Zivnostensky list (Trade License Visa)
Official nomad visaCzechia 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
Visa
Entry document
Temporary residency
2 years, renewable
Permanent residency
After 5 years
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.
Recommended for your move
- SafetyWingFlexible monthly cover
Health insurance built for nomads. Monthly subscription.
Get a quote - GenkiEU-regulated, long-term
EU-regulated health insurance for nomads and expats; long-term and resident cover.
See plans - WiseGetting paid abroad
Multi-currency account and low-cost transfers at the mid-market rate.
Open an account - RevolutEveryday spending
Multi-currency card with budgeting and fee-free transfers.
Open an account
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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Every dated change we've logged for Czechia: income thresholds, fees, consular policy.
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.