Our Expert in Czech Republic
No results available
Last updated: 7 May 2026
The Czech property market entered 2026 under a new set of rules that every foreign buyer, expat homeowner and investor-landlord needs to understand before signing a contract. Real estate lawyers in the Czech Republic are fielding a surge of enquiries driven by three concurrent changes: tightened foreign-ownership eligibility rules that took effect in January 2026, revised mortgage loan-to-value (LTV) caps introduced by the Czech National Bank (CNB) on 1 April 2026, and updated property-registration and tax-filing requirements administered by the cadastral office and the Ministry of Finance. This guide consolidates all three topics into a single, lawyer-authored reference for anyone buying, financing or selling Czech property this year.
Whether you are an EU citizen relocating to Prague, a non-EU investor acquiring a buy-to-let apartment, or an advisor helping clients navigate the Czech market, the sections below set out the eligibility tests, financing mechanics, contractual safeguards and fiscal obligations you must address.
The short answer is yes, but with qualifications that became more important after the January 2026 amendments. Czech law has long permitted foreigners to acquire real property, yet the rules differ materially depending on the buyer’s nationality, residency status and the type of land involved. The January 2026 changes refined the documentation and permit requirements for certain non-EU nationals and introduced additional scrutiny for purchases of agricultural and forest land by foreign entities.
Czech real-estate law distinguishes three broad buyer categories. EU and EEA nationals (including Swiss citizens) enjoy near-identical rights to Czech citizens when purchasing residential and commercial property. They may buy apartments, houses and building plots without any special permit, provided they can present valid identification and a tax-identification number. Non-EU nationals who hold a valid Czech residence permit, whether temporary or permanent, are treated similarly for residential purchases, although the January 2026 amendments now require additional verification documents at the cadastral office. Foreign-registered companies controlled by non-EU shareholders face the most detailed scrutiny, particularly when acquiring agricultural or forest land, which remains subject to a prior-approval regime under the Act on Acquisition of Agricultural and Forest Land.
A non-EU citizen without Czech residency can still purchase a residential apartment or house, but must provide apostilled identity documents, proof of the source of funds and, following the January 2026 update, a declaration confirming compliance with Czech anti-money-laundering obligations. In practice, the procedural burden falls on the buyer’s Czech lawyer, who prepares the declaration, coordinates with the cadastral office and ensures that the purchase contract satisfies the new filing template. Industry observers expect the additional documentation requirement to add one to two weeks to the registration timeline for non-EU purchasers.
| Buyer category | Residential property | Agricultural / forest land |
|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA / Swiss citizen | No permit required; standard ID and tax number | Subject to prior-approval regime; must demonstrate connection to agricultural use |
| Non-EU citizen with Czech residence permit | Permitted; additional AML declaration required from January 2026 | Prior approval required; residence permit alone is insufficient |
| Non-EU citizen without Czech residence | Permitted; apostilled documents, source-of-funds proof and AML declaration required | Generally restricted; exceptions may apply via bilateral treaties |
| Foreign-registered company (non-EU controlled) | Permitted; enhanced due diligence on beneficial ownership | Prior approval required; corporate structure transparency obligations |
The Czech National Bank’s updated macroprudential framework, effective 1 April 2026, recalibrated the mortgage LTV limits that Czech lenders must observe. The CNB uses these limits as a binding upper ceiling: no regulated lender may advance a mortgage exceeding the stated percentage of the property’s appraised value. The 2026 revision tightened the caps for investment properties while maintaining relatively accessible thresholds for owner-occupied homes, reflecting the regulator’s aim of cooling speculative demand without penalising first-time buyers.
Understanding the mortgage LTV limits in the Czech Republic for 2026 is critical for anyone planning a purchase, because the limits dictate the minimum cash deposit a buyer must bring to closing. A buyer whose loan application exceeds the LTV ceiling will either need to increase the deposit, find a co-borrower with Czech-based assets, or restructure the transaction.
| Property type | LTV limit (from 1 Apr 2026) | Practical impact |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-occupied (primary residence) | 80 % | Buyer must fund at least 20 % of the purchase price from own resources; standard documentation accepted by most Czech banks |
| Buy-to-let / investment property | 60 % | Buyer must fund at least 40 % from own resources; some lenders require a local guarantor for non-resident investors |
| New-build using developer financing | 80 % (primary residence) / 60 % (investment) | Developer stage-payment schedules may allow phased deposits; contract clauses must be reviewed for alignment with CNB limits |
Consider a Prague apartment appraised at CZK 8,000,000. An owner-occupier may borrow up to CZK 6,400,000 (80 % LTV), requiring a deposit of CZK 1,600,000. The same apartment purchased as a buy-to-let investment would cap the loan at CZK 4,800,000 (60 % LTV), requiring CZK 3,200,000 in cash, double the deposit. For expats earning in euros or dollars, currency fluctuations can further widen this gap, making it essential to lock in exchange rates or arrange a CZK-denominated deposit account well before closing.
Securing an expat mortgage in the Czech Republic now requires careful preparation. Czech lenders typically request at least 12 months of payslips (or tax returns for the self-employed), a letter from the employer confirming contract terms, and proof of existing debts. Non-residents may also be asked to provide a Czech-based guarantor or to pledge additional collateral. Converting foreign-currency income into CZK at a favourable rate is often easier through a specialist FX provider than through the lending bank itself. Early engagement with a real estate lawyer who understands mortgage structuring can prevent costly delays at the approval stage.
A typical Czech property purchase follows a well-established sequence, but each stage contains traps for buyers unfamiliar with local practice. The purchase contract checklist below reflects current requirements as of 2026.
