Dlouhá Street
Dlouhá Street stretches six blocks from Old Town Square to Republic Square, packing Prague's most interesting shopping into a narrow medieval corridor.
About Dlouhá Street
Dlouhá Street stretches six blocks from Old Town Square to Republic Square, packing Prague's most interesting shopping into a narrow medieval corridor. You'll find Czech fashion designers like Tatiana Kovarikova and Jakub Polanka selling pieces you won't see anywhere else, plus vintage stores with genuine 1980s Communist-era finds and streetwear shops stocking local brands. The street works as both a shopping destination and a glimpse into how young Czechs actually dress, not what tourists think they should buy.
The experience unfolds as a slow wander between ground-floor boutiques and climbing narrow staircases to second-floor showrooms. Shopkeepers speak excellent English and genuinely want to explain their products rather than just make sales. The medieval buildings create an intimate atmosphere where you're browsing in spaces that feel more like apartments than stores. By late afternoon, the upper floors transform as cocktail bars and small clubs start opening.
Most guides oversell this as a major shopping street when it's really about discovering 8-10 genuinely interesting shops among twice as many forgettable ones. Focus on the stretch between Kozí and Rybná streets where the best independent stores cluster. Expect to spend 800-2000 CZK for locally designed pieces, which is reasonable for the quality. Skip the tourist-oriented crystal shops near Old Town Square and head straight to the middle section where locals actually shop.
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