RFK Rankings · Prague
Best Restaurants for Brunch in Prague (2026)
Weekend brunch · Prague · 6 rooms ranked · Updated June 2026
Compiled by the Restaurants for Kings editorial team · Published July 22, 2024 · Updated June 2026 · Reviewed by Fredrik Filipsson, Editor-in-Chief · How we rank · Corrections
Karlín bakes the city’s best bread, and across the river the grand cafes still pour hot chocolate the way they did under the First Republic. Prague brunches well and brunches everywhere, from a former bread factory to a neo-Renaissance room with a restored painted ceiling. These six, ranked, are where to spend a Prague weekend morning when the table matters as much as the coffee.
1.Eska
Prague’s defining bakery brunch in a former Karlín bread factory; arrive early for the ground-floor counter and the sourdough.
Eska fills a former bread factory at Pernerova 49 in Karlín, the Ambiente group’s modern-Czech flagship across two floors. The ground-floor bakery and all-day brunch is the draw, locally sourced eggs, a celebrated house sourdough and Czech morning plates in an industrial room.
A 2023 renovation added the upstairs Štangl tasting room under chef Martin Štangl, but the morning belongs downstairs. Brunch plates run roughly 200 to 400 CZK; the restaurant takes bookings while the bakery counter absorbs walk-ins. It set the template for the city’s bakery-led brunch.
2.Café Savoy
The grand-cafe brunch under a restored painted ceiling; book ahead for the French toast and the Savoy hot chocolate.
Café Savoy sits at Vítězná 5 in Smíchov, a neo-Renaissance room with a restored painted ceiling that dates to the First Czechoslovak Republic. The all-day breakfast is the order, farmhouse butter, house jam, family-farm eggs and bakery bread, with a signature French toast and the thick Savoy hot chocolate.
It is the dressed-up Prague morning, run by the Ambiente group, and demand is high. Plates land around 250 to 450 CZK and booking is strongly advised; walk-ins face a wait. This is where to bring out-of-town guests for the grand version of brunch.
3.Múj šálek kávy
Karlín’s third-wave coffee landmark for a chef-y brunch; walk in early on a weekend before the small room fills.
Múj šálek kávy, “My Cup of Coffee,” is Doubleshot’s original roastery cafe at Křižíkova 105 in Karlín, a third-wave coffee landmark a few streets from Eska. The breakfast slides into a weekend brunch of eggs, pulled-pork focaccia, quiche, pancakes and house pastries.
Brunch dishes run roughly 150 to 300 CZK, and the room is mostly walk-in, so a weekend morning means arriving before the Karlín crowd. It is the coffee-first pick on this list, the place to come when the cup matters as much as the plate.
4.The Farm
Letná’s long-running weekend brunch of eggs and French toast; reserve a weekend table or come midweek to walk in.
The Farm runs at Korunovační 17 in the Bubeňeč and Letná quarter, an urban kitchen with a farm-to-table emphasis and a popular weekend brunch. The menu covers several egg preparations, French toast, cereals, cakes and continental plates in a bright neighbourhood room.
Brunch lands around 250 to 400 CZK, and the kitchen runs from morning into the evening. Reserve for the weekend, when the Letná locals fill the tables; midweek you can usually walk in. It is the residential-neighbourhood brunch, away from the Old Town crowds.
5.Café Letka
The relaxed Holešovice cafe for breakfast and baked goods near Letenšké náměstí; mostly walk-in, so arrive before the late risers.
Café Letka sits at Letohradská 44 in Holešovice, near Letenšké náměstí, a shabby-chic neighbourhood room listed by Prague City Tourism. The breakfast and brunch menu runs alongside savoury and sweet baked goods and a careful coffee programme.
Plates land roughly 150 to 300 CZK, and it is primarily walk-in, open from early through the evening. This is the local’s brunch, an unhurried Letná morning with the newspaper, rather than a destination booking. Come for the room and the pastry counter as much as the eggs.
6.Sisters Bistro
The gourmet chlebíčky counter for a quick Czech morning bite; walk in from eight, no bookings, near Naše maso.
