Czech Republic Living Cost Guide 2026

Complete breakdown of monthly expenses, salaries by profession, Czech tax system, healthcare, and PPP calculator. For expats and newcomers planning to move to the Czech Republic.

Last updated: June 29, 2026 | Next review: December 2026
Charles Bridge and Prague Castle - iconic Czech Republic landmark

Monthly Living Expenses in Prague

For a single adult. All amounts in CZK (Kc). Based on CSU data, real 2026 costs, and expat reports.

Important: These figures are monthly expenses (after-tax spending). Prague is the most expensive Czech city. Other cities like Brno, Ostrava, or Plzen are 15-30% cheaper, especially for rent. See the City Comparison tab for details.
~28,000
CZK/month (low)
Frugal single in Prague
~45,000
CZK/month (high)
Comfortable lifestyle
~45,600
CZK avg gross salary
Czech Republic national median gross
20,800
CZK minimum wage
Statutory minimum monthly gross (2026)
CategoryItemLow (CZK)High (CZK)Notes
Housing
Rent (1-bedroom apartment)15,00025,000Prague centre vs outskirts; includes energy bills in some listings
Utilities (electricity, heating, water)3,0005,000CEZ, PRE, innogy; varies by season and apartment size
Internet500800O2, UPC/Vodafone, T-Mobile; fiber widely available
Mobile phone400700T-Mobile CZ, O2, Vodafone; or budget MVNOs like Kaktus
Housing subtotal18,90031,500
Food & Groceries
Groceries5,0008,000Albert, Tesco, Lidl, Kaufland, Billa; discounters much cheaper
Food subtotal5,0008,000
Transport
Litacka monthly pass550550Prague integrated transport (metro, tram, bus); annual pass CZK 3,650
Occasional taxi / Bolt0500Bolt, Liftago popular in Prague
Transport subtotal5501,050
Health Insurance
Public health insurance (employee share)00VZP or other pojistovny; employer deducts 4.5% from gross + pays 9%
Health subtotal00Included in payroll deductions
Personal & Lifestyle
Clothes1,0002,000H&M, Zara, local markets
Personal care5001,000Haircuts, toiletries, cosmetics
Sport & leisure6001,200Gym CZK 600-1,200/month; Multisport card popular
Eating out / entertainment1,5003,000Lunch menu (poledni menu) CZK 150-200; beer evenings
Personal subtotal3,6007,200
Insurance & Misc
Household insurance200400Pojisteni domacnosti; optional but recommended
Miscellaneous5001,000Laundry, small purchases, subscriptions
Insurance & misc subtotal7001,400
TOTAL MONTHLY EXPENSES~28,750~49,150Realistic range: 28,000 - 45,000 with buffer

Salaries by Profession in Czech Republic

Monthly gross salaries in CZK. Data from CSU (Czech Statistical Office), Platy.cz, Glassdoor 2026.

Note: Prague salaries are typically 20-40% higher than the national average. IT and finance sectors pay the most. Many employers offer stravenky (meal vouchers) worth CZK 100-200/day as an additional benefit, which are tax-advantaged.
Software Engineer
60,000 - 100,000 CZK
Doctor (specialist)
50,000 - 80,000 CZK
Data Scientist
55,000 - 85,000 CZK
Lawyer
45,000 - 75,000 CZK
Financial Analyst
45,000 - 70,000 CZK
Marketing Manager
40,000 - 60,000 CZK
Mechanical Engineer
38,000 - 55,000 CZK
Accountant
35,000 - 50,000 CZK
Architect
35,000 - 50,000 CZK
Teacher
35,000 - 45,000 CZK
Nurse
30,000 - 42,000 CZK
Police Officer
30,000 - 40,000 CZK
Electrician
28,000 - 38,000 CZK
Chef / Cook
25,000 - 32,000 CZK
Bus Driver
25,000 - 32,000 CZK
Retail Worker
22,000 - 28,000 CZK
Minimum wage (2026): The Czech statutory minimum wage (minimalni mzda) is CZK 20,800/month gross (CZK 124.40/hour) for a 40-hour work week. This is one of the lowest in the EU but purchasing power is relatively strong due to lower costs.

Czech Tax System (Danovy system)

Czech Republic uses a flat income tax with mandatory social and health insurance contributions. Updated for 2026 tax year.

Income Tax Rates

Annual Taxable Income (CZK)Tax RateNotes
Up to ~CZK 1,935,552 (48x average wage)15%Flat rate for most employees
Above ~CZK 1,935,55223%Solidarni zvyseni dane (solidarity surcharge rate) on income exceeding threshold

Slevy na dani (Tax Credits)

CreditAnnual Amount (CZK)Notes
Basic taxpayer credit (zakladni sleva)30,840Everyone gets this; reduces tax bill directly
Student credit4,020For students up to age 26 (28 for PhD)
Spouse credit (non-working spouse)24,840If spouse earns less than CZK 68,000/year
Disability credit2,520 - 16,140Depends on degree of disability
Child tax bonus (danova zvyhodneni)15,204 - 27,840Per child; amount increases for 2nd and 3rd+ child

Social & Health Insurance Contributions

ContributionEmployee ShareEmployer ShareTotalNotes
Social insurance (socialni pojisteni)6.5%24.8%31.3%Covers pension, sickness, unemployment
Health insurance (zdravotni pojisteni)4.5%9.0%13.5%VZP, CPZP, OZP, etc.
Total employee deductions11.0%33.8%44.8%Employee pays 11% of gross; employer pays 33.8% on top

Net Salary Calculator

Quick Reference: Net Pay by Gross

Monthly GrossAnnual GrossTax + SocialNet MonthlyEffective Rate
25,000300,000~5,330~19,67021.3%
35,000420,000~8,260~26,74023.6%
50,000600,000~12,670~37,33025.3%
75,000900,000~20,420~54,58027.2%
100,0001,200,000~28,170~71,83028.2%

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Calculator

Compare how far your Czech salary goes in other countries. Based on World Bank/OECD 2025-2026 PPP indices. Czech Republic = 100.

CountryPPP Index (CZ=100)Region35,000 CZK buys equiv. of
How to read: Czech Republic = 100. If Switzerland has a PPP index of 236, your 35,000 CZK in Czech Republic has the same purchasing power as 35,000 x (236/100) = 82,600 CZK equivalent in Switzerland. You'd need ~136% more money in Switzerland for the same standard of living.

Cost of Living by City

Comparing major Czech cities. Prague = 100 (most expensive baseline). Data: CSU, Numbeo, Sreality.cz 2026.

CityAvg Rent 1-bed (CZK)Monthly Pass (CZK)Meal Out (CZK)Beer 0.5L (CZK)Livability Note
Prague15,000-25,000550180-28050-70Most expensive; cultural capital; best job market
Brno10,000-18,000550150-22040-552nd city; university town; strong IT sector; wine region
Ostrava7,000-13,000495130-19035-50Industrial city; very affordable; growing tech scene
Plzen9,000-15,000450140-20035-50Home of Pilsner Urquell; Skoda HQ; relaxed lifestyle
Olomouc8,000-14,000400130-19035-45Beautiful baroque city; major university; affordable
Ceske Budejovice8,000-14,000400130-19035-50Home of Budweiser Budvar; South Bohemia gateway
Prague vs Brno: Brno offers 25-35% lower rents than Prague with a thriving tech and startup scene. Many expats choose Brno for better value while still enjoying excellent infrastructure, universities (Masaryk, VUT), and a vibrant cultural life. Train to Prague takes just 2.5 hours.

Czech Healthcare System (Zdravotnictvi)

Czech Republic has a universal public health insurance system with multiple insurance companies (zdravotni pojistovny). Quality is high and co-pays are minimal.

