Summer 2025 Events Prague: Festivals, Open-Air Concerts, and Outdoor Hangouts
Best Things to Do in Prague Summer 2025
Summer in Prague is all about soaking up the summer sun as the light stretches well past dinnertime. Denizens flock to the city’s verdant parks, riverbanks, beer gardens and streets to beat the heat. The city is also bursting with events taking advantage of the long days and favorable outdoor conditions. Insight Cities navigates a path for you that offers an authentic Prague summer experience and a chance to see the city at its best.
Take a tour with Insight Cities
Explore the magnificent architecture of Prague and the notable events that took place throughout its history with our Prague Introduction Tour. Our expert guide will walk you through Prague’s Old Town Square, which showcase the city’s power and influence in the Middle Ages, and through New Town, where buildings both old and new tell the varied stories of Prague’s place in Central Europe – first as part of its own kingdom and then as part of the Habsburg Empire, all the way through its role as a capital city in the country’s tumultuous 20th century. Summer’s high tourist season for the Golden City, so book your tour today!
Music
Respect Festival – June 14th and 15th, 2025
Respect Festival kicks the summer off with a bang – a bang that is entirely composed of ethnic, tribal, folk and indigenous music from all corners of the world. Celebrating its 28th edition in 2025, Respect is the music festival which includes some of the biggest names in world music. With discounts for families, games, food, open air events, a laid-back atmosphere and lots of love and respect, it’s hard not to have a great time.
Open Air Concert at Hradčaný Square – June 19, 2025, 8:00 PM
As the longest day of the year approaches, the Czech Philharmonic performs on an open stage set up in front of the Prague Castle Entrance in Hradčaný Square, creating a truly unique setting and experience. Admission is free, but good seats are limited, so make sure to come early.
Metronome Festival – June 19 to 21, 2025
Since its first edition in 2016, the Metronome Festival has become Prague’s biggest music festival, and its timing at the tail end of June makes this event especially popular with young adults celebrating the end of the school year. Held at Prague’s extensive exhibition grounds in Holešovice, the festival can host thousands of fans and international acts. Alanis Morissette, Rag N bone Man, and Die Antwoord headline this year’s festival.
Bohemia Jazz Festival – July 9, 2025
Every summer the Bohemia Jazz Festival comes to town (and a half-dozen other towns in Bohemia), bringing both some of the biggest and newest names in modern jazz to the country. Concerts are free and take place on the Old Town Square in the evening. And if you miss it in Prague, make a trip to Pilsen, Brno, or Hluboká nad Vltavou, which also host jazz concerts.
Culture
Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (KVIFF) – July 4th to 12th, 2025
Not quite Prague, but since the city’s cultural elite relocate themselves to the awe-inspiring environs of Karlovy Vary for Central and Eastern Europe’s leading film festival for ten days in early July, we thought we’d mention it. KVIFF is entirely worth a day trip or two, for the movies, for the stars, for the parties and for the spa-town. Skip the opening and closing weekends, and buy tickets online for a film experience like no other.
Behind the Door Festival – July 9 to 15, 2025
This festival showcases the unique and ancient art of street theater and takes advantage of the open spaces of Prague’s city squares and parks, bringing fantastic theater performances up close and personal. Actors, musicians, acrobats and other performers from near and far will dazzle with technical and artistic prowess.
Prague Folklore Days – July 17 to 20, 2025
Every summer, various folk music and dance ensembles gather to perform and share their craft with wider audiences. Singers, musicians, dancers and other performers from all over Central and Eastern Europe dress up in traditional costumes to complete their effect, and of course traditional food and drink are served to satiate the appetite worked up from all that dancing.
Prague Pride – July 28 to August 3, 2025
Like many other European capitals, Prague has become a liberal and artistic enclave in a country that’s more often conservative otherwise. Prague Pride lays this misconception to rest, as the annual parade and festival hosts multitudes of participants. In addition to the Parade on Saturday, Prague Pride hosts a plethora of screenings, discussions, and meetups, culminating in a joyous festival in Letná Park.
Letní Letná – August 13 to 31, 2025
Letní Letná has come to culturally define the end of a Prague summer, in the 20-plus years it has been running. Set up in giant tents all over Letná Park, the festival is a fortnight-long showcase of new circus and theatre, bringing some of the world’s best troupes and artistes to the city. With special events for kids, Letní Letná is our recommendation for that perfect summer evening. Tickets are available online but sell out fast.
Exhibitions
Silent Spring: Art and Nature 1930-1970 at the National Gallery Prague Trade Fair Palace – until August 31, 2025
Awareness of environmental issues grew as the 20th century progressed and people witnessed the devastation of pollution on their communities. This was equally true on the other side of the Iron Curtain, and the keen attention and sensitivity of artists helped bring environmental issues to light. This exhibition focuses on the use of shapes and colors found in nature in abstract art, with nearly 100 works by 40 artists who called attention to natural forms in Soviet-aligned Central and Eastern Europe.
