Café Savoy

Operating from its Art Nouveau address on Vítězná since 1893, Café Savoy is one of Prague's most enduring café institutions. Its Star Wine List recognition across 2025 and 2026 positions it within a serious wine-focused tier that sets it apart from the city's more casual café circuit. For visitors who want First Republic atmosphere alongside considered sourcing, this Lesser Town address delivers on both counts.

A Room That Argues Against Minimalism
Walk into Café Savoy and the architecture makes an immediate argument: there is nothing tentative about how the building presents itself. The original Art Nouveau interior, in place since the café opened at Vítězná 124/5 in 1893, holds its ground against every contemporary hospitality trend that has swept through Prague over the past three decades. Carved wooden paneling, high ceilings, and the particular quality of light that only accumulates over more than a century of occupation — these are not restoration-project features. They are the building itself, and they define the register in which every plate and glass is received.
Lesser Town (Malá Strana) has always sat at a slight remove from the tourist density of Staré Město and the corporate restaurant activity around Wenceslas Square. The neighbourhood's residential character and proximity to the river give it a different pace, and Café Savoy has long been part of the fabric of that daily life rather than positioned as a destination extraction point for visitors passing through. That civic rootedness matters when assessing what kind of institution this is.
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Get Exclusive Access →The First Republic Café Tradition and What It Demands
Prague's grand café culture belongs to the same Central European tradition as Vienna's Café Central or Budapest's New York Café — establishments where the physical setting carried social weight equal to the food and drink on offer. The Czechoslovak First Republic period, roughly 1918 to 1938, produced an intellectual and artistic café culture that placed these rooms at the center of literary and political life. Café Savoy, operating through that era and beyond, sits within that lineage.
The tradition imposes specific obligations. A café in this category is expected to serve as much as it is expected to cook: the newspaper, the long afternoon, the serious coffee, the cake with architectural ambition. Where Prague's more recent dining development has skewed toward tasting-menu formats , La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise represents that end of the spectrum clearly , the classic café operates on different hospitality logic. Duration is welcome. Occasion is not required. That accessibility within a serious setting is harder to execute than it looks, and most attempts at it in contemporary hotel lobbies and brasserie openings fall flat.
Wine Recognition as a Sourcing Signal
Star Wine List recognition is not awarded for range alone. The platform's methodology evaluates list curation, sourcing depth, and the editorial coherence of a wine program , whether the list reflects considered choices or simply a broad distribution catalogue. Café Savoy holds Star Wine List recognition for both 2025 and 2026, with multiple tier placements in 2026, which places the café within a narrow group of Prague addresses whose beverage programs are assessed as operating at a serious level.
For a venue in the classic café format, this matters more than it might initially appear. Wine selection in the café tradition has historically been secondary to coffee and spirits, with lists often functioning as afterthoughts. A café that has earned consistent Star Wine List recognition has made an active decision to treat its sourcing as part of the offer rather than a compliance exercise. That decision reflects on the kitchen's sourcing priorities as well. Institutions that invest in one supply chain area with this degree of intentionality tend to apply comparable scrutiny elsewhere. Prague's tighter end of the dining market , Alcron, 420 Restaurant, Alma , operates with that sourcing discipline as a baseline expectation. Café Savoy's wine credentials position it as part of that conversation despite its different format.
Across the Czech Republic, the restaurants demonstrating the most interesting sourcing work tend to operate with strong regional supplier relationships. Babiččina zahrada in Průhonice and Bohém in Litomyšl represent that regional sourcing approach outside the capital. In Prague itself, venues like Amano demonstrate how seriously the city's better restaurants now treat ingredient provenance. Café Savoy's wine program places it in alignment with those sourcing values rather than the more indifferent middle tier.
The Practical Case for This Address
Lesser Town is walkable from the Old Town in under twenty minutes via the Charles Bridge, and the neighbourhood's restaurant density is lower than the historic center, which makes advance planning more direct. Café Savoy operates as both a breakfast and lunch destination and an evening venue, giving it a flexibility that the more format-rigid tasting-menu restaurants in Prague cannot offer. For visitors planning a Prague itinerary around the fuller dining guide , the EP Club Prague restaurants guide covers the broader field , Café Savoy functions well as a mid-day or early-evening option that does not require the same booking lead time as the city's most reservation-pressured counters.
Those building a wider Czech itinerary will find useful regional reference points in the EP Club coverage of ARRIGŌ in Děčín, ATELIER bar & bistro in Brno, and Cattaleya in Čeladná. For Prague-specific planning across categories, the Prague hotels guide, Prague bars guide, Prague wineries guide, and Prague experiences guide provide the full picture. For sourcing-focused restaurant comparison internationally, Le Bernardin in New York City and Emeril's in New Orleans represent how seriously sourcing credentials travel across different restaurant formats. Chapelle in Písek offers another regional Czech reference for those moving beyond the capital.
Reservations for Café Savoy are advisable for dinner and weekend lunches. The address at Vítězná 124/5 in Malá Strana is easily reached on foot from the city center or via tram to Újezd.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the leading thing to order at Café Savoy?
- The kitchen operates in the Central European café tradition, which means pastry, coffee, and brasserie-style Czech dishes are the core of the offer. The wine program has earned Star Wine List recognition for 2025 and 2026, so the list warrants attention regardless of what you order. Specific current menu items should be confirmed directly with the venue, as menus in this format change seasonally.
- How far ahead should I plan for Café Savoy?
- As an established address in a relatively low-density neighbourhood, Café Savoy is less reservation-pressured than Prague's tasting-menu restaurants, but weekend lunch and dinner service fills quickly given the room's size and reputation. Booking a few days ahead is prudent for weekend visits; weekday lunch typically allows more flexibility. Prague's most in-demand tasting-menu counters require weeks of lead time , Café Savoy sits in a different access tier.
- What's the signature at Café Savoy?
- The room itself and the wine program are the clearest differentiators. The Star Wine List placements in both 2025 and 2026 reflect a level of sourcing seriousness that places the café above the standard Prague café offer. The Art Nouveau interior, continuously operating since 1893, provides a physical context that no contemporary opening can replicate. Current menu signatures should be verified with the venue directly.
- What if I have allergies at Café Savoy?
- Allergy information is not published in detail in EP Club's current data for this venue. Given the café's positioning and the sourcing standards implied by its wine recognition, staff are likely well-placed to advise , but this should be confirmed directly with the restaurant before your visit, particularly for severe or complex dietary requirements. Czech restaurant practice generally accommodates common allergy queries at point of service.
In Context: Similar Options
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Café Savoy | Star Wine List #3 (2026), Star Wine List #2 (2026), Star Wine List #1 (2026), Star Wine List #1 (2025) | This venue | ||
| La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise | French-Czech | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | French-Czech, €€€€ |
| Alcron | Modern European | Modern European | ||
| Benjamin | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Modern Cuisine, €€€ | |
| Café Imperial | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Traditional Cuisine, €€ | |
| Dejvická 34 by Tomáš Černý | Italian | €€ | Italian, €€ |
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