13.5%
Total health contribution
4.5% employee + 9% employer
VZP
Largest insurer
Vseobecna zdravotni pojistovna; ~60% market share
30 CZK
Emergency room co-pay
Abolished for most visits; minimal out-of-pocket costs
EHIC
EU card valid
European Health Insurance Card accepted across EU

Health Insurance Companies (Pojistovny)

Insurance CompanyCodeMarket ShareNotes
VZP (Vseobecna zdravotni pojistovna)111~60%Largest; state-owned; widest network; default for most employees
CPZP (Ceska prumyslova ZP)205~12%Good benefits programs; popular with employers
OZP (Oborova zdravotni pojistovna)207~8%Good preventive care programs
ZPMV (ZP Ministerstva vnitra)211~7%Originally for interior ministry; open to all
Vojenska ZP201~5%Military health insurance; open to civilians too

What's Covered

ServiceCostNotes
GP visit (prakticky lekar)FreeRegister with a GP; referrals to specialists needed for some
Specialist visitFreeDermatology, cardiology, etc.; may need referral (doporuceni)
Hospital stay100 CZK/dayRegulatory fee per day; otherwise fully covered
Prescription drugs30-100+ CZK co-payMany drugs fully covered; some require doplatek (co-payment)
Dental - basicPartially coveredCheck-ups and basic fillings covered; cosmetic/premium materials extra
Dental - crowns/bridgesCo-pay variesStandard materials covered; premium ceramics/implants private pay
Mental healthCoveredPsychiatry covered; psychotherapy increasingly covered; long waits
MaternityFully coveredPrenatal care, delivery, postnatal; 28 weeks maternity leave
Emergency (pohotovost)FreeCall 155 (ambulance) or 112 (EU emergency); excellent response times
EHIC for EU citizens: If you're an EU citizen, your European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) provides temporary coverage in Czech Republic. For long-term stays, you must register with a Czech health insurance company (pojistovna). Non-EU citizens need to arrange coverage through their employer or purchase commercial health insurance until they get employee status.

Housing in Czech Republic (Bydleni)

The Czech rental market, especially in Prague, has become competitive. Understanding local terms and platforms is essential.

Key Terms

Czech TermEnglishExplanation
KauceSecurity depositTypically 1-2 months rent; returned at end of lease minus damages
Najemni smlouvaRental contractAlways get a written lease; defines rights and obligations
NajemRent (base)Base rent without services/utilities
Poplatky za sluzbyService chargesWater, heating, garbage, building maintenance; paid monthly as advance
EnergieEnergy costsElectricity and gas; usually separate contracts with CEZ, PRE, innogy
Dispozice (1+kk, 2+1, etc.)Layout notation1+kk = studio with kitchenette; 2+1 = 2 rooms + separate kitchen; kk = kitchenette
Prihlasen k pobytuResidence registrationRegister your address at the foreign police (cizinecka policie) or town hall

Where to Search

PlatformTypeNotes
Sreality.czAll typesLargest Czech property portal; most listings; both rental and sale
Bezrealitky.czDirect from ownersNo agent fees; deal directly with landlords; growing platform
Reality.idnes.czAll typesMajor media portal listings; good selection
Flatshare (spolubydleni.cz)Shared flatsPopular with students and young professionals
Facebook groupsAll types"Flats for rent Prague" groups; popular with expats; beware scams
Expats.czExpat-focusedEnglish-language classifieds; higher prices but easier for newcomers

Housing Costs by Type

TypePrague (CZK/month)Brno (CZK/month)Notes
1+kk (studio)12,000-18,0008,000-13,000Most common for singles
2+kk (1 bedroom)15,000-25,00010,000-18,000Living room + bedroom + kitchenette
3+kk (2 bedrooms)20,000-35,00014,000-24,000Suitable for couples/small families
Shared room (spolubydleni)6,000-12,0004,000-8,000Room in shared flat; cheapest option
Watch out for: (1) Agent fees (provize) are typically 1 month's rent -- use Bezrealitky.cz to avoid these. (2) New builds have 21% VAT included in purchase price. (3) Verify the landlord's ownership at the Katastr nemovitosti (land registry). (4) Heating costs can spike significantly in winter (November-March). (5) Prague districts 1-3 are most expensive; districts 4-10 offer better value with good metro/tram access.

Transport in Czech Republic (Doprava)

Excellent public transport networks, affordable intercity trains, and a well-connected country for its size.

