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Knowing how to respond to a UOHS investigation in the Czech Republic is now a front‑line compliance priority for every undertaking active on the Czech market. The Úřad pro ochranu hospodářské soutěže (ÚOHS), the Czech Competition Authority, can issue formal information requests, launch market inquiries, conduct unannounced dawn raids, and serve statements of objections on companies, their managers, and trade associations alike. The 2026 amendment to the Competition Act substantially broadens these powers, introducing a new market‑investigation “competition tool,” a call‑in merger‑control mechanism, and enhanced manager‑level investigative instruments.
This guide sets out the complete Czech Competition Authority procedure in eight practical steps, with timelines, a required‑documents checklist, a costs table, and a dedicated section on the 2026 reform changes, giving general counsel and compliance officers a single playbook they can act on immediately.
Last reviewed: 15 June 2026, updated for the 2026 Competition Act amendment.
ÚOHS enforces the Czech Competition Act (Act No. 143/2001 Coll., as amended) and Articles 101–102 TFEU in the Czech Republic. Its enforcement actions follow a broadly common administrative procedure, but the practical steps a company must take differ depending on the type of action received. Understanding the action type is the first step in calibrating your response.
These actions apply to all undertakings, domestic or foreign, whose conduct affects the Czech market, as well as to individual managers and trade associations. The 2026 amendment reinforces personal liability for managers who direct or permit anticompetitive conduct, making the response process relevant at board level. For a broader introduction to competition law practice, see the Global Law Experts directory.
Any entity or natural person named in a ÚOHS information request is legally obliged to respond within the specified deadline. There is no minimum‑size threshold: small undertakings, sole traders, managers acting in a personal capacity, and trade associations all fall within scope. Foreign companies must respond if the request concerns conduct with effects in the Czech Republic, for example, sales to Czech customers, participation in tenders, or supply agreements with a Czech nexus.
Before engaging with ÚOHS, the addressee should secure the following internal prerequisites:
The following eight‑step procedure covers the full lifecycle of a UOHS information request, from the moment the letter arrives to long‑term remediation. Each step identifies the responsible owner and a typical duration. Adapt the sequence if your matter involves a dawn raid or statement of objections, those scenarios are addressed in Steps 7 and 8.
| Step | Who Does It (Owner) | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Intake & preservation (initial legal hold) | In‑house GC + IT + external competition counsel | Immediate, first 0–48 hours |
| 2. Triage & scope mapping | Compliance lead + external counsel | 2–5 calendar days |
| 3. Privilege & legal review | External counsel (lead) + internal legal | 3–10 calendar days |
| 4. Document collection & production | Records team / custodians / e‑discovery vendor | 7–21 calendar days (varies by volume) |
| 5. Draft & send formal reply | External counsel (draft) / GC (sign‑off) | 3–7 days after collection complete |
| 6. Request extension (if needed) | External counsel / GC (formal request to ÚOHS) | Submit as early as possible; before expiry of initial deadline |
| 7. Post‑submission follow‑up | GC + external counsel | Ongoing (weeks–months) |
| 8. Prepare for escalation (SoO / dawn raid / leniency) | GC + litigation team + PR | Immediate upon escalation |
The moment you receive a UOHS information request, initiate a litigation hold across all potentially responsive data. Practically, this means:
Working with external counsel, map the scope of the request against your organisation’s data landscape:
External counsel should lead a structured privilege review. Under Czech law, legal privilege protects confidential communications between a client and an external lawyer (advokát) for the purpose of providing or receiving legal advice. Industry observers note that communications with in‑house counsel and internal investigation materials may not attract the same level of protection, this remains an area of evolving practice. For each potentially privileged document:
Collect responsive documents from all identified custodians and systems. Where the volume is substantial, engage a specialist e‑discovery vendor for collection, processing, and review. Ensure:
The formal reply letter should be drafted by external counsel and signed off by the general counsel. It should include: a structured response to each question or category in the request; the documents produced (referenced by index number); any privilege claims with the supporting log; any confidentiality claims; and a clear statement of cooperation.
If the reply deadline is insufficient, common where more than 10,000 documents are in scope, translation is required, or data resides abroad, file a reasoned extension request with ÚOHS as early as possible. Cite specific grounds: volume, cross‑border data retrieval, translation needs, or the complexity of the legal assessment. ÚOHS has discretion to grant extensions and, in practice, generally accommodates well‑reasoned requests submitted before the original deadline expires.
After submission, confirm receipt with ÚOHS and request written acknowledgement. Maintain the litigation hold until the matter is formally closed. Track any supplementary requests or follow‑up questions and respond within the deadlines set. Update your internal compliance remediation plan to address any weaknesses the investigation has revealed.
