REVIEW · PRAGUE
Scary Prague Walking Tour
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Fear, with footnotes in Prague. This Scary Prague Walking Tour is interesting because it pushes you past the postcard route into non-touristy Old Town corners, with stops tied to executions, a past cemetery, a convent, and an old synagogue area. I also like the way the guide connects the spooky talk to specific street-level places, so it feels less like a generic ghost show and more like a guided walk through Prague’s shadowed history.
The main caution: the stories mix ghosts with crimes and period attitudes, so the tone and humor may not match every person’s idea of scary. Since the walk runs about 90 minutes and the group is capped at a maximum of 25, arriving on time helps you avoid a rushed delivery.
In This Review
- Quick Take: What Makes This Prague Ghost Walk Worth Your Hour and a Half
- How the Scary Prague Walk Is Actually Built
- Meeting at Kožná 500/6 and Finishing at Old Town Square
- Stare Město Stops You Might Miss on Your Own
- Ghosts, Crimes, and Dark Humor: What the Guide Tells
- Pacing, Rain, and the Real Walking Time
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
- Price, Value, and the $31.38 Question
- Should You Book This Scary Prague Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Scary Prague Walking Tour?
- What does the tour cost?
- Where do I meet the tour, and where does it end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Do I need to buy any admission tickets during the tour?
- Is this tour suitable for children?
- What fitness level is required?
- What is the cancellation policy?
Quick Take: What Makes This Prague Ghost Walk Worth Your Hour and a Half

- Old Town sites you may miss alone, including a former execution spot, an ex-cemetery area, St. Agnes convent, and the oldest synagogue in Europe area
- Dark, story-first guiding, with several guides praised for dry humor and strong pacing
- A walk that’s usually manageable, since it’s designed with listening stops and a moderate fitness level
- Family-friendly in theory, but kids must have an adult with them
- English is the listed language, with some guide styles also mentioned in other languages by past guests
How the Scary Prague Walk Is Actually Built

This is a classic street-level ghost format: you move through Old Town (Stare Město) while your guide threads together eerie crime tales, local mysteries, and the kind of legends Prague does best. The tour doesn’t feel like you’re stuck at one location. Instead, it’s paced like a story walk, with multiple stops so you can hear the next chunk without sprinting between points.
What makes it work is the mix of place types. You’re not just hearing about ghosts in the abstract. You’re being pointed at corners connected to executions, cemetery history, religious sites like St. Agnes convent, and an old synagogue area described as the oldest synagogue in Europe. That turns spooky storytelling into something you can look at while you listen.
You also get a local guide plus a professional guide team, and the vibe is meant to be performative. Several guides in past experiences have been praised for humor and timing, and even when conditions weren’t ideal, the tour was still delivered.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Prague
Meeting at Kožná 500/6 and Finishing at Old Town Square
The start is very specific: Kožná 500/6, Staré Město, right at the corner with Parizská street. That matters more than people think, because a tight schedule plus a dark-walk setting makes late arrival feel extra stressful.
The tour ends at Old Town Square (Staroměstské nám.) in Prague 1, again near the Parizská street corner area. If you’re planning dinner or a post-tour drink, this is convenient. Old Town Square puts you back in the center of everything, without needing extra transit.
Bring your confirmation info and plan on using the mobile ticket. This is the kind of tour where having your phone ready beats digging through emails. Also, because the tour is about 1 hour 30 minutes of walking plus story stops, shoes that handle uneven pavement are a smart move.
Stare Město Stops You Might Miss on Your Own

Even if you’ve walked Old Town Square a dozen times, you may not notice the details this tour highlights. The route is built around non-touristy locations, which is a big part of why the tour can feel more personal than the usual highlights loop.
Here are the types of places you should expect the guide to point out:
- An ex-execution site: You’ll get a story linked to punishment and public fear, which can explain why certain legends linger in city memory.
- An ex-cemetery: Cemetery ground stories tend to land differently than ghost rumors, because the guide can connect social history with the spooky folklore.
- St. Agnes convent: Religious sites often show up in medieval ghost lore, and this stop adds a calmer, heavier tone to the walk.
- An area tied to the oldest synagogue in Europe: This is one of the most distinctive references on the tour, and it gives the evening walk a strong sense of historical specificity.
A few examples from past guide styles also hint that the walk can include references to recognizable Prague sights along the way, even when the focus stays on darker stories. If you like seeing Prague not just as buildings but as layers of human behavior—fear, punishment, rumor—these stops are the point.
Ghosts, Crimes, and Dark Humor: What the Guide Tells