Every purchase contract should include a title warranty by the seller (confirming unencumbered ownership), representations on the physical condition of the property, a defects-disclosure schedule, a handover protocol with a specified date, and contractual penalties for late performance. Buyers should insist on a clause permitting contract rescission if the cadastral office refuses registration, and a clear mechanism for returning the purchase price from escrow in that scenario.
Using a lawyer-managed escrow account is standard practice and provides the strongest protection for foreign buyers. The escrow agreement should specify the release conditions, the timeline for disbursement, and the procedure if the transaction fails. Bank-managed escrow is an alternative, but fees tend to be higher and release conditions less flexible.
All transfers of real property in the Czech Republic must be registered with the Czech Office for Surveying, Mapping and Cadastre (Český úřad zeměměřický a katastrální, or ČÚZK). Ownership does not pass to the buyer until the cadastral office records the change, making registration a constitutive step, not merely an administrative formality. The property registration rules in the Czech Republic were updated in 2026 to permit electronic submission of certain supporting documents, although the signed purchase contract itself still requires physical filing with notarised signatures.
A cadastral extract (výpis z katastru nemovitostí) contains four key sections: Section A identifies the owner; Section B describes the property (plot number, area, building type); Section C lists encumbrances such as mortgages, easements and pre-emptive rights; and Section D records pending proceedings. Buyers should request a fresh extract no more than 48 hours before signing the purchase contract to confirm that no new encumbrances have been recorded.
The most frequent grounds for rejection include discrepancies between the contract description and the cadastral record, missing notarisation of signatures, and failure to attach the required geometric plan where a plot has been subdivided. A qualified real estate lawyer will reconcile these details before filing, reducing the risk of rejection and the resulting delays.
| Stage | Action required | Who files |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Submit registration application (návrh na vklad) with signed purchase contract and supporting documents | Buyer or buyer’s lawyer (as authorised representative) |
| Day 1–20 | Cadastral office reviews application; protective notice (plomba) is recorded to block competing filings | Cadastral office (automatic) |
| Day 20–30 | If no deficiencies, ownership is registered and extract updated | Cadastral office |
| Within 30 days of registration | Buyer notifies the municipal authority and utility providers of ownership change | Buyer |
Understanding the real estate tax obligations in the Czech Republic for 2026 is essential before committing to a purchase. The tax landscape touches every phase of ownership, from acquisition through annual holding to eventual disposal, and non-residents face additional withholding and reporting obligations.
The Czech Republic abolished its 4 % real estate acquisition tax (daň z nabytí nemovitých věcí) in September 2020, and it has not been reinstated as of 2026. Buyers therefore do not pay a transfer or stamp duty on the purchase price. However, VAT applies to certain transactions: the sale of a new residential dwelling (within five years of the issuance of a final occupancy permit) is subject to a reduced VAT rate of 12 %, while the sale of an older residential property is generally VAT-exempt. Commercial property transactions may attract the standard 21 % VAT rate, depending on the seller’s VAT status and election.
Non-resident landlords receiving rental income from Czech property are subject to a 15 % withholding tax, deducted at source by the tenant (if the tenant is a Czech tax entity) or declared by the landlord in an annual Czech tax return. Resident landlords include rental income in their general income-tax return and may deduct documented expenses, mortgage interest, maintenance, depreciation and property management fees, or apply a flat 30 % expense deduction. A non-resident earning CZK 300,000 per year in gross rent and electing the flat deduction would declare CZK 210,000 in taxable income and owe approximately CZK 31,500 in Czech income tax at the 15 % rate.
Annual property tax (daň z nemovitých věcí) is due by 31 May each year and is calculated based on the property’s floor area, type and location, not its market value. Rates are low by international standards; a typical Prague apartment of 70 m² may attract annual property tax of CZK 1,500–3,500. Owners should also budget for communal fees (fond oprav) in apartment buildings, which cover shared maintenance and reserve-fund contributions.
Capital-gains tax applies to the profit on a property sale if the seller has owned the property for fewer than five years (or ten years for land); gains on sales after these holding periods are exempt from income tax, as set out in the Czech Income Tax Act administered by the Ministry of Finance.
Investors face a distinct compliance profile compared with owner-occupiers. The stricter 60 % LTV ceiling effective 1 April 2026 is the most immediate change, but it is not the only consideration. Investor buy-to-let rules in 2026 also encompass trade-licence requirements for landlords who manage multiple units, VAT registration thresholds for commercial conversions, and enhanced AML reporting where the investor is a non-EU entity.
Even in a transparent market, Czech property transactions carry risks that only thorough due diligence can mitigate. Real estate lawyers in the Czech Republic routinely check for unregistered easements, pending litigation affecting the property, zoning restrictions that could limit future development, and discrepancies between the building’s actual footprint and the cadastral record. Title insurance is available through international insurers but is not standard practice in Czechia; buyers who want this protection should request it expressly.
Instructing a qualified Czech real estate lawyer early, ideally before making an offer, is the single most effective way to protect your investment and avoid costly errors. A lawyer’s scope of engagement typically includes eligibility assessment, contract drafting and review, escrow management, cadastral filing, tax-registration coordination and post-completion compliance checks. Fees are generally structured as a flat rate for standard residential transactions or an hourly rate for complex investment deals, and should be agreed in writing before the engagement begins.
For anyone planning to buy, sell or invest in Czech property in 2026, the following five-step action plan provides an immediate starting framework:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martina Kačerová at Caring Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 14 minutes ago
posted 40 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message