If the investigation escalates, ÚOHS issues a statement of objections, conducts a dawn raid, or indicates a cartel suspicion, the response intensifies:
ÚOHS information requests typically call for a broad range of documents. The exact scope is case‑specific, but the checklist below captures the categories most frequently demanded. Preparing these documents in advance, as part of a standing competition compliance file, significantly reduces investigation timeline pressure.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Contracts with suppliers and customers (relevant period) | PDF copies of signed versions; include all appendices, amendments, and side letters. Issued by the commercial / contracting team. |
| Pricing and discount records | Exports from ERP or pricing systems showing calculation basis and applicable date range. |
| Internal meeting minutes and competition‑related emails | Identify custodians and date range; flag communications with external counsel as potentially privileged. |
| Procurement and tender documents | Bid documents, evaluation matrices, and communications with bidders. |
| Market studies and internal analyses | Market reports, strategy memos, pricing models. Indicate proprietary or trade‑secret status. |
| Communications with competitors | Emails, messaging logs, preserve chain of custody and route through counsel for privilege review. |
| Financial data and sales volumes by product / geography | CSV or Excel exports with clear field definitions. |
| Compliance programme documents and training records | Evidence of competition compliance steps taken, can be a mitigating factor. |
| Documents submitted to other regulators | Prior submissions, commitments, or corrective steps in other jurisdictions. |
| Czech translations of key documents (if requested) | ÚOHS may require certified Czech translations for evidentiary use. |
Note on legal privilege at ÚOHS: Privilege under Czech law protects communications between a client and an external lawyer (advokát) made for the purpose of legal advice. Documents created by in‑house counsel, or internal investigation reports, may not be fully protected. Always prepare a detailed privilege log and assert claims expressly in the cover letter. Where privilege is disputed, ÚOHS may seek a judicial determination.
Deadlines in a ÚOHS investigation are case‑specific and stated in each written request. The table below provides the ranges typically encountered in practice. The 2026 reform extends the public comment window for market inquiry draft reports, giving affected parties more time, but also introducing additional procedural stages that require active engagement.
| Action | Typical Deadline | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Initial UOHS information request (formal RfI) | 7–30 calendar days depending on scope | If >10,000 documents or cross‑border data, request an extension immediately, citing volume. |
| Request for translations / certified copies | 14–30 calendar days from request | Provide prioritised batch deliveries to demonstrate cooperation. |
| ÚOHS market inquiry draft report, public comment | 30–60 calendar days (extended under 2026 reform) | Begin drafting external legal and economic submissions early. |
| Statement of Objections, factual reply | 14–30 calendar days | Use the SoO reply to propose corrective actions; legal counsel should lead. |
| Dawn raid, immediate compliance | Immediate (on‑site) | Follow the dawn‑raid response plan; do not obstruct investigators; ensure counsel is present. |
Always check the formal notice for the exact reply deadline. An extension request filed before the deadline expires is far more likely to be granted than a request filed after the deadline has passed.
ÚOHS does not typically charge administrative fees for receiving or processing responses to information requests or market inquiries. The direct costs of responding are borne by the addressee and can vary significantly depending on the scope and complexity of the investigation.
| Item | Typical Amount (Guidance) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| External competition counsel, investigation response | EUR 5,000 – 50,000+ | Hourly or project‑based; large cartel cases can be materially higher. |
| E‑discovery collection and review | EUR 2,000 – 40,000+ | Scales with data volume; includes processing and review platform costs. |
| Translation and certified copies | EUR 500 – 5,000 | Key documents may require certified Czech translation. |
| Internal staff time and project management | Variable | Opportunity cost across legal, compliance, and IT teams. |
| Fines / penalties (if adverse finding) | Statutory, up to a percentage of annual turnover | Not a response cost, but a material financial risk; consult counsel early. |
Where an investigation reveals corrective pricing adjustments or profit restatements, involve tax and accounting counsel promptly to manage potential fiscal consequences.
The 2026 amendment to the Czech Competition Act represents the most significant overhaul of the competition enforcement framework in over a decade. For companies preparing to respond to a UOHS investigation in the Czech Republic, the reform has three practical consequences that demand immediate attention.
ÚOHS gains a formal “competition tool” allowing it to open market inquiries into sectors or practices without first identifying a specific infringement. These inquiries culminate in a draft report on which affected undertakings may comment. The 2026 reform extends the public comment process, with windows commonly in the range of 30–60 calendar days. Companies should treat a market inquiry 2026 request as seriously as a traditional investigation: prepare economic and legal submissions, and engage external counsel to coordinate public comments.
The amendment equips ÚOHS with expanded investigative instruments, including a call‑in mechanism for merger control that allows the authority to require prior notification of transactions that fall below standard thresholds but raise competition concerns. Early indications suggest that ÚOHS will use this power selectively, targeting digital and technology markets. Separately, the reform strengthens the basis for imposing personal liability on individual managers who direct or permit anticompetitive conduct. Companies should update their preservation and privilege protocols to cover manager‑level communications and ensure that board members receive competition law training.
ÚOHS launched an anonymous and confidