Getting Around Prague

Getting Around Prague
Getting Around Prague

Video: Getting Around Prague

Video: Getting Around Prague
Video: How to travel around Prague 2024, May
Anonim

Prague is a city that you must visit at least once in your life! It is the largest tourist center with many architectural monuments. To stay in the Czech Republic, you need to obtain a Schengen visa.

Getting around Prague
Getting around Prague

Traveling around Prague by car is unforgettable. The Moscow - Prague road (via Brest and Warsaw) is simply magnificent, like a mirror! It is better not to take risks in Prague and not go by car, but outside the city without a tour, on your own, it is worth a ride.

Gasoline is expensive. In the center of the problem with parking, it is paid everywhere, and sometimes in general, it is not clear whether it is possible to park a car here. And you will definitely want to try Czech beer, it's worth it. Therefore, it is better to travel by public transport! Travelers need to buy a vignette for their car if they travel on the toll roads of the Czech Republic (they are marked on the maps).

It is not recommended to violate the high-speed mode. There, police officers with radars do not hide, but there are many photo radars, and they are not always warned about with signs. They are all there. The best way to get around Prague is by public transport. It runs around the clock and on schedule. They are clean and tidy!

During the day they run every 2 - 3 minutes, much less often at night. The timetable is written at each stop for each tram or bus, clearly indicating the route number and the specific departure time from the stop. At the entrance to the tram, near the door, there is a button to open the door, it must be pressed.

Payment for transport is different from what we understand. They pay not for the number of trips, but for the total time (for 30, 90 minutes, for the whole day, for 10, 15, 20 days, etc.). The ticket is valid for all types of transport. The passage is free, the composting of tickets is on the conscience of the passenger. But the controllers go! They go often, the fines are high, the controllers are polite, but strict, so it's better not to risk it.

It is not difficult to buy a travel ticket, they are sold in vending machines located at bus stops, at metro stations, in press kiosks. You can pay for it only with Czech coins. The validity period of the ticket starts from the moment you validated the ticket, it will be marked with the date and time. If the ticket is not validated, then it is invalid and can be fined if checked. All public transport has a clock, so you can always track how much time you have left.

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