Clementinum (Klementinum), a Baroque complex near Charles Bridge, includes a historically significant Baroque library hall (one of the most photographed in the world) and an Astronomical Tower. Entry is guided only, in groups of 25, and timed-entry slots sell out days in advance in summer.

Prague: Klementinum Library and Astronomical Tower guided tour — the standard guided visit to both the library hall and the tower. This is a timed-slot tour with a guide; independent entry is not available for the library hall.

Price: approximately 350 CZK (≈ €14) for the guided tour slot.

Verdict: book in advance (especially in June–August). The Baroque library hall rivals the most famous examples in Vienna and Coimbra, and it is less known than it deserves to be. This is one of Prague’s genuine secret gems.

National Museum + Old Town walking tour

For visitors who want the National Museum (Národní muzeum, at the top of Wenceslas Square) combined with a guided orientation of the Old Town:

Prague: Old Town tour and National Museum skip-the-line ticket — guided Old Town walking tour + National Museum skip-the-line entry (250 CZK individual value). Useful for visitors who want to see Wenceslas Square in context and enter the museum without queuing.

What Prague doesn’t have (and why)

Unlike Amsterdam (I Amsterdam City Card) or Vienna (Vienna City Card), Prague does not have a single unified pass operated by the city that bundles transport, all major attractions, and tour discounts seamlessly. The “Prague Visitor Pass” covers many attractions but requires the Jewish Museum supplement for the Old-New Synagogue; the CoolPass covers others. Neither covers every major sight without gaps.

For most visitors, the most efficient approach is: buy the Jewish Museum combined ticket (mandatory), pre-book Prague Castle (skip the queue), and buy remaining individual tickets on-site or via GYG. Unless you’re doing 7+ attractions, the city passes cost more than paying individually for the targeted sights you actually visit.

Worked break-even for the three-sight bundle (t415273)

The Castle + Jewish Quarter + Old Town Hall combined bundle covers:

  • Prague Castle Circuit B: 250 CZK (€10)
  • Jewish Museum combined ticket: 550 CZK (€22)
  • Old Town Hall tower: 250 CZK (€10)
  • Pay-as-you-go total: 1,050 CZK (≈ €42)

The GYG bundle (t415273) typically prices slightly below the combined face value and eliminates three separate ticket queues (Castle main gate, Maisel Synagogue desk, Old Town Hall desk). In summer, the time saving across three queues is realistically 60–90 minutes — which may be worth more than any financial discount. Check the GYG listing for the current 2026 bundle price.

Upgrade and downgrade paths for combined tickets

Bought Castle Circuit B and want Circuit A? Pay the 100 CZK (€4) difference at any Castle ticket desk. Show your Circuit B ticket; they upgrade it on the spot.

Bought the Jewish Museum combined ticket and want to add Old-New Synagogue? Pay the 200 CZK (€8) supplement at the Old-New Synagogue door on Červená Street. The supplement is sold separately from the combined ticket and cannot be pre-purchased.

Bought a Lobkowicz Palace ticket and want to add a midday concert? The Lobkowicz midday concert (t48430) includes palace admission — if you have a separate palace ticket, contact the Lobkowicz concierge desk about converting your entry ticket to a concert combo. Not guaranteed but sometimes possible on the day.

Already used the Visitor Pass for Jewish Museum but want to add the Old-New Synagogue? The 200 CZK Old-New Synagogue supplement is payable separately at the door regardless of whether you have the Visitor Pass or not.

Frequently asked questions about combined tickets in Prague

Can I buy Prague Castle and the Jewish Museum together?

Yes — the GYG bundle above (t415273) covers both plus the Old Town Hall. Alternatively, buy Prague Castle online at hrad.cz and the Jewish Museum at jewishmuseum.cz, then collect passes at the entrance fast-track lanes.

Are there combo tickets for Prague and day trips?

GYG day-trip tours to Český Krumlov, Kutná Hora, and Karlštejn typically include transport and guided entry. These are not “combo tickets” in the traditional sense but all-inclusive tour packages. They are usually the best value for day trips from Prague — see our 4-day Prague itinerary for specific recommendations.

Do any combined tickets include a river cruise?

The Prague CoolPass includes a 1-hour Vltava river cruise. No official combined attraction ticket bundles a cruise with museum entry. The Big Bus Hop-on Hop-off includes a river cruise option in its premium tiers.

Is the Mucha Museum worth combining with other sites?

Alfons Mucha (1860–1939) is one of the defining Art Nouveau artists and spent much of his career in Prague. The Mucha Museum (Muchovo muzeum) at Panská 7 covers his decorative work and the Slav Epic. At 260 CZK (≈ €10), it’s a good standalone visit. Included in both the Prague Visitor Pass and the CoolPass. No special combined bundle exists beyond the city passes.

Are Prague’s combined tickets family-friendly?

The Jewish Museum combined ticket is free for children under 15. Prague Castle is free for under 6, reduced for 6–16. The Clementinum tour has minimum age restrictions (typically 8+ years). The National Museum is family-friendly with hands-on exhibits.

Is there a combined ticket for Petřín Tower and Mirror Maze?

Yes — the Petřín Tower and Mirror Maze are sold as a combined ticket: 220 CZK (≈ €9) for adults, 140 CZK for children 6–15, free under 6. Buying them separately is not more economical. The funicular (operated by DPP) requires a separate standard transport ticket (or is covered by the Prague Visitor Pass DPP inclusion). Prague: Petřín Tower and Mirror Maze entry ticket.

What if I only want to visit the Clementinum library hall?

The Baroque Library Hall inside the Klementinum is one of the most photographed interiors in Prague and accessible only on the guided tour (approximately 350 CZK / €14). Independent entry is not available. This tour combines the library hall and the Astronomical Tower. Book in advance in summer — timed-slot tours sell out days ahead in July and August. Prague: Klementinum Library and Astronomical Tower guided tour.

Can I use my GYG booking for the Castle and Jewish Museum on the same day?

Yes — both are valid simultaneously. Present your GYG QR codes at each venue’s fast-track entrance. Castle morning, Jewish Museum afternoon is the recommended order: Castle opens at 9 AM and is best before the day-trip groups arrive (10:30 AM). The Jewish Museum sites are open from 9 AM; Josefov is a 20-minute walk from the Castle via Malostranská metro and Charles Bridge.

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