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If you are an expat investor deciding whether to buy property personally vs through a company in the Czech Republic in 2026, the answer turns on five variables: your tax profile, your access to mortgage financing, how much liability protection you need, how many properties you plan to hold, and how you intend to exit. The 2026 tax year brings updated personal income-tax thresholds and tighter investment-mortgage underwriting rules that took effect on 1 April 2026, shifting the calculus for buy-to-let purchasers in particular.
This article walks through both ownership structures dimension by dimension, delivers a side-by-side comparison table, and closes with a concrete decision framework so you can choose the right path before you engage counsel or apply for a loan.
When a natural person buys Czech property, ownership transfers upon registration with the Land Registry (katastr nemovitostí). The buyer signs a purchase deed, pays the agreed price (typically held in escrow), and files for title registration. No company formation step is required, and there is no acquisition tax, the Czech Republic abolished the real-estate acquisition tax in 2020.
Czech banks treat individual borrowers as their default mortgage customer. Resident individuals can generally access loan-to-value (LTV) ratios of 80–90 %, depending on the lender and borrower profile. Non-resident buyers face stricter terms: most banks cap LTV at 60–70 % for non-residents and require translated income documentation, a Czech bank account, and proof of tax residency in the applicant’s home country. Interest-rate margins for personal mortgages are typically narrower than for corporate loans, because the bank underwrites against stable personal income rather than rental cash-flow projections.
For owner-occupiers weighing “buy vs rent,” personal ownership remains the simpler route: mortgage interest is a predictable fixed cost, Czech property values in Prague and Brno have shown sustained appreciation, and the personal-residence capital-gains exemption (discussed below) eliminates exit tax entirely for qualifying owners.
Rental income earned by a natural person is taxed as personal income under progressive rates. The Czech Republic also offers a flat-tax regime for qualifying self-employed individuals, and the 2026 tax year introduced updated income thresholds that determine eligibility for these simplified regimes. Individuals can deduct documented expenses or apply a statutory flat-rate deduction of 30 % of gross rental income, whichever is more favourable.
Capital gains on sale enjoy two powerful exemptions: the property is exempt if it served as the seller’s primary residence for at least two years, or, regardless of use, if the seller owned the property for more than ten years. Where neither exemption applies, the gain is taxed as ordinary personal income. These exemptions make personal ownership highly attractive for long-hold investors and owner-occupiers.
The standard vehicle is the společnost s ručením omezeným (s.r.o.), a Czech limited-liability company. Formation requires a notarial deed, registration with the Commercial Register, and a minimum registered capital of CZK 1. In practice, professional setup costs (including notary fees, registration fees, and legal assistance) typically range from CZK 10,000 to CZK 30,000. The process takes approximately two to four weeks from document preparation to registration. Ongoing costs include mandatory bookkeeping, annual financial-statement filings, and corporate income-tax returns, typically adding CZK 30,000–80,000 per year in accounting and compliance fees even for a single-asset company.
Securing a mortgage through an s.r.o. is possible but materially harder. Czech banks that offer investment mortgages to corporate borrowers typically require the managing director to provide a personal guarantee, demand lower LTV (commonly 50–70 %), and apply stricter debt-service-coverage tests. Following the 1 April 2026 underwriting changes, which industry observers expect to further tighten documentation and affordability requirements for investment-property loans, corporate borrowers may face additional scrutiny on projected rental yields and vacancy assumptions. Some lenders have begun requiring independent property valuations and forward-looking cash-flow models before approving s.r.o. mortgage applications.
An s.r.o. pays corporate income tax at 21 % on net rental profits. While the headline rate can be lower than the top marginal personal rate for high earners, profits distributed to the individual owner as dividends are taxed again, creating a layer of double taxation. Capital gains on the sale of property held by the company are also taxed at the 21 % corporate rate, and the after-tax proceeds face dividend taxation when extracted. Non-resident holding companies introduce additional complexity: cross-border dividend flows may trigger withholding-tax obligations, and the applicable rate depends on the relevant double-taxation treaty.
