
Old Town Square & Astronomical Clock
The medieval heart of Prague — pastel facades, the Týn Church spires, and the 15th-century Astronomical Clock whose figures parade on the hour.
The call
Worth it if you are watching the budget and you only have one day.
Why
- 01
The square itself is a stunning, genuinely medieval room of architecture and the obvious orientation point for the Old Town.
Our read - 02
The honest catch: the hourly clock 'show' is the city's most reliable letdown — a 45-second mechanical shuffle watched by a packed, pickpocket-friendly crowd.
Our read
Is it a fit?
Go if
This is your first trip to Prague
The obvious orientation point; lower your expectations for the clock and enjoy the square instead.
You are watching the budget
On a budget, Old Town Square & Astronomical Clock still earns its price.
You only have one day
Even on a tight schedule, Old Town Square & Astronomical Clock earns the hours.
You are traveling with kids
With kids, Old Town Square & Astronomical Clock works.
Think twice if
You prefer local life to spectacle
For local authenticity, Old Town Square & Astronomical Clock is hit or miss.
Plan it well
- Cost
- Free (square); tower ~300 CZK
- Timing
- Early morning for photos without crowds; the clock chimes hourly if you must.
- Allow
- 30–60 min
- Accessibility
- Flat cobbled square, fully step-free; the tower has a lift partway plus stairs.
- Getting there
- Staroměstská metro (line A), then a 3-minute walk.
Consider instead
Sources and method (2)
- The Astronomical Clock (Orloj) dates to 1410, built by Mikuláš of Kadaň with astronomer Jan Šindel — the oldest astronomical clock still operating, on the south wall of the Old Town Hall. en.wikipedia.org ↗
- The calendar dial and gothic sculptures were added around 1490; the hourly 'Walk of the Apostles' is the figure procession. prague.eu ↗