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Advance Booking

Do I have to pre-book day trip, excursion? Yes, we strongly recommend making a booking online early (at least 1 day ahead).

Payments

How do I pay for excursion? If you book online, you have choice to pay online using your credit or debit card, PayPal or in cash when we pick you up. If paying in cash, you have to pay in CZK (local currency) or in EUR.

Excursion Tip

What is your best recommendation? One of our most demanding daytrips is excursion to the spa town of Karlovy Vary. This day trip is much recommended for everyone who wants to see another part of Czech Republic. Also day trips to the Kutna Hora and Terezin are popular. If you don't have much time then you should choose Karlstejn. You will not regret, we promise.

Terezín - Private Excursion

Theresienstadt - Half Day Trip from Prague

The excursion will take you to the place where the Nazi occupation led to not only the most tragic chapter in the history of a town but also the catastrophic fate of many thousands of innocent victims during the Second World War. More than 140,000 Jewish people were imprisoned here and at the end of the war there were just 17,247 survivors. Terezin was founded by Emperor Josef II. A narrated video all about the complex of the former Nazi concentration camp will be shown, including authentic personal memories, and descriptions of chilling experiences and episodes from Terezin's grim history. You will also visit the Ghetto Museum and the Small Fortress, which has an exhibition.

Private Terezin excursion price list (see also shared/guided option)

GROUP SIZE TOTAL PRICE FOR
WHOLE GROUP
TOTAL
DURATION
RECOMMENDED
PICK-UP TIME
FREE TIME AT
DESTINATION
01 - 04 per. CZK 2000
4 hrs
from 8am to 2pm 2 hrs 30 min
05 - 08 per. CZK 2550
4 hrs
from 8am to 2pm 2 hrs 30 min
more per. Ask Us ---
--- ---

Price excludes: tour guide or any entrance fees. Entrance fee to the Terezin memorial is from 160 to 200 CZK per person (should be paid directly by customer). Tour of Terezin memorial complex takes about 1hr 30min.

Recommended for: groups, couples, student groups, elderly and single travellers.

Visitor Information: the Museum of the Ghetto and the Minor Fortress both have shops that stock reading material in several languages.

Seeing the Camp: Once inside the Major Fortress, you'll instantly be struck by its drab, plain streets. Just off the central square lies the Museum of the Ghetto, chronicling the rise of Nazism and life in the camp. English pamphlets describing the exhibits are provided. A 10-minute walk from the Major Fortress over the Ohre River takes you to the Minor Fortress. In front of the fortress's main entrance is the National Cemetery where the bodies exhumed from the mass graves were buried. As you enter the main gate, the sign above it, ARBEIT MACHT FREI (Work Sets One Free), sets a gloomy tone. You can walk through the prison barracks, the execution grounds, the workshops, and the isolation cells.

 

Terezin


Terezin Memorial

Over 150 000 men, woman, and children were deported to Terezin from the Czech lands, Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Slovakia and Hungary; 35 000 died.

You can witness the common rooms for prisoners, perhaps the size of a two-car garage which held 25-30 people, with no electricity and no running water. The "isolation cells" rooms big enough to hold a twin bed, not too much else. You can also see the cemetery just outside the fortress was where thousands of political prisoners were buried. As well as a Jewish museum with a permanent exhibition on the history of the ghetto, along with documentary films, and a German propaganda film to deceivethe world public.

Terezin will be very intense experience, with a focal point for everything you've seen in films and read in books about the Holocaust. It will also help you to view events in your own life with a new perspective; while visiting Prague tear yourself away from the beautiful city to spend a day in Terezin, we must never forget!

 

Terezin after WW II

After the German surrender the small fortress was used as an internment camp for ethnic Germans. The first prisoners arrived on the May 10, 1945. On February 29, 1948 the last German prisoners were released and the camp was officially closed. Among the interened Germans were on one hand former Nazis like Heinrich Jöckel, the former commander of Terezín and other SS members. On the other hand a great group of internees was arrested simply because of their German nationality, among them young boys of 12 years or elderly people.

In the first phase of the camp lasting until July 1945 mortality was high due to diseases, malnutrition and incidents of simple outright murder. Commander of the camp in that period was Stanislav Franc, who had been a prisoner of the camp under the Nazis since 1944. He was guided by a spirit of revenge and tolerated any mistreatment of the prisonsers by the guards.

In July 1945 the camp shifted under the control of the Czech ministry for domestic affairs. The new commander appointed was Otakar Kálal. From 1946 on the inmates were gradually transferred to Germany and Terezín more and more turned into a hub for the forced migration of Germans from the Czech lands into Germany proper.

A small exhibition nowadays reminds of the history of Terzín as internment camp for Germans.

 

Tip: Lidice

If you wish, you can combine a visit to Terezin with a trip to the Lidice memorial. Please contact us for a price quote.

Lidice is a small village near Prague. This place is also connected with the dramatic events of year 1942. In May 1942 the German protector SS-Obergruppenfuhrer R. Heydrich, who established the Terezin Jewish concentration camp, was killed by Czech partisans and the Gestapo started hunting them. Although there was insufficient proof of the involvement of Lidice citizens, the Nazis decided to burn the village to the ground. The men were shot, the women and children were taken to concentration camps, and a few children were given to German families for re-education. You will visit the Memorial of Lidice and a small museum in the rose park at the location of the tragedy.

 

I want to thank you for the good service of your company especially the visit to Terezin with your driver dana she is a very good company and know the region very well we, from belgium, will recommend Dana to all our friends who want to visit Prague and who wanted to visit places in the neighbourhood of this beautifull town when I return next year I want here as my driver from the airport to my hotel and back greetings Benny Clinckers Belgium posted on 3/09/2009