REVIEW · PRAGUE
Prague Super Saver: Lobkowicz Palace Concert plus Lobkowicz Palace Museum Entrance Ticket
Book on Viator →Operated by The Lobkowicz Palace · Bookable on Viator
Prague Castle can feel like a maze—this ticket gives it a mission. You get a 1 pm classical concert plus entry to the Lobkowicz Palace museum, all tied together so you do not waste time figuring out the order. I like that the concert entry is scheduled, and I like the self-guided audio tour that lets you slow down in the museum. The main thing to consider: getting to the correct Lobkowicz entrance can be a little tricky inside the castle area, so give yourself extra time.
This combo works well if you want something more human than just sightseeing and selfies. The music is staged in a historic hall on site, and the museum portion is paced for wandering—no marching with a group. Dress code is formal, and the experience asks for moderate physical fitness, so wear shoes that can handle castle steps and corridors.
If you are trying to balance culture with sanity, this is a solid choice. You spend about two hours, it is offered in English, and the ticket is mobile—easy to carry, easy to show.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Notice Right Away
- One Ticket, Two Parts: Concert + Lobkowicz Museum Inside Prague Castle
- Getting Started: The Voucher Exchange and Your First Steps
- The Self-Guided Museum Walk: 22 Galleries and a Downward Route
- The Classic Midday Concert at 1:00 pm: Small Ensemble, Big Effect
- Practical Timing: How to Fit It Smoothly Into a Prague Castle Day
- What Makes the Lobkowicz Museum Special (Beyond the Objects)
- Price and Value: Why $38.62 Feels Fair for What You Get
- Who This Works Best For (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Prague Super Saver Lobkowicz Combo?
- FAQ
- What time does the concert start?
- How long is the experience?
- Is the ticket mobile and offered in English?
- What should I wear to the concert?
- What is included in the price?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Highlights You’ll Notice Right Away

- Reserved 1 pm concert seating means you can plan your Castle day without waiting around
- One combo ticket covers the concert and the palace museum, so booking separately is off your list
- Audio guide at your pace helps you explore 22 galleries without keeping step with anyone
- Inside Prague Castle keeps your walking efficient if you already plan to see the complex
- Original manuscripts and instruments are a big draw, especially for Beethoven fans
- Cafe perks and views (including a terrace) make a nice cooldown after the music and museum walk
One Ticket, Two Parts: Concert + Lobkowicz Museum Inside Prague Castle

The real win here is how the day is packaged. Instead of thinking through concert timing and museum entry separately, you show up, exchange your voucher, and the schedule does the heavy lifting. The concert starts at 1:00 pm, and that timing matters. Prague Castle can swallow hours, so having a fixed anchor keeps your visit from drifting.
Inside, you get the best of both modes: the museum is self-guided with an audioguide, but the concert is a traditional sit-and-listen event. Reviews repeatedly point to how relaxing that is—more like a planned break than another timed stop. If you want a calmer rhythm after climbing and crowds, this combo is a good pressure release.
One more plus: you stay in the same historic complex, so you avoid extra transit time. That sounds basic, but inside Prague Castle, every avoided detour helps.
A few more Prague tours and experiences worth a look
Getting Started: The Voucher Exchange and Your First Steps

Your journey begins with a simple exchange at the museum cash desk. You’ll want to arrive with enough buffer for the castle area itself, because signage and GPS can be uneven in the final approach. More than one person flagged that getting turned around near the last walk can happen fast—sometimes with only minutes to spare—so I recommend adding a cushion. Even if you think you know the way, give yourself the extra time.
Once you exchange your voucher, the route starts on the second floor. Your audioguide starts the flow: you move through a sequence of galleries and then continue down toward the ground floor exit. This matters because you are not wandering aimlessly. The route is designed so you can keep moving, but you still control how long you linger.
A practical heads-up: the experience has a formal dress code. Performers are not in costume, but the setting and concert etiquette call for proper attire. Leave the sports wear at the hotel if you can.
The Self-Guided Museum Walk: 22 Galleries and a Downward Route

The museum portion is where the pace really shifts. You are guided by an audioguide that leads you through 22 galleries, and you can spend as much time as you want in each space. Several reviews praised the museum’s structure, including logical room themes like portraits, armory, and personal collections tied to the Lobkowicz family.
What makes this museum work is the mix of objects and stories. You get paintings, decorative arts, and hands-on historical materials—plus the kind of cultural specifics that turn a name like Lobkowicz into something real. People also commented on the commentary feeling personal, not dry. One standout detail: the recorded narration includes remarks by William Lobkowicz, an American and a heir to the estate. That voice adds context and makes restoration and family history feel less like a textbook.
For music lovers, the payoff is strong. Multiple reviews point to original scores and manuscripts, including major mentions of Beethoven (and also Mozart and Handel). Seeing those originals changes the experience from listening to the story of listening.
Two small considerations to keep in mind:
- The museum focus can lean toward the family and what they collected and preserved, not only broad national history.
- If you are expecting a giant room-by-room guide with a live docent, this is more self-directed. The audioguide does the heavy explanation work, and you supply the curiosity.
Tip for your visit: the palace has excellent city views at a marked point (people specifically mention point 51). If you want a photo moment that feels worth the effort, build that stop into your museum time before you exit.
The Classic Midday Concert at 1:00 pm: Small Ensemble, Big Effect