| Dimension | Buy personally (natural person) | Buy via company (Czech s.r.o. / foreign company) |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility & set-up | Simple: sign purchase deed and register title. No company formation needed. EU/EEA nationals and most foreign nationals can buy residential property directly. | Requires forming a Czech s.r.o. (notary deed, Commercial Register, annual compliance). Adds formation cost and ongoing admin. |
| Mortgage access & rates | Easier for resident individuals; LTV 80–90 %. Non-residents face stricter LTV (60–70 %) and documentation requirements. | Higher scrutiny; LTV typically 50–70 %. Director personal guarantees usually required. Apr 2026 underwriting changes tighten criteria further. |
| Tax on rental income | Progressive personal income-tax rates; 30 % flat-rate expense deduction available. 2026 threshold updates apply. | Corporate income tax at 21 %. Distributions to the owner taxed again as dividends, potential double taxation. |
| Capital gains on sale | Exempt if primary residence (2+ years) or owned 10+ years. Otherwise taxed as personal income. | Taxed at 21 % corporate rate. Distribution of sale proceeds attracts further dividend tax on exit. |
| Property transfer costs | No acquisition tax (abolished 2020). Standard notary and Land Registry fees only. | Same transaction costs, plus potential VAT considerations and corporate restructuring fees if selling assets out of the company. |
| Liability & creditor exposure | Owner is personally liable. Creditors can reach the property and other personal assets. | Liability limited to company assets. Directors may be liable for personal guarantees or tax breaches. Good for asset isolation. |
| Administration & compliance | Low: annual personal tax return plus property-tax filing (deadline typically 2 April). | Higher: mandatory bookkeeping, corporate income-tax return, annual financial statements, potential audit obligations. |
| Exit & enforceability | Straightforward property sale; primary-residence exemption can eliminate capital-gains tax entirely. | Can sell company shares (simpler for transferring control) or sell the asset from the company (triggers corporate tax). Share sale avoids Land Registry transfer but buyer inherits company liabilities. |
| Typical up-front & running costs | Low: notary fees, Land Registry, mortgage arrangement fee. | Formation CZK 10,000–30,000+; annual accounting CZK 30,000–80,000; plus notary, registry, and legal fees on acquisition. |
Key takeaways from the table:
The tax comparison is the heart of the decision for most buy-to-let investors. Czech corporate income tax stands at 21 % of net profit. For an s.r.o., rental income less deductible expenses (depreciation, maintenance, insurance, interest) is taxed at this flat rate. However, when the owner extracts profits as dividends, a further layer of tax applies. The combined effective rate can exceed the top marginal personal rate for many investors, especially those whose total income falls within lower personal-tax brackets.
For natural persons, rental income is taxed under the progressive personal income-tax system. The 2026 tax year brought updated thresholds that affect which bracket applies. Individual landlords can elect to deduct actual documented expenses or claim a flat-rate expense deduction of 30 % of gross rental income, whichever produces the better result. This flat-rate option is particularly valuable for landlords with low actual costs (e.g., mortgage-free properties).
The following table illustrates the tax and cost comparison for a single buy-to-let apartment generating CZK 600,000 in gross annual rent:
| Item | Buy personally | Buy via company (s.r.o.) |
|---|---|---|
| Tax on rental income | Progressive personal income-tax rates (2026 thresholds apply). 30 % flat-rate expense deduction available. | Corporate income tax at 21 % on net profit. Dividend tax applies when profits are distributed. |
| Capital gains on sale | Exempt if primary residence (2+ years) or owned 10+ years. Otherwise taxed as personal income. | Taxed at 21 % corporate rate; distribution of sale proceeds triggers additional dividend tax. |
| Typical mortgage LTV (resident) | 80–90 % | 50–70 %; personal guarantee of director typically required. |
| Company formation cost | N/A | CZK 10,000–30,000 (one-off, including notary and registration). |
| Annual compliance & accounting | Low, personal tax return and property-tax filing. | CZK 30,000–80,000 per year for bookkeeping, corporate accounts, and filings. |
| Effective tax after distributions | Depends on personal income-tax bracket (potentially lower for moderate earners). | 21 % corporate + dividend tax on distributions (combined rate may exceed personal rate). |
The capital-gains exemption deserves emphasis: a natural person who holds a rental property for more than ten years pays zero tax on the sale gain. An s.r.o. selling the same property after the same holding period pays 21 % corporate tax on the gain and further tax on dividend extraction. For a single buy-to-let held long term, the personal route delivers a materially better after-tax exit.
