Restaurant in Prague, Czech Republic
Na Kopci
350Pearl PointsNeighbourhood Czech cooking that earns repeat visits.

About Na Kopci
Na Kopci holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, making it one of Prague's clearest value cases for serious Czech cooking. Chef Titus Eliáš runs a confident, flavour-forward kitchen in a residential Praha 5 setting with a genuinely personal atmosphere. At €€, with a 4.8 Google rating across over 1,600 reviews, it earns a booking for any food-focused visitor willing to go slightly off-centre.
Should You Book Na Kopci?
If you're choosing between Na Kopci and a well-reviewed tourist-facing restaurant in Prague's Old Town, Na Kopci wins on almost every measure that matters: quality, authenticity, atmosphere, and value. Chef Titus Eliáš runs a Bib Gourmand-awarded kitchen in Praha 5 that has held that recognition through both 2024 and 2025, which is the Michelin organisation's clearest signal that a restaurant delivers serious cooking at a fair price. For food-focused visitors willing to take the metro to a residential neighbourhood, this is one of Prague's most rewarding dinner decisions at the €€ price point.
The Space
Na Kopci sits in a residential neighbourhood in Praha 5, and the physical experience of arriving here is part of what makes it work. The name translates to "on the hill," and the restaurant does occupy an refined position above its surroundings, giving it a remove from the city that feels earned rather than engineered. Inside, the room has a genuinely personal character: the walls feature original wallpaper printed with images from a family photo album, which is an unusual design choice that reads as warmth rather than gimmick. The effect is a dining room that feels like a private home that happens to serve very good food, rather than a designed "neighbourhood restaurant" built to feel that way. For solo diners and couples, this kind of intimate spatial framing is hard to find in Prague at this price. Groups will find it convivial but should check ahead on capacity, as the room's residential scale limits how large a party it can comfortably seat.
The Kitchen
The cooking at Na Kopci is grounded in regional Czech and central European tradition, delivered with what the Michelin inspectors describe as "punch, flavour and aroma." That phrasing is useful because it signals that this is not a timid or heritage-museum approach to traditional cuisine: the dishes are well-seasoned and confident. Titus Eliáš runs the kitchen, and the menu covers a good range of regional and classic preparations. If you're uncertain where to start, the Chef's Starter Selection is the most practical entry point, especially on a first visit when you want a read on the kitchen's range before committing to a main. The dessert program has drawn particular notice, with the dumplings specifically called out as a highlight worth saving room for. At the €€ price tier, this kitchen is delivering at a level that most comparable-priced restaurants in Prague's centre do not.
Multi-Visit Strategy
Na Kopci rewards repeat visits more than most restaurants at this price level, because the menu has enough range to explore across two or three evenings without repetition. On a first visit, anchor yourself with the Chef's Starter Selection to map the kitchen's strengths, and commit to the dessert course. The dumplings are the most documented highlight and should not be skipped. On a second visit, move past the starter selection and order more specifically from the regional mains, which is where the kitchen's depth in Czech classical technique becomes clearer. A third visit, if you're a longer-stay visitor or a Prague resident, is the point at which you can start treating the menu as a seasonal document: traditional Czech cooking tracks the seasons closely, and what's available in late autumn will differ meaningfully from a spring visit. The consistent 4.8 Google rating across 1,656 reviews suggests the kitchen maintains its standard reliably enough that repeat visits carry low risk of disappointment.
How It Compares
Na Kopci's closest direct comparison in the traditional Czech category is Café Imperial, which shares the €€ price tier and a traditional cuisine focus. Café Imperial has the advantage of a more accessible central location and a famous Art Nouveau interior, but Na Kopci's Michelin recognition and neighbourhood remove give it an edge in cooking quality and atmosphere for visitors who are specifically seeking out serious Czech food rather than a grand-café experience. If budget is not a constraint and you want to see what Czech culinary tradition looks like at full formal expression, La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise at €€€€ is the comparison point: it is a more technically ambitious and expensive evening, but the two restaurants are not really competing for the same decision. Na Kopci is the better answer when you want honest, well-executed regional food in a characterful room without a fine-dining price tag. For modern Czech and European cooking at €€€, Alcron and Benjamin sit in a different register: more polished, less personal. Na Kopci is the right call when the personal quality of the room and the directness of the cooking matter more than formality.
Know Before You Go
- Cuisine: Traditional Czech and regional Central European
- Chef: Titus Eliáš
- Price tier: €€ (Bib Gourmand — serious cooking at a fair price)
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024, 2025
- Google rating: 4.8 from 1,656 reviews
- Location: K Závěrce 2774, Praha 5 — residential neighbourhood, metro accessible
- Booking difficulty: Easy , but book ahead for weekend evenings
- Leading for: Couples, solo diners, food-focused visitors, repeat visits
- Dress code: Smart casual; the room is warm and personal rather than formal
- Start with: Chef's Starter Selection on a first visit; don't skip dessert
Pearl's Take
Na Kopci is the kind of restaurant that justifies the effort of going slightly out of your way. It is not a splurge, it is not a special-occasion formal dinner, and it is not a tourist-facing recreation of Czech food. It is a neighbourhood restaurant with genuine Michelin recognition, a kitchen that cooks with confidence, and a room with real personality. At €€, with a 4.8 rating at scale and back-to-back Bib Gourmand awards, the value case is clear. Book it for a weeknight dinner if you're in Prague for more than two nights, and plan a return visit if you're staying longer. For more options across the city, see our full Prague restaurants guide, our Prague hotels guide, and our Prague bars guide. If you're exploring Czech cooking beyond the capital, Bohém in Litomyšl and Babiččina zahrada in Průhonice are worth knowing about, as are ATELIER bar & bistro in Brno and Cattaleya in Čeladná for regional depth outside Prague. For traditional cuisine at a similar register in other European cities, Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne and Cave à Vin & à Manger in Narbonne offer useful reference points for what Bib Gourmand-level traditional cooking looks like across France.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Na Kopci?
