Maximilian Hotel Prague

Michelin Selected in 2025, Maximilian Hotel Prague occupies a quietly positioned address on Haštalská in the Old Town, within walking distance of Old Town Square and the Jewish Quarter. The property sits in the mid-tier of Prague's design-led boutique hotel category, drawing guests who want architectural character and central access without the scale of the city's larger luxury flagships.
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- Address
- Haštalská 752/14, Staré Město, Prague, Czech Republic
- Phone
- +420 225 303 111

Old Town's Quieter Side: Where Haštalská Places You
Prague's Old Town is one of Central Europe's most navigated districts, and the experience of staying inside it varies considerably depending on which street you land on. Haštalská runs through the calmer northeastern edge of Staré Město, closer to the Jewish Quarter and the less-trafficked lanes that connect St. Agnes Convent to the Týn Church backstreets, rather than the tourist-dense axis around Old Town Square. Hotels in this pocket trade on proximity without saturation: you are a short walk from the architectural set pieces but not surrounded by them at street level. That positioning defines what a stay at Maximilian Hotel Prague delivers before you step through the door.
Within Prague's competitive boutique hotel tier, properties on this side of the Old Town tend to attract guests who have already done the landmark circuit and want a base that feels residential in scale. Compare that to the grander Baroque conversion properties closer to the river, such as Augustine, A Luxury Collection Hotel in Malá Strana or Alchymist Grand Hotel & Spa further into the Lesser Town, and the distinction becomes clearer. Maximilian occupies a quieter register, both geographically and in terms of the hospitality identity it projects.
Michelin Selection and What It Signals in the Prague Hotel Market
The Michelin Guide's hotel selection, introduced as an extension of the restaurant guide, applies its own set of criteria around comfort, service consistency, and design coherence. Maximilian Hotel Prague carries a MICHELIN Selected designation in the 2025 guide, placing it in a recognised tier that also includes several of the city's more prominent properties. In the Prague context, Michelin Selected status functions as a quality signal rather than a category floor: it appears across properties that range widely in price and scale, from design boutiques to larger four- and five-star operations.
For travellers using the Michelin framework to filter options, the designation confirms a baseline of assessed consistency. It does not, by itself, indicate a particular price bracket or amenity set. What it does do, in a city where hotel quality ranges sharply from well-located but superficially refurbished buildings to genuinely curated properties, is narrow the shortlist. Other Prague properties carrying Michelin recognition include Andaz Prague, Aria Hotel Prague, BoHo Hotel Prague, and Buddha-Bar Hotel Prague, each of which occupies a different neighbourhood and design register.
Prague's Boutique Hotel Pattern and Where Maximilian Fits
Over the past decade, Prague's upper-mid and boutique hotel segment has split into two recognisable types. The first converts historic buildings, monasteries, palaces, townhouses, and uses the architectural fabric as the primary draw, often at the cost of modern spatial standards in rooms. The second works within purpose-built or extensively reworked modern structures, prioritising comfort metrics and design coherence over heritage drama. Century Old Town Prague by MGallery and Almanac X Alcron Prague sit in different points along this spectrum.
Maximilian Hotel Prague belongs to the more contemporary end of the boutique category. Its address on Haštalská places it in a building that reads as a clean, design-forward property rather than a heritage conversion, which has implications for room geometry and noise levels that matter in a district as acoustically variable as the Old Town. For travellers who find the romantic patina of vaulted ceilings and irregular floor plans less important than predictable room standards, this positioning is an argument in its favour, not a limitation.
The Dining Question in a Hotel at This Tier
Prague's hotel dining scene has matured considerably. The city now has restaurants operating inside hotel buildings that would hold their own as standalone destinations, a pattern familiar from larger European capitals. For a property at Maximilian's scale and tier, the dining programme is typically more functional than destination-oriented: breakfast quality, proximity to good surrounding restaurants, and perhaps a bar that works for an evening drink before heading out.
The Old Town's restaurant density around Haštalská is sufficient that guests are not dependent on in-house dining to eat well. The Jewish Quarter edge of Staré Město has seen a quiet concentration of better independent restaurants over the past several years, with options ranging from contemporary Czech cooking to international formats that have moved beyond the city's tourist-adjusted mainstream. A hotel that positions itself well for this neighbourhood is, in effect, letting the surrounding city act as its extended dining room.
For those looking to understand where hotel dining in Prague reaches more ambitious territory, properties like Andaz Prague or the larger flagships in Malá Strana offer a different scale of in-house culinary programming. Internationally, hotels where the restaurant is genuinely the lead attraction, places like Le Bristol Paris, Mandarin Oriental Ritz in Madrid, or Bvlgari Hotel Tokyo, set a benchmark that sits above what the boutique tier in Prague typically targets.
How Maximilian Compares Within the Czech Republic's Wider Hotel Picture
Prague dominates Czech hotel commentary, but the country's wider hotel stock includes properties worth considering as extensions of a trip. Grandhotel Pupp in Karlovy Vary represents the spa-town grand hotel tradition that predates modern boutique categorisation entirely. Chateau Mcely, set in Bohemia's countryside, operates in a completely different register as a rural retreat. Theatre Hotel in Olomouc offers a design-forward option in a city that draws fewer international visitors but considerably more domestic ones. Each of these sits in a distinct competitive set from Maximilian, underscoring how Prague's boutique urban segment is its own category within the country's hospitality picture.
Planning a Stay: What to Know Before You Book
Maximilian Hotel Prague is located at Haštalská 752/14 in Staré Město, placing it roughly five minutes on foot from Old Town Square and a similar distance from the edge of Josefov, Prague's Jewish Quarter. The address makes it practical for guests covering the historic centre on foot, which remains the most effective way to move through the Old Town.
Maximilian sits comfortably in a more accessible bracket, a Michelin-assessed property with a well-chosen address, in a city that remains one of Europe's more competitively priced capitals for travel at this standard.
Price and Recognition
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximilian Hotel PragueThis venue — the venue you are viewing | $$$ | 4-Star | |
| Design Hotel Neruda | $$$ | 4-Star | Malá Strana, Boutique design hotel in restored 14th-century historic buildings |
| Falkensteiner Boutique Hotel Prague | $$$$ | 5-Star | Prague 1, Urban boutique with modern opulence and reduced minimalism |
| Dancing House - Tančící dům hotel | $$$$ | 4-Star | Nove Mesto, Iconic deconstructivist landmark on the Vltava waterfront. |
| Hotel Josef | $$$$ | 4-Star | Josefov, Pure, authentic, inspiring design hotel |
| NYX Hotel Prague | $$$ | 4-Star | Praha 2, Boutique design hotel with art-infused interiors in a historic building. |
At a Glance
- Elegant
- Sophisticated
- Modern
- Quiet
- Romantic Getaway
- Weekend Escape
- Business Trip
- Historic Building
- Design Destination
- Garden
- Terrace
- Wifi
- Spa
- Fitness Center
- Room Service
- Concierge
- Business Center
- Brasserie
- Library
- Art Gallery
- Massage Studio
- Soundproofed Rooms
- 24 Hour Front Desk
- Street Scene
- Garden
Restrained elegance with sophisticated art deco feel, soft curves, suspended ceiling artwork, and patterned surfaces creating a refined yet welcoming atmosphere with garden views from the brasserie.












