Prague
Prague is Central Europe's biggest queer scene: the Vinohrady neighbourhood, affordable prices, Prague Pride in August, and a direct flight from Zurich in 1h15.
Prague's queer world revolves around Vinohrady, the art-nouveau neighbourhood east of the centre that has built up Central Europe's most visible LGBTQ+ district since the 1990s. Within a few streets of each other on and around Mánesova and Třebízského sit the scene's key venues. Club Termix is the largest and loudest — a proper gay club with a darkroom, DJ nights and staying power until early morning. Saints Bar on Polská takes a different tone: English-friendly, with affordable drinks, a mixed international crowd and a relaxed pub feel that makes it an easy first stop. Piano Bar has been running since 1995 and remains one of the city's longest-standing addresses. A little further out, near the Old Town on Bartolomejska, Friends Club is open every night with a rotating concept — pub quiz, karaoke, party — making it the most consistently busy venue in the city.
Prague is affordable by any European measure. Beer routinely costs under two euros in neighbourhood bars, restaurants in Vinohrady sit well below western European prices, and accommodation is attainable even in central locations. That makes the city work for a long weekend or a full week. Staying in or near Vinohrady puts the Old Town and the Jewish Quarter a few tram stops away, with Žižkov's alternative bars an easy walk in the other direction.
The peak of the year is Prague Pride. The 2026 festival week runs 3–9 August; the parade marches on Saturday 8 August at noon from Wenceslas Square through the Old Town to Letná Park. Prague Pride has an explicitly political edge: the Czech Republic has had registered partnerships since 2006 but still does not have equal marriage, and the festival both celebrates community and advocates directly for change. The programme combines evening parties and club events with film screenings, art exhibitions, sports and panel discussions.
Why it's a gay destination
Czechoslovakia decriminalised same-sex acts in 1961, earlier than many western countries. Registered partnerships have been recognised since 2006; full marriage equality remains pending. Prague Pride was first held in 2011 and has grown into Central Europe's largest queer event.
Gay districts
- Vinohrady — Prague's LGBTQ+ heartland, home to most of the scene's bars and clubs around Mánesova and Třebízského.
- Žižkov — Adjacent alternative neighbourhood with pubs, cultural centres and a mixed progressive scene.
- Staré Město (Old Town) — Tourist centre, home to Friends Club on Bartolomejska; easily walkable from Vinohrady.
What to do
- Prague Pride — Largest queer festival in the Czech Republic, with a parade on 8 August (Wenceslas Square → Letná Park) and an explicitly political focus on equal marriage. · 3–9 Aug 2026
- Club Termix — Vinohrady's biggest gay club, with a darkroom and DJ nights running until early morning.
- Saints Bar — English-friendly pub on Polská — relaxed, affordable, international crowd.
- Friends Club — Daily-open club near the Old Town with a rotating programme (quiz, karaoke, party).
- When to go
- April to September for mild weather; August is the ideal month thanks to Prague Pride (3–9 Aug).
- Pride
- Prague Pride · August
- Getting there from Switzerland
- Direct flight from Zurich ZRH in approx. 1h15 (SWISS, ~29 weekly connections). Alternatively long-distance bus or train via Vienna or Munich.
Updated: 2026-06-26