550
CZK/month
Litacka Prague monthly pass (metro, tram, bus)
3,650
CZK/year
Litacka annual pass -- save over 50%
~40
CZK/litre petrol
Diesel ~38 CZK; fluctuates with oil prices
9,500+
km rail network
Ceske drahy + RegioJet + Leo Express
Transport TypeCostDetails
Litacka monthly (Prague)550 CZK/monthAll Prague metro (3 lines), trams (30+ lines), buses; integrated PID system
Litacka annual (Prague)3,650 CZK/yearBest value; works out to ~304 CZK/month
Ceske drahy (national rail)VariesState railway; covers entire country; InKarta discount card available
RegioJetFrom 99 CZKPrivate operator; Prague-Brno from CZK 99; comfortable coaches with WiFi, coffee
Leo ExpressFrom 89 CZKPrivate operator; modern trains; competitive pricing; Prague-Ostrava route
FlixBus / RegioJet busFrom 79 CZKIntercity buses; often cheaper than trains; good for international routes
Prague-Brno (train)150-350 CZK~2.5 hours; frequent departures; RegioJet or Ceske drahy
MHD (city public transport)300-550 CZK/monthMost Czech cities have integrated MHD; trams in Prague, Brno, Ostrava, Plzen, Olomouc
Bolt / Liftago (ride-hailing)~25 CZK/kmPopular in Prague; cheaper than traditional taxis
Nextbike / Rekola (bike sharing)From 30 CZK/rideAvailable in Prague, Brno, and other cities; electric bikes too
Pro tip: Buy the Litacka annual pass (CZK 3,650) -- it saves over 40% compared to monthly passes and includes all Prague zones. For intercity travel, RegioJet and Leo Express often have flash sales with tickets from CZK 79-99. Book 2-3 weeks ahead for best prices. The InKarta from Ceske drahy gives 25% off all national rail tickets for CZK 550/year.

Working in Czech Republic (Prace v Cesku)

Czech work culture, employment rights, visa requirements, and practical info for newcomers.

20
Vacation days/year
Legal minimum 4 weeks; some employers offer 25
3 months
Zkusebni doba
Probation period; 6 months for managers
Stravenky
Meal vouchers
Tax-advantaged benefit; CZK 100-200/day typical
13
Public holidays
Including Czech Statehood Day, Jan Hus Day
TopicDetailsNotes
Pracovni smlouvaEmployment contract; must be in writing before start dateMust include job type, place of work, start date; 3 copies
Zkusebni dobaProbation period: 3 months (6 for managers)Either party can terminate without reason during probation
Working hoursStandard 40 hours/weekMax 8 hours/day; overtime limited to 150 hours/year; must be compensated
Dovolena (vacation)Legal minimum: 4 weeks (20 working days)Many employers offer 5 weeks (25 days); teachers get 8 weeks
Sick leave (nemocenska)Days 1-3: unpaid (karenni doba abolished, now paid at 60%); Days 4-14: employer pays 60%; Day 15+: CSSZ paysNeed nemocensky list from doctor
Stravenky (meal vouchers)Tax-free benefit up to 70% of meal valueSodexo, Edenred, Up; increasingly replaced by stravenkovy pausal (cash allowance)
Employee card (zamestnanecka karta)Work permit for non-EU citizensDual permit (residence + work); employer must apply; processing ~60-90 days
Blue Card EUFor highly qualified workers with university degreeSalary must be 1.5x Czech average; faster processing; EU-wide mobility
Maternity leave (materska)28 weeks (37 for multiple births)70% of daily assessment base; followed by rodicovsky prispevek up to 4 years
Vypovedni dobaNotice period: minimum 2 monthsStarts from 1st of following month; employer needs valid reason for dismissal

Work Culture Tips

Czech work culture essentials: (1) Punctuality -- Czechs value being on time for meetings and work. (2) Lunch culture -- poledni menu (lunch specials) at restaurants are a big tradition; many workers eat out for CZK 150-200. (3) Direct communication -- Czechs are straightforward but polite; avoid excessive small talk in business settings. (4) Stravenky -- meal vouchers are a beloved benefit; ask about them during job negotiations. (5) Home office -- increasingly common since COVID; many IT companies offer hybrid or full remote work.