Czech mortgage lenders assess individual borrowers on personal income, employment stability, and existing debt obligations. Resident individuals routinely secure LTV ratios of 80–90 %. Non-resident expats typically face LTV caps of 60–70 %, with lenders requiring certified translations of income documentation, proof of tax residency abroad, and a Czech bank account.
Corporate borrowers face a different underwriting framework. Banks lending to an s.r.o. evaluate the company’s projected rental cash flow, vacancy assumptions, and debt-service coverage, not the director’s personal income. This results in lower LTV (commonly 50–70 %), higher interest-rate margins, and a near-universal requirement for the director or shareholder to sign a personal guarantee. The likely practical effect is that the liability-isolation benefit of the s.r.o. is partially undermined the moment the bank demands a personal guarantee.
Industry observers expect the investment-mortgage underwriting changes introduced on 1 April 2026 to further tighten lending standards for buy-to-let borrowers. Early indications suggest lenders are applying stricter stress-testing to rental-income assumptions and requiring independent valuations on investment properties. Prospective corporate borrowers should confirm current bank requirements before submitting applications, as terms are changing rapidly.
Liability protection is the strongest argument for corporate ownership. An s.r.o. ring-fences the property: if a tenant sues for injury or a contractor dispute escalates, only company assets are at risk. A natural person who owns the property directly faces personal liability, creditors can pursue the property and, in some cases, the owner’s other personal assets.
The practical caveat: Czech mortgage lenders almost always require the s.r.o. director to provide a personal guarantee, which re-introduces personal exposure for the guaranteed loan amount. Directors also face statutory duties and potential personal liability for unpaid taxes or social contributions. Genuine liability isolation therefore works best for unmortgaged properties or for investors with sufficient corporate equity that no personal guarantee is needed.
Forming a Czech s.r.o. takes approximately two to four weeks (notarial deed, trade licence registration, Commercial Register entry). One-off setup costs range from CZK 10,000 to CZK 30,000 when using professional services. Annual bookkeeping and compliance add CZK 30,000–80,000 per year. For a single rental apartment, these costs significantly reduce net yields. Personal ownership, by contrast, requires only the property-tax return (filed by 2 April each year) and the annual personal income-tax return.
Exit strategy is where the two routes diverge most sharply. A personal owner who has held the property for more than ten years pays no capital-gains tax. An s.r.o. owner faces 21 % corporate tax on the gain plus dividend taxation on extraction. Alternatively, selling s.r.o. shares (rather than the underlying property) can simplify the transfer and avoid Land Registry fees, but the buyer inherits all company liabilities, making share deals less attractive to many purchasers and often requiring extensive due diligence.
Three developments in 2026 directly affect the personal-vs-company calculation for expat property ownership in the Czech Republic:
These changes make 2026 a year in which timing the ownership-structure decision before applying for financing is more important than usual. Locking in a mortgage application before further tightening, or restructuring ownership to qualify under the most favourable personal-tax bracket, can produce meaningful savings over the loan term.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Simplest purchase process and lowest admin cost | Buy personally |
| Best mortgage terms and highest LTV | Buy personally |
| Tax-free exit after long hold | Buy personally (10-year exemption) |
| Liability isolation from tenant/contractor claims | Buy via company |
| Holding three or more rental properties | Buy via company |
| Selling control via share transfer without Land Registry fees | Buy via company |
| Estate and succession planning across jurisdictions | Buy via company (with professional advice) |
Choose personal ownership when:
Choose company ownership when:
Three investor archetypes:
The decision between buying property personally vs through a company in the Czech Republic is implementable without counsel only in the simplest owner-occupier scenarios. For any buy-to-let investment, multi-property plan, or cross-border financing arrangement, engaging a Czech real-estate lawyer before committing is strongly advisable. You can find a Czech real-estate lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
Specific situations that move this decision into professional-advice territory:
A qualified Czech property lawyer will typically deliver a structure memo comparing both routes against your specific tax position, a title due-diligence report, mortgage-term review, and a closing checklist covering escrow, registration, and post-acquisition compliance obligations.
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.
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