Skip to main content
Prague · Hradčany

Černín Palace

Černín Palace stretches an impressive 150 meters across Loretánské Square, making it Prague's longest baroque facade.

Černín Palace, Prague · Hradčany
Category
Landmark
Duration
20 minutes
Best Time
Morning
Entry
Rating
4.6 (832)
The place

About Černín Palace

Černín Palace stretches an impressive 150 meters across Loretánské Square, making it Prague's longest baroque facade. You're looking at peak 17th-century power architecture: thirty monumental columns march across the building's front, creating a rhythm that's both imposing and surprisingly elegant. The palace was built for Count Černín, who wanted to outshine every other aristocrat in the city, and honestly, he succeeded. While it now houses the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the exterior alone tells the story of baroque ambition at its most grandiose.

Standing in the square, you'll feel dwarfed by the sheer scale of this building. The repetitive columns create an almost hypnotic effect as your eye travels along the endless facade. Most visitors spend their time craning their necks upward, taking in the detailed stonework and the way shadows play between the columns throughout the day. The building dominates the entire square, making everything else look miniature by comparison. There's something theatrical about it, like a stage set designed to make mere mortals feel small.

Most guidebooks oversell this as a major stop, but twenty minutes is genuinely enough unless you're deeply into baroque architecture. You can't go inside, so you're essentially paying your respects to an impressive exterior and moving on. The real value is understanding how this building fits into Prague's power landscape. Skip it if you're short on time, but if you're already visiting the nearby Loreta, it's worth the extra few minutes to appreciate the sheer audacity of 17th-century wealth.

Get Ticketsvia GetYourGuide · prices may vary
Book ahead

Skip the Queue

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The place

Getting there

Address
Černínský palác, Loretánské nám. 101/5, 118 00 Praha 1-Hradčany, Czechia
Neighborhood
Hradčany
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Position yourself at the far end of Loretánské Square near the lamp posts for the best full-facade photo without tourists crowding your shot

Most visitors stand too close to the building and miss the intended visual impact: step back to the opposite side of the square to see it as the architect designed it

Come between 4-6 PM when the afternoon sun hits the columns at the perfect angle, creating dramatic shadows that emphasize the building's massive scale

Plan for about 20 minutes. Morning visits are typically less crowded.

Černín Palace is in the Hradčany neighborhood of Prague. The address is Černínský palác, Loretánské nám. 101/5, 118 00 Praha 1-Hradčany, Czechia. The area is well-served by metro.

Morning visits, especially early, mean fewer crowds and better light for photos. Weekdays are significantly quieter than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Parts are outdoors, so bring a light layer.

Around the corner

Nearby in Hradčany

Explore all →
Prague Castle
Landmark

Prague Castle

Prague Castle sprawls across 70,000 square meters above the Vltava River, housing nearly 1,000 years of Czech royal history in one massive complex. You'll walk through St. Vitus Cathedral's soaring Gothic nave (free entry), climb the 287-step tower for city views, explore the cramped medieval houses of Golden Lane where Kafka once lived, and wander through the Old Royal Palace's vast Vladislav Hall. The full circuit ticket costs CZK 250 and covers all the main interiors, though you can easily spend hours just in the free cathedral sections. The experience feels like walking through a living history book, with each courtyard revealing different architectural periods from Romanesque to Baroque. St. Vitus Cathedral dominates the first courtyard, its blackened stone exterior giving way to jewel-toned light filtering through Mucha's Art Nouveau stained glass. Golden Lane gets packed with tourists photographing the tiny colorful houses, while the Royal Palace's enormous halls echo with footsteps on worn stone floors. The complex sits on multiple levels, so you're constantly climbing stairs and discovering new views across Prague's red rooftops. Most guidebooks oversell Golden Lane, which is essentially a tourist trap with overpriced medieval-themed shops. The real highlights are the cathedral's free sections and the tower climb, though skip the tower if you're doing Petřin Hill later. The CZK 250 circuit ticket is worth it only if you're genuinely interested in royal apartments and historical interiors. Buy online to skip ticket queues, especially in summer when lines stretch across the courtyard.

