
Czech Food: What to Eat and What It Costs
Czech food is built for cold winters: heavy on meat, gravy, and dumplings, genuinely satisfying after a day of walking cobblestones. A casual restaurant meal runs $8–14 per person. Don't miss goulash with bread dumplings, svíčková (marinated beef in a creamy sauce with cranberries), and trdelník for dessert — a sweet pastry sold on every tourist street (fun once, though more tourist trend than old family recipe).
Czech cuisine doesn't get the international spotlight that, say, Italian or Thai food does, but it's exactly the kind of hearty, comforting cooking you want after wandering cold cobblestone streets for six hours. Here's what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and the one 'traditional' snack that's more modern tourist hit than centuries-old staple.
Must-try dishes
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| Goulash (guláš) with dumplings | Slow-cooked beef stew in a rich paprika gravy, served with bread dumplings | $7–12 |
| Svíčková | Marinated beef sirloin in a creamy root-vegetable sauce, topped with cranberry sauce and whipped cream | $9–15 |
| Vepřo knedlo zelo | Roast pork, bread dumplings, and braised sauerkraut — the classic Sunday-lunch combo | $8–13 |
| Smažený sýr | Fried cheese, breaded and deep-fried, served with tartar sauce and fries — a vegetarian staple | $6–10 |
| Trdelník | Sweet, cinnamon-sugar-dusted pastry cylinder, often filled with ice cream or Nutella | $3–6 |


Two kinds of dumplings — don't mix them up
'Knedlíky' covers two very different things: bread dumplings (houskové knedlíky) — dense, sliced bread-like rounds served alongside meat dishes to soak up gravy — and fruit dumplings (ovocné knedlíky) — a sweet dessert version stuffed with plums or strawberries and topped with melted butter, sugar, and cottage cheese. If you order 'dumplings' expecting dessert and get the bread version, you're not alone.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian travelers do reasonably well — smažený sýr (fried cheese) and fruit dumplings are widely available, and most menus have at least one meat-free option, though traditional Czech cuisine skews heavily toward meat. Vegan and halal options are more limited outside Prague's international restaurant scene; Prague itself has a growing number of dedicated vegan restaurants. Gluten-free travelers should note that bread dumplings and most traditional sides are wheat-based by default — ask before ordering.
Where to eat
- A neighborhood pivnice (beer hall) — the most authentic, and usually the cheapest, way to eat a proper Czech meal alongside your beer.
- Lokál (a small Prague chain) — reliably good traditional Czech food and tank beer, popular with locals as well as visitors.
- Havelské Tržiště market, Old Town — good for a quick, affordable lunch and fresh produce, a short walk from Old Town Square.
What it costs, all in
| Meal type | Price per person |
|---|---|
| Market stall / quick lunch | $4–8 |
| Casual restaurant | $8–14 |
| Mid-range restaurant | $14–22 |
| Nice dinner out | $25–45 |












