Start with the Chef's Starter Selection — it is explicitly flagged in the Michelin notes as the move when you are undecided. The dumplings are called out as a dessert highlight, so leave room. Beyond that, the menu leans into regional Czech and central European classics, so order what reads most traditional rather than anything that sounds adapted for outside tastes.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Na Kopci?
Na Kopci does not operate a formal tasting menu in the way that La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise does. At the €€ price tier with Bib Gourmand recognition, the value case is built around à la carte Czech and regional dishes rather than a structured progression. If a multi-course format is your priority, La Degustation is the Prague answer; if you want cooking with flavour and value in a neighbourhood setting, Na Kopci delivers that without the tasting-menu overhead.
What should a first-timer know about Na Kopci?
Na Kopci is in a residential neighbourhood in Praha 5, away from the Old Town circuit, so factor in the travel. The name means 'on the hill', and arriving outside the centre is part of the experience. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, which signals quality at a fair price rather than a splurge. Go with an appetite — the Michelin description flags punch, flavour, and aroma as the kitchen's register, and the dessert dumplings are worth saving space for.
What should I wear to Na Kopci?
The venue is a residential-neighbourhood restaurant with family photo album wallpaper and a charming, personal atmosphere — the Michelin notes describe it as friendly rather than formal. Comfortable, neat clothes are appropriate. This is not a white-tablecloth occasion; dress as you would for a good local dinner rather than a special-occasion restaurant.
Is Na Kopci good for solo dining?
Yes. The personal, neighbourhood-restaurant atmosphere described in the Michelin entry — friendly service, a charming interior — makes solo dining comfortable rather than awkward. At the €€ price tier, a solo meal with a starter, main, and dessert remains a low-stakes commitment. It is a better solo option than a counter-format omakase or a large group-oriented space.
Can Na Kopci accommodate groups?
The venue database does not confirm private dining or group capacity details. Given that Na Kopci is a neighbourhood restaurant with a residential, personal atmosphere, large groups should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. For groups where a private room is a firm requirement, Café Imperial or La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise may be more straightforward choices.
Can I eat at the bar at Na Kopci?
Bar seating is not confirmed in the available venue data. Na Kopci is described as a restaurant with a charming, home-like interior rather than a bar-forward space, so bar dining is unlikely to be a primary format here. If counter or bar seating is important to you, confirm directly before visiting.
Location
K Závěrce 2774, 150 00 Praha 5, Czechia
Prague, Czech Republic
Compare Na Kopci
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Na Kopci | €€ | |
| La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ |
| Alcron | ||
| Benjamin | €€€ | |
| Café Imperial | €€ | |
| Dejvická 34 by Tomáš Černý | €€ |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise, French-Czech, €€€€
- Alcron, Modern European, Modern European
- Benjamin, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Café Imperial, Traditional Cuisine, €€
- Dejvická 34 by Tomáš Černý, Italian, €€
At the €€ tier, Na Kopci's closest comparison is Café Imperial, which shares both the price level and a traditional cuisine focus. Café Imperial has a more accessible central location and one of Prague's most impressive interiors, but Na Kopci's back-to-back Bib Gourmand recognition and stronger Google rating signal a kitchen operating at a higher level. If you're choosing purely on cooking quality and atmosphere at the same price, Na Kopci is the better decision. If you want a grand café experience in a famous room, Café Imperial is the right call.
For visitors considering a step up in spend, La Degustation Bohême Bourgeoise at €€€€ is Prague's benchmark for formal Czech-inflected tasting menus. It is a different kind of evening entirely: longer, more elaborate, and priced accordingly. Na Kopci is not trying to compete in that format, and the Bib Gourmand positioning makes clear that the value proposition is the point. Choose La Degustation if budget is flexible and a full tasting-menu format is what you want. Choose Na Kopci if you want the most cooking quality per euro in a room that feels lived-in rather than designed. Alcron and Benjamin at €€€ sit between these poles: more formal and polished than Na Kopci, less theatrical than La Degustation, and better suited to diners who want a modern European register rather than a traditional Czech one.
If your priority is booking ease, Na Kopci is low-friction relative to the top end of the Prague market. The residential location and €€ positioning mean it does not attract the same reservation pressure as the city's Michelin-starred rooms. Book a few days ahead for weekday evenings and a week or more ahead for weekends. For Italian at the same price tier in a more central location, Dejvická 34 by Tomáš Černý is a comparable-effort booking in a different cuisine category. For traditional Czech cooking specifically, Na Kopci is the strongest case at this price in the current Prague market.
Recognized By
Explore Prague
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