Smetana: My Country at the Czech Museum of Music, until October 31, 2025
The year 2024 marked the 200th anniversary of Czech Composer Bedřich Smetana, and where else but the Czech Museum of Music has a special exhibition exploring his life and one of his most important works, the My Country cycle, which has become a cultural touchstone of Czech musical history. View objects and documents connected to Smetana himself, and walk through nine stations themed around the various landmarks of the Czech lands that have inspired poets and composers like Smetana, and his process composing his epic symphonic poem.
Theater
Summer Shakespeare Festival – various dates, July and August 2025
The works of William Shakespeare have made a splash across the continent, and Prague plays host to one of the oldest and largest open-air festivals celebrating the English playwright. Started by the Czech Republic’s first post-Communist president Václav Havel (a playwright himself), the Summer Shakespeare Festival has been put on every year since 1998. Attendees number over 90,000 across the 150 productions, with many shows selling out. The venue of Prague Castle is a perfect place to immerse into the stories of Shakespeare. While many plays are staged in Czech for local audiences, the program often features an English-friendly production or two. This year’s program has yet to be announced but we’ll be watching!
Food and Drink
Microbrewery Festival at Prague Castle – June 13 and 14, 2025
More than 60 Bohemian and Moravian microbreweries gather in the area of Prague Castle to share their craft beers with the beer-loving public. The Royal Gardens make for a perfect early-summer backdrop to drinking cooling flavorful brews.
Prague Ice Cream Festival – June 21 and 22, 2025
Ice cream is the perfect treat to beat the summer heat, and Prague has the largest festival in Central Europe celebrating the dessert. Sample ice cream, gelato, popsicles, sorbets, and sweet frozen treats of all kinds from dozens of vendors, some of which offer some unusual and innovative flavors. Celebrating its 10th anniversary in 2025, the Prague Ice Cream Festival promises something extra special this June.
Wine at the Grébovka Cellar – Fridays from 2 PM to 10 PM
The wine cellar at the city’s Grébovka Park (Havlíčkovy Sady) gives you a chance to sip on some of the only wine produced in Prague, while taking in incredible views of the city’s southern façade. Nestled amongst the vineyards located on the lower hills of the Vinohrady-Vršovice districts, this is a unique opportunity to mingle with locals and appreciate the incredible image of the city’s Baroque rooftops juxtaposed against the outline of the numerous Communist housing estates in the background.
Summer hangouts
Parukářka Park Beer Garden – Open daily
No visit to Prague in the summer is complete without time well-spent at one of its ubiquitous beer gardens. While some have changed with the times, with craft beers, pulled pork and vegan dogs on offer, we prefer the authentic, slightly more humble offerings, without the airs of gentrification. And, for that, nothing beats the Parukářka Park beer garden. Located at the entrance of the park, with unparalleled views of the Žižkov district, humble Gambrinus beer on tap and nothing but all-pork sausages on the grill, this is as authentic as a Prague summer will get. Fun for kids as well!
Stalin at Letná Park – Open daily from noon
An incredible story of urban renewal, Stalin showcases why Prague is at the forefront of Europe’s cultural scene. Located at the base of where the world’s largest Stalin statue once stood, this outdoor venue, beer garden, skate park, art gallery and cultural center, took the city by storm when it was setup in 2015. Entirely local and truly authentic, Stalin has craft beers, food, live music and everything you’d want for a summer evening. Come early, leave late and lose yourself in the maze of bars and galleries in Letná after you’re done at Stalin.
You can learn more about the Stalin statue and hear about Prague’s experience with totalitarianism on our Cold War Prague tour. While the Stalin statue may be gone, many other examples of Prague’s period as a Communist capital remain in the imposing Brutalist architecture. In addition to the distinct architecture of the era, your expert guide will show you some of the remnants of Socialist imagery and the symbolism behind it, as well as the reality of living in a 20th-century surveillance state.
Altenberg 1964 – Open daily
Off the beaten track, located on a barge in Prague’s Holešovice district, Altenberg 1964 underlines Prague’s renaissance as the epicenter of urban chic. Home to the city’s techno crowd, young artists and film crews, Altenberg is a floating wonder. Part gallery, nightclub, beer garden and cultural center, it has the right combination of craft beers, organic food, smiling hipsters and great music, to make this a must-visit for some evening entertainment.
Looking to learn more about the history of the Golden City during your visit? Book a tour with Insight Cities. We have a cadre of expert guides who not only know their home city’s history inside and out but can also seamlessly connect it to today, with the charm of local hospitality. Summer is Prague’s high season for tourism, so if you plan to come to Prague this summer don’t delay and book a tour with Insight Cities today.