The Tisá municipality is a gateway to the romantic region of Elbe river sandstones. The Church of St. Anna welcomes visitors in the centre, from where there is a direct path to the Tisa rocks. It will take you to a fantastic rock town with numerous bizarre sandstone formations. Until the early 1920s entry without a local guide was prohibited here. Today the whole area is a paradise for tourists and climbers, for whom there are 113 registered climbing paths. Apart from the Small and the Large rocks north of Tisá there are the less frequented rock towns of Ostrovské and Rájecké skály. Tisá is located in the Labské pískovce natural preserve, 20 km from the regional capital Ústí nad Labem and 5 km from the Petrovice municipality with a border crossing to Germany. The municipality is situated in Děčínske stěny, also known as Bohemian Switzerland, at an elevation of 550 m.
Tisá offers much more than just the sandstone rocks. However, it is true that the rock formations are a dominant local feature. There are countless paths and tracks in the northern part of the village that will lead you through the woods. This is an ideal place for summer walks, or a bicycle trip, and you can criss-cross the area on skis in winter. The local cycling and trekking paths will take you to Ostrov, Děčínský Sněžník, Děčín, or on the other side to Saxony, where the trails continue. You can take an interesting cycling trip around Tisá, past the Děčínský Sněžník outlook tower, to Rosenthal - Bielatal in Germany and back.
Even one of the so-called Great European trailsleads through Tisá, i.e. the E3 from Spain across Europe to the Black Sea!