The concert is Classic Midday, and it runs at 1 pm. You’ll go from the museum portion to the recital hall on the first floor. Reviews stress that the set-up feels intimate, with instruments close enough that you can really hear the phrasing. One person described the closeness as flute/piano/violin scale, which is a good clue about the vibe: think chamber music, not a huge orchestra with a distant sound.
Expect the kind of program that is familiar in spirit but tailored for a smaller group. Reviews mention combinations like piano with flute and violin, and other trios like pianist plus violinist and violist. The instrument list can vary, but the common theme is a trio-style sound with quick transitions between pieces.
Also: do not expect Renaissance-style performers. Reviews note that musicians are in normal concert attire, not historical costumes. That is actually a good thing. It keeps attention on the music and the room.
How it feels in the space matters too. Several reviews called the recital hall gorgeous, including a frescoed ceiling. That visual detail adds an extra layer to the music without turning the concert into a gimmick.
One caution from the reviews: one listener reported that the flute sound bothered them personally. If you are sensitive to certain high frequencies, consider that you may be seated fairly close in a small hall.
Practical Timing: How to Fit It Smoothly Into a Prague Castle Day

This combo lasts about 2 hours total, give or take depending on how long you linger in the museum. The key is that the concert is fixed at 1 pm, so your museum pacing should be realistic.
If you are doing other Prague Castle stops the same day, plan around the concert time as the anchor. One review described the timing as perfect after touring Circuit B, which is a helpful reminder: the midday slot can fit neatly into a half-day rhythm. You just need to arrive at the palace with enough breathing room for navigation.
And yes, the castle walk can be long. Some reviews say it feels like a long trek back and forth, while others say it is worth it because you stay within the complex. My practical advice: wear comfortable shoes, accept that you will climb, and do not treat this as a quick in-and-out.
If you are visiting in October, you might find the gardens closed. Even if you cannot do the gardens, you can still enjoy the terrace views mentioned by multiple reviews.
Finally, verify you are going to the correct Lobkowicz Palace entrance for your selected time. There are mentions of confusion between similarly named locations, and missing the concert is a avoidable problem if you double-check.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Prague
What Makes the Lobkowicz Museum Special (Beyond the Objects)

A lot of museum tickets in Prague feel like a checklist. This one leans more personal. The museum tells you who the Lobkowicz family were, what they owned, what survived, and what had to be restored. Reviews mention themes like loss during the war and later struggles under communism, and they also highlight restoration stories—how damage happened and how the art made it back into view.
The museum’s strongest moment, for many visitors, is the musical connection. You are not just seeing instruments; you are seeing the paper trail of famous compositions. Multiple reviews mention original Beethoven scores and manuscripts, described as priceless or breathtaking. That is why classical music fans tend to rate this portion highly even when the museum layout is fairly specific to the family collection.
For art lovers, the room-by-room organization can be satisfying. People described the museum as well organized into themed rooms, with audio commentary that feels more personal because it ties to current ownership. The ability to take photos is also mentioned, with a no-flash rule.
If you are not a classical superfan, you can still enjoy it. But your experience will be strongest if you like objects with provenance and stories that connect names, politics, and music.
Price and Value: Why $38.62 Feels Fair for What You Get

At $38.62 per person, you are paying for two different experiences under one scheduled umbrella: a concert and museum admission inside Prague Castle.
The value equation works because:
- The concert has a fixed start time at 1 pm, so you are not gambling on walk-in seating.
- You get museum access tied to the same palace visit, so you do not pay separately or manage separate entry windows.
- The audioguide gives you control over time, which often makes paid admission feel more flexible.
In other words, this is not just a ticket to a room. You are buying a planned hour of music plus a self-guided museum path in the same setting. When Prague plans feel crowded and confusing, that kind of structure is worth real money.
Who This Works Best For (and Who Might Skip It)
This combo is ideal if you:
- Want a break from constant walking and crowd flow
- Love chamber music or simply like the idea of hearing instruments close up
- Prefer self-guided museum time over being rushed in a group
- Like having a set anchor in your Castle schedule
It may not be the best match if you:
- Hate formal dress codes and do not want to think about attire
- Are extremely sensitive to flute sound or very high notes in close quarters
- Get frustrated by navigation inside large complexes and do not want to allow time to find the right entrance
Should You Book the Prague Super Saver Lobkowicz Combo?
My take: book it if you want a structured, calm cultural moment inside Prague Castle. The combo ticket is the heart of the value—concert + museum in one package with scheduled entry. If you enjoy chamber music, you’ll likely feel the intimacy factor right away, and the museum’s original scores and audioguide commentary can add a level of meaning beyond standard palace sightseeing.
If you are on a tight schedule, the biggest decision is timing. Arrive early enough to find the correct entrance without stress. Once you are there, the format is straightforward: exchange your voucher, follow the audioguide through the galleries, then settle into the 1 pm concert.
If you want a single high-impact afternoon plan in Prague Castle that does not require constant decision-making, this is a very reasonable pick.
FAQ
What time does the concert start?
The Classic Midday Concert starts at 1:00 pm.
How long is the experience?
It runs for about 2 hours.
Is the ticket mobile and offered in English?
Yes. The ticket is mobile, and the experience is offered in English.
What should I wear to the concert?
The dress code is formal.
What is included in the price?
The ticket includes the midday classic concert and access to the Lobkowicz Palace museum.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance of the experience start time for a full refund.
