Sisters Bistro occupies Dlouhá 39 in the Old Town, in the gastro arcade beside the Naše maso butchers, an Ambiente concept built on the Czech open sandwich. The gourmet chlebíčky come with house spreads and Naše maso ham, a morning bite rather than a sit-down plate.
Sandwiches run roughly 50 to 90 CZK each, and the bistro opens at 8am with no reservations, quick-service and walk-in only. It is the Czech contrarian on this list, the traditional open-faced sandwich done well, and the fastest morning stop in the centre of town.
Not for brunch
Famous, but not actually brunch
La Degustation Bohěme Bourgeoise. The one-Michelin-star Ambiente room on Haštalská runs a tasting-menu dinner only, Tuesday to Sunday from 6pm, closed Monday. Chef Oldřich Sahajdák cooks no lunch and no brunch; save it for a long evening.
Field. The one-Michelin-star room on U Milosrdných serves lunch and dinner tasting menus only, with no morning service. It is one of the best meals in Prague, but it is not where you brunch.
Café Imperial. Zdeněk Pohlreich’s Art Deco room does serve a famous breakfast and eggs benedict, so it is brunch-adjacent rather than off-limits. We rank the six above first; come here for the room and the buffet if they are full.
How to brunch well in Prague
Prague brunch splits by neighbourhood: Karlín for the bakery-led rooms, Letná and Holešovice for the relaxed cafes, and Smíchov and the Old Town for the grand cafes and quick bites. Karlín alone, with Eska and Múj šálek kávy a few streets apart, makes the easiest morning crawl in the city.
The destination rooms take bookings and fill fast, so reserve at Eska, Café Savoy and The Farm for the weekend. For a no-reservation morning, Múj šálek kávy, Café Letka and Sisters Bistro all run walk-in, so arrive before the late risers. Most kitchens open from eight or nine and serve through the early afternoon.
Frequently asked
Where is the best brunch in Prague?
Eska in Karlín is the marquee pick, the Ambiente bakery-restaurant in a former bread factory where the house sourdough and locally sourced eggs anchor an all-day brunch. For the grand-cafe version, Café Savoy in Smíchov serves French toast and its famous hot chocolate under a restored painted ceiling, and Múj šálek kávy covers the third-wave coffee crowd.
Which Prague neighbourhood is best for brunch?
Karlín is the brunch heartland. The former industrial district east of the centre holds Eska and Múj šálek kávy within a few streets, the bakery and the specialty-coffee landmark, so you can walk between them. Letná and Holešovice are the relaxed alternative, with The Farm and Café Letka, while Smíchov has the grand Café Savoy across the river.
Do you need a reservation for brunch in Prague?
At the destination rooms, yes. Eska, Café Savoy and The Farm all fill their weekend tables and take bookings, so reserve ahead, especially for Savoy. For a walk-in morning, Múj šálek kávy, Café Letka and Sisters Bistro do not take reservations, so arrive early on a Saturday or expect a short wait at the busiest tables.
What is a traditional Czech brunch dish?
The chlebíček, the open-faced sandwich. Sisters Bistro on Dlouhá, an Ambiente bistro beside the Naše maso butchers, makes the gourmet version with house spreads and good ham, a Czech morning staple rather than an eggs-and-pancakes plate. For a fuller Czech brunch, Eska builds a modern morning around local eggs and its own bread.
Is brunch expensive in Prague?
It is mid-range by European-capital standards. A brunch plate at the better rooms runs roughly 200 to 400 CZK, so around eight to sixteen euros, with the grand Café Savoy at the top of that range and the chlebíčky at Sisters from about 50 CZK each. Specialty coffee at Múj šálek kávy is priced like any third-wave cafe, a few euros a cup.
Related rankings
More from RFK
Browse the full Prague dining guide, read the Eska profile and the Café Savoy profile, find a counter for one in the Prague solo-dining ranking, skip the queue with the Prague walk-ins ranking, read the journal at the RFK journal, or open the full RFK rankings index.
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