REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague: The Largest Beer SPA with Unlimited Beer Consumption
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Beer Baths Letna · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A beer bath in Prague is a great idea when you want rest, not sightseeing fatigue. This one mixes unlimited drinks with a warm bathtub soak using brewer’s yeast and hops, then tops it off with time in a salt cave for that dry, calm, after-spa feeling.
What I like most is how structured it is for groups without turning into chaos. You get a guided start, a proper changing setup with slippers and a towel, and in larger rooms you can section off the space with sliding doors plus curtains for privacy.
One consideration: the whole treatment is only about 1 hour, so if you’re hoping for a long, multi-step spa day, this is more of a focused reset than a half-day indulgence.
In This Review
- Key points before you go
- Beer Baths and Salt Caves: Why This Prague Experience Works
- Your 60-Minute Rhythm: Check-In, Locker Space, and the Beer Soak
- The Beer Bath: What You’re Actually Doing in the Tub
- Unlimited Drinks: The Part People Really Care About
- Salt Cave Therapy: Birch Branches, a Salt Fountain, and Firelight Calm
- Price and Value: Is $93 for Beer, Bath, and Salt Worth It?
- Who Should Book (and Who Might Skip It)
- Practical Tips for a Smooth Session
- Should You Book Beer Baths Letna in Prague?
- FAQ
- How long is the beer spa experience?
- What drinks are included?
- What does the bath involve?
- Is there time in a salt cave?
- What is included with the booking besides the spa treatments?
- Who can go?
- Are there limits on when I should arrive?
Key points before you go

- Unlimited beer/prosecco so you can actually sip during the soak without keeping score
- Yeast-and-hop warm bath designed for hydration and skin comfort, plus anti-inflammatory claims
- Salt cave with a fireplace vibe and a salt fountain effect fed by saline dripping from birch branches
- Small group setup with sliding doors to split bigger rooms into sections
- Friendly staff, including English-speaking hosts such as Tatiana who tend to look after guests closely
Beer Baths and Salt Caves: Why This Prague Experience Works

Prague has lots of spa-y options, but this one leans into something very local: beer culture turned into therapy. You’re not just drinking beer in a theme setting. You’re soaking in it—well, in a specially-brewed dark beer bath mixed with brewer’s yeast and natural hop ingredients.
The second clever part is the salt cave. It’s not a quick photo stop. You finish the warm tub portion and then take your drink into the salt cave area to keep relaxing while the air fills with salt ions as the saline solution evaporates. It’s a nice match: heat in the bath, then a calmer, drier recovery phase.
If you’re traveling with family or friends, the setup makes a difference. It’s built for people to share the experience without needing everyone to be shoulder-to-shoulder the whole time. That’s real value, because nothing kills vacation fun like awkward group logistics.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Prague
Your 60-Minute Rhythm: Check-In, Locker Space, and the Beer Soak

The session runs for 1 hour, so you’ll want to treat it like a tight workout: check in, get ready, follow the flow, and then let your body do the rest. Plan to arrive about 10 minutes early. The facility can cancel your reservation without refund if you’re 20 minutes late, so don’t cut it close.
Once you arrive, an assistant walks you through the treatment. Then you go to the changing area with lockers, plus a towel, slippers, and a sheet. Men’s and women’s areas are separate for shower and lockers, which makes the experience feel smoother and less stressful.
For groups, the space can be divided into smaller sections: in a larger room, there are sliding doors, and each bath has a curtain for privacy. You don’t have to worry about finding your own corner of the room; the design does that work for you.
Then comes the tub. You’ll soak in warm water containing brewer’s yeast and natural hop ingredients, designed to hydrate your skin and support comfort. Dark beer and/or light Czech beer are part of the routine because the bath is meant to be enhanced with drinking beer during the session.
A useful detail: one English review described the flow as roughly 30 minutes in the beer bath and then around 30 minutes in the salt cave. Even if your timing varies slightly, that gives you a realistic expectation of how the hour usually breaks down.
The Beer Bath: What You’re Actually Doing in the Tub

This spa experience is built around the bath’s ingredients and the warm soak method. The mix includes brewer’s yeast and natural hop ingredients in warm water. The goal is hydrating and skin-regenerating effects, with an anti-inflammatory focus.
In plain terms, you’re getting:
- Warm water that feels soothing right away
- A bath formula that’s meant to support skin comfort while you’re soaking
- A guided rhythm where sipping beer matches the bath treatment
And yes, the beer element is strong, but it isn’t supposed to be an overpowering smell. I like that this doesn’t feel like standing in a brewery. In one French review, the guest said there was no beer smell aside from the pleasant scent of beer they were drinking. Another guest described the result as leaving the skin feeling soft.
One more practical point: the bath time is the main “hands-on” step. If you’re sensitive to warmth or you don’t like soaking, this is still manageable because the total session stays under an hour. But you should still go in with the mindset that this is a tub-based experience, not a massage-based spa day.
Unlimited Drinks: The Part People Really Care About

The headline is unlimited consumption of beer/prosecco, and that matters. It changes the tone from this being a “try a thing” activity into something more relaxed—like you’re hanging out in a warm, controlled spa setting while your drink stays topped up.
You’ll get the drinks as part of the experience, and you’ll continue sipping through the salt cave portion. That combination is why groups tend to have a good time. It’s not “sit quietly for wellness.” It’s a calm, social wellness moment.
From the reviews, the drink side gets consistent praise for being fair and abundant. One German review even summed it up as the beer consumption being just right, and another guest highlighted beer at will.
Two quick considerations:
- It’s still a spa session, so keep it chill. Sip, don’t race your glass.
- If you’re not into beer, there is also prosecco listed as an included option, so you’re not completely trapped in hops and yeast.
Salt Cave Therapy: Birch Branches, a Salt Fountain, and Firelight Calm

After the bath, you move into the salt cave. This is where the experience shifts from warm soak to stillness.
The salt cave is described as the largest in the city, and it has a fireplace setup. That combination matters more than you’d think: firelight makes the space feel cozy instead of medical or industrial.
The standout detail is the salt fountain mechanism. A saline solution drips down birch branches, and as it evaporates it fills the air around you with healing salt ions. In other words, you’re breathing in conditioned air, not just sitting in a room that happens to be salty.
In the reviews, this part is often where guests settle in. One French guest said they loved the salt grotto time and mentioned the overall session felt like a balanced split. Another guest praised the way the resting area was set up.
One practical note: because the focus is relaxation, you’ll want to keep your voice down and let your body cool off properly. This is the last step, so don’t treat it like an escape room. You’ll enjoy it more when you slow down.
You can also read our reviews of more drinking tours in Prague
Price and Value: Is $93 for Beer, Bath, and Salt Worth It?

At $93 per person for a 1-hour experience, the real question is what you get for that price beyond the novelty.
Here’s what’s included:
- Drinks (beer/prosecco), including unlimited consumption
- Bath experience with the yeast-and-hop soak
- Access to the salt cave
- Towels, sheets, and slippers
So you’re paying for:
1) A built-in environment (tub + salt cave)
2) The ingredients and spa setup
3) The “package” effect that removes planning friction
4) A drinks component that’s genuinely part of the treatment
If you already drink casually while on vacation, this can feel like good value because the cost isn’t just “spa time.” It’s spa time plus included beverages, plus a relaxing follow-up.
If you don’t drink alcohol, the value may still work because prosecco is included. Still, be honest with yourself: this experience is designed around the beer ritual, not around swapping in non-alcoholic drinks you bring from outside. (Non-alcoholic options aren’t listed in the provided info.)
Best value often comes when you go with others. Group pricing is part of why the place works as a shared activity, and the sliding-door privacy helps you all enjoy it without feeling trapped in one big common area.
Who Should Book (and Who Might Skip It)
This is a great fit for:
- Adults 18+ who want a different kind of Prague experience that isn’t just standing in crowds
- Couples who want something playful but still relaxing
- Friends and family groups who like a shared activity with a built-in pace
- Travelers who like wellness but don’t want a lecture—just a guided, step-by-step session
It may not be ideal if:
- You need wheelchair-friendly access. The experience isn’t suitable for wheelchair users based on the provided info.
- You’re traveling with kids. Children under 18 aren’t allowed, and unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed either.
- You expect a long spa day. This one is one hour, so think “reset,” not “retreat.”
Also, note what’s not allowed: pets and smoking are not permitted. If you’re bringing any family members with specific needs, double-check comfort expectations before booking.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Session

Small things can make a big difference in how much you enjoy a beer-and-salt routine. Based on the rules and setup:
- Go with a simple mindset. This is a soak + rest flow, not a complex itinerary.
- Wear what you can easily change out of. You’ll have lockers and changing space, plus slippers and a sheet provided.
- Plan on privacy. Sliding doors can section the room into up to 4 sections, and each bath has a curtain. You still might want a calm tone, especially in shared spa spaces.
- Choose your drink pace. Unlimited means you can stay comfortable, but going overboard can ruin the relaxed part.
- If you’re hoping for a strong beer scent, you might be pleasantly surprised. One guest noted there wasn’t an unpleasant beer smell beyond what you’d expect from the beer you’re drinking.
And for staff: several guests praised the warm, attentive care they received. One review specifically called out Tatiana for taking care of guests, which is a good sign that you’ll feel looked after from check-in onward.
Should You Book Beer Baths Letna in Prague?
If you want a memorable Prague experience that’s genuinely relaxing, I’d say book it—especially if you’re the kind of traveler who likes comfort and “doing something” rather than only walking and photographing. The combo of unlimited beer/prosecco, a warm yeast-and-hop soak, and then a salt cave session makes this feel like a complete ritual instead of a one-off stunt.
I’d only hesitate if you’re limited by mobility (wheelchair users aren’t suitable), under 18, or you’re expecting a long-form spa day. Also, if you don’t like the idea of any alcohol at all, make sure prosecco being included works for you, since the experience is built around beer culture.
If that matches your style, this is an easy win: one hour, friendly service, and a very Prague twist on wellness.
FAQ
How long is the beer spa experience?
It lasts 1 hour.
What drinks are included?
The included drinks are beer and prosecco, and the experience includes unlimited consumption.
What does the bath involve?
You soak in warm water with brewer’s yeast and natural hop ingredients, and the experience is designed to be enhanced by drinking dark or light Czech beer.
Is there time in a salt cave?
Yes. You get access to a salt cave after the bath.
What is included with the booking besides the spa treatments?
You’ll receive towels, slippers, and a sheet, and you’ll also have the drinks and the bath/salt cave access included.
Who can go?
The experience is not suitable for children under 18, and unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed. Pets aren’t allowed either.
Are there limits on when I should arrive?
You should arrive 10 minutes before your reservation. The spa has the right to cancel your reservation without refund if you are 20 minutes late from the start time.































