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Czechia

1 programme · CZK · Czech

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Prague · Charles Bridge
Prague · Charles Bridge
Last updated July 2026Sources:mvcr.cz

Zivnostensky list (Trade License Visa)

Official nomad visa

Czechia has no specific digital nomad visa. Nomads use the živnostenské oprávnění (the “živno”, a trade licence for self-employment) paired with a long-stay residence permit. You register as a sole trader in a recognised trade, and that self-employment is what makes the route work for freelance and remote income. It's a well-worn path, but a real local bureaucracy sits behind it, not a fast-track nomad scheme.

What this visa gets you

  1. Visa

    Entry document

  2. Temporary residency

    2 years, renewable

  3. Permanent residency

    After 5 years

  4. Citizenship

    After 10 years of residence

Income requirement
No fixed monthly income: a one-time proof of funds of about CZK 156,500 (around EUR 6,470) held in your own account.
Application fee
€207
Family allowed
Yes

Pick your passport to see your application path

Processing time, consular location, apostille requirements, and tax-treaty notes for Zivnostensky list (Trade License Visa) change based on your source country.

Tax

How is Zivnostensky list income taxed?

Self-employed trade-licence (zivnost) holders are taxed in the Czech Republic as tax residents once they spend 183+ days in the country or have their centre of interests there. Personal income tax is a flat 15% on the tax base, with a 23% rate on the portion of annual income above the cap (36x average wage, CZK 1,762,812 in 2026). Self-employed individuals may use the "lump-sum expenses" (pausalni vydaje) regime, deducting 60% of revenue as notional expenses for most trades (40-80% depending on activity), which lowers the taxable base. A simplified flat-tax scheme (pausalni dan) lets eligible small traders with turnover below CZK 2,000,000 pay a single monthly amount covering income tax plus social and health insurance. There is no special expat/relocation tax regime for this route. Social security and public health insurance contributions are mandatory for trade-licence holders. No fixed-term tax holiday applies.

Money, roughly (indicative)

Regime: 15% flat (lower with trade-licence deduction), about 38% effective tax on €60k/yr.

Flat 15%; effective ≈6–9% for trade-licence (živno) holders via the 60/80% expense deduction (not modelled here). Self-employed social plus health run ~23% of profit once you apply the 55% assessment base; nil under a totalisation agreement.

Living comfortably to well in Prague runs about €1,600–€2,250/mo for one person, incl. rent.

Estimate your take-home in the tax calculator →

Worth a specialist's time. A short call before you commit usually pays for itself, especially for US citizens (FEIE/FATCA), existing UK ties, or unwinding SA tax residency.

Fees, income thresholds, and consular policy for Czechia, emailed when they move. About once a month.

By passport

Czechia by nationality

The requirements, consular path, and realistic timeline change with your passport. Pick yours for the source-country-specific guide.

What's next

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Expatlas provides information for orientation only and is not legal advice. Always verify current requirements with official government sources and consult an immigration lawyer for your specific case.

Czechia — Zivnostensky list (Trade License Visa) | Expatlas