This isn’t a soft and floaty ghost tour. It leans into ghosts, crimes, and mysteries, plus the kind of medieval storytelling tone that makes you feel like you’re overhearing an old legend told by candlelight. Some guides have been praised for covering gruesome history and keeping the pace steady, which can make the hour feel quick.
The best versions of this tour feel like dry wit plus real detail. Several guides named Peter and Petr have been singled out for strong storytelling and humor. There’s also praise for a guide named Anna, with mentions of calm delivery and legends that include famous Prague characters like a headless knight style story.
Now for the honest part. The darker humor and period moralizing can be a mismatch. Some past experiences described a repetitive focus on women and devilish themes, which may feel less like spooky fun and more like a lecture if that’s not your thing. One more risk: if the guide feels rushed, you can end up with less of the ghost-story payoff you hoped for.
If you’re going for an evening spook session, you’ll enjoy it most if you’re okay with the tour being about history-by-way-of-legend, not just jump-scare haunting.
Pacing, Rain, and the Real Walking Time

The tour is listed at about 1 hour 30 minutes and includes plenty of stopping points. That’s a key design choice. It means you’re not just walking and waiting for the next paragraph. You’re listening while you stand somewhere meaningful, which helps the spooky mood stay intact.
Fitness-wise, the description asks for moderate physical fitness. That’s usually fine for most people who can handle an evening stroll. It’s also why timing and arrival matter. When schedules are tight, a rushed feeling is more likely, and that can affect storytelling clarity.
Weather can be a factor in a walking tour, but at least some past groups noted the tour continued through heavy rain and still finished. So if you tend to fear getting soaked in Prague, don’t overthink it—just plan for dark streets and bring a jacket that can handle drizzle.
Group size is capped at 25, which helps the guide keep attention on the story without turning it into a noisy herd. It can also mean you might not get a super large group crowd vibe. If you love a lively “everyone scream together” atmosphere, you may want to be flexible about the energy level.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)

This works best for you if you like:
- Spooky folklore tied to specific locations, not just general ghost facts
- Crime-and-mystery storytelling, including gruesome or dark themes
- A story-walk format where the guide is part performer, part historian
- Families who want a structured evening activity with a clear route, as long as kids stay with an adult
It may be less ideal if you:
- Want strictly gentle, kid-safe ghost vibes. The tour is family-friendly, but it still deals in crimes and dark lore, and kids must have an adult.
- Hate repetitive moralizing. If you’re sensitive to humor that leans on medieval attitudes—especially gendered jokes—you might not feel entertained.
- Prefer a very theatrical ghost-only show with no historical or moral commentary.
One practical tip: show up early. More than once, rushed delivery was blamed on timing, not on the tour concept. If you want the full experience, arrive with time to spare.
Price, Value, and the $31.38 Question

At $31.38 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, this tour sits in the “worth it if you’ll actually listen” category. You’re paying for a local guide, a professional storytelling setup, and a route that’s built around specific eerie stops rather than only famous viewpoints.
The value improves because the tour lists admission as free, meaning you shouldn’t expect extra ticket fees just to stand at the next stop. You’re also getting a mobile ticket, so check-in is designed to be quick.
Group discounts are mentioned too, which can make it a nicer option for couples or small groups traveling together. And since the tour is often booked around 9 days in advance on average, it’s a sign the concept is popular enough that planning ahead can help you get a departure time that fits your schedule.
So: if you like Old Town walks plus dark stories, this price can feel fair. If you want a quiet self-guided stroll with no edge to the content, you might feel like you paid for entertainment that isn’t your style.
Should You Book This Scary Prague Walking Tour?

Book it if you want Prague to feel a little colder at night—in a fun way. This tour’s strength is the way it anchors spooky tales to concrete places in Stare Město, from execution-related history to cemetery references, with stops like St. Agnes convent and an old synagogue area described as the oldest in Europe.
Skip it or choose another option if your definition of scary is very narrow—like only playful ghosts—or if you dislike dark crime storytelling mixed with moral humor. Also, if your group has kids, be ready to judge the content with your own standards, since the tour’s theme is inherently intense.
My bottom line: if you’re excited to walk Old Town after dark and you like stories that blend legend with grim details, this is a solid pick—especially with a guide whose style matches your taste.
FAQ
How long is the Scary Prague Walking Tour?
It’s listed at about 1 hour 30 minutes.
What does the tour cost?
The price is $31.38 per person.
Where do I meet the tour, and where does it end?
You meet at Kožná 500/6, Staré Město, at the corner with Parizská street. The tour ends at Old Town Square (Staroměstské nám.) near the Parizská street corner area.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, English is listed as the offered language.
Do I need to buy any admission tickets during the tour?
Admission is listed as free, so there shouldn’t be an extra ticket cost for the stops mentioned.
Is this tour suitable for children?
It’s described as great for families, but children must be accompanied by an adult.
What fitness level is required?
The tour calls for a moderate physical fitness level.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel within 24 hours of the start time, there’s no refund.






