3-4 hoursExplore
St. Vitus Cathedral
Landmark

St. Vitus Cathedral

St. Vitus Cathedral is Prague's Gothic masterpiece, a towering spire that took 600 years to finish and houses Czech kings in its crypt. You'll walk through soaring stone arches where colored light streams through medieval stained glass, including Alphonse Mucha's Art Nouveau window depicting Saints Cyril and Methodius. The Chapel of St. Wenceslas glitters with semi-precious stones covering every wall, while the royal tombs below hold Charles IV and Rudolf II. The nave feels impossibly tall and hushed, with tourists craning their necks at the ribbed vaulting overhead. Most people cluster around the Mucha window (third on the left as you enter), but the real showstopper is St. Wenceslas Chapel, where every surface sparkles with jasper, amethyst, and gold leaf. If you buy the full circuit ticket, the tower climb gets progressively narrower until you're squeezing through medieval stone passages to emerge 287 steps later with panoramic views over red rooftops. Here's what most guides won't tell you: the nave is completely free, so don't feel pressured to buy the 250 CZK circuit ticket unless you specifically want the tower climb and Wenceslas Chapel access. The crypt is interesting but skippable unless you're obsessed with Habsburg history. Morning light makes the stained glass absolutely sing, while afternoon visits feel dim and gloomy.

45-90 minutesExplore
Petřín Observation Tower & Funicular Experience
Tour

Petřín Observation Tower & Funicular Experience

Prague's mini Eiffel Tower sits atop Petřín Hill, reached by a charming 1891 funicular that creaks up the 511-meter climb in four minutes. The 63-meter steel tower offers genuine 360-degree views across Prague's red-tiled rooftops, with the castle complex, Charles Bridge, and Old Town Square spread below like a medieval map. You'll climb 299 steps inside the tower's narrow spiral staircase, but there's a lift for 20 CZK extra if your legs aren't up for it. The funicular ride feels delightfully old-world, with wooden benches and vintage charm as you glide past gardens and glimpses of the city below. At the top, the tower's observation deck gets packed during sunset but the views justify the crowds: you can trace the Vltava's curves and spot every major landmark. The surrounding Petřín Gardens offer peaceful paths through rose gardens and orchards, plus a quirky mirror maze that's surprisingly entertaining for adults. Most guides won't tell you the tower closes at 8pm in summer (6pm in winter), and the funicular stops running 20 minutes after. Skip the overpriced café at the bottom and bring snacks for the gardens instead. The funicular costs 60 CZK up, 32 CZK for the tower, but walking down through the gardens is free and far more rewarding than taking the funicular both ways.

1.5 hoursExplore
Loreta
Landmark

Loreta

Loreta houses a precise replica of the Holy House from Nazareth, wrapped in baroque cloisters that contain six chapels dedicated to various saints. The treasury upstairs displays the famous Prague Sun, a diamond-encrusted monstrance that's genuinely spectacular, plus dozens of other liturgical objects donated by noble families. The carillon tower plays Marian hymns every hour, and the acoustics in the courtyard make it worth timing your visit around. You'll enter through the main gate into a peaceful rectangular cloister where pilgrims have walked for centuries. The Santa Casa sits in the center, surprisingly small and intimate compared to the ornate baroque facade surrounding it. Each chapel has different artwork and relics, but the real highlight is climbing to the treasury where cases display centuries of religious gold and silverwork. The whole complex feels like stepping into a working pilgrimage site rather than a tourist attraction. Entry costs 150 CZK for adults, which is reasonable given what you see. Most visitors rush through in 30 minutes, but you'll appreciate it more if you take the full hour and read the English descriptions. Skip the basement exhibition unless you're really into religious history. The treasury is worth the extra time, and don't miss the carved ceiling in the Church of the Nativity.

45-60 minutesExplore
More on Prague

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Prague?

Let DAIZ plan your Prague days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Prague tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Prague trip