Local Prices & Everyday Costs

What things actually cost day-to-day in Czech Republic. Prices in CZK, Prague-based unless noted.

Food & Drink

ItemLow (CZK)High (CZK)Notes
Coffee (kavarna)6090Espresso or cappuccino; specialty coffee shops CZK 80-120
Beer 0.5L (hospoda)4570Pilsner Urquell, Staropramen, Kozel; craft beer CZK 70-100
Svickova na smetane180250National dish: marinated beef with cream sauce and knedliky
Lunch menu (poledni menu)150200Weekday lunch specials at restaurants; soup + main course
Dinner at restaurant250500Mid-range restaurant; fine dining CZK 800+
Trdlo (chimney cake)80120Popular street food; tourist areas more expensive
Bread (chleb, 1kg)3050Rohlik (roll) CZK 3-5 each at bakery
Milk (1 litre)2230Madeta, Olma brands; bio/organic more
Chicken breast (1kg)130180Supermarket price; butcher slightly more

Entertainment & Services

ItemLow (CZK)High (CZK)Notes
Cinema ticket200280Cinema City, CineStar; IMAX/premium CZK 300+
Gym membership6001,200Monthly; John Reed, Fitness Park; Multisport card CZK 1,100-1,500
Haircut (men)200400Barber shops; women CZK 400-800
Theater / concert200800National Theatre, Rudolfinum; standing tickets cheaper
Swimming pool (entry)100200Public pools (plovarna); aquaparks more
Monthly streaming (Netflix)200350Standard to Premium plan
Domestic postage (letter)1927Ceska posta standard letter

Cultural Essentials

Things to know: (1) Beer culture -- Czech Republic has the highest beer consumption per capita in the world; beer is often cheaper than water in restaurants. (2) Tipping -- round up to nearest 10 CZK or add 10%; say the total you want to pay when handing over money. (3) Cash vs card -- cards widely accepted in Prague; smaller towns and pubs may prefer cash. (4) Shoes off indoors -- always remove shoes when entering a Czech home; hosts usually offer papuce (slippers). (5) Name days -- Czechs celebrate jmeniny (name days) almost as much as birthdays.

Minimum Earnings to Survive in Czech Republic

What gross salary do you need? Here's the realistic breakdown for 2026.

~25,000
CZK/month net minimum
Bare minimum for single in Prague (frugal)
~40,000
CZK/month net comfortable
Comfortable single lifestyle in Prague
~33,000
CZK gross for minimum
Gross salary needed for ~25,000 net
~53,000
CZK gross for comfortable
Gross salary needed for ~40,000 net
LifestyleMonthly Expenses (CZK)Gross Salary Needed (CZK)Net After TaxBuffer
Survival mode
Shared flat, very frugal
15,00022,00017,000+2,000
Basic single (outside Prague)
Own flat in Brno/Ostrava
20,00028,00022,000+2,000
Single in Prague (frugal)
1-bed apartment, careful spending
28,00038,00030,000+2,000
Single in Prague (comfortable)
Nice apartment, dining out, hobbies
40,00055,00042,000+2,000
Couple in Prague
2 adults, good lifestyle
55,00075,00058,000+3,000
Family with child
2 adults + 1 child, Prague
65,00090,00068,000+3,000
Newcomer checklist (first 2 weeks): (1) Register your address at the cizinecka policie (foreign police) or town hall within 30 days. (2) Open a bank account (Fio banka, Ceska sporitelna, Komercni banka, or Revolut). (3) Get health insurance -- your employer handles this for employees; self-employed must register directly with VZP/CPZP. (4) Get a Litacka transport card (CZK 550/month for Prague). (5) Buy a Czech SIM card (T-Mobile, O2, Vodafone; or budget Kaktus). (6) Get your rodne cislo (birth number / personal ID) if staying long-term. (7) Register with a GP (prakticky lekar) near your home. (8) Download Mapy.cz -- the best map app for Czech Republic.
Data note: All figures updated June 2026. Rents, salaries, and tax rates change periodically. Always verify current rates with official sources (CSU, Financni sprava, your pojistovna) before making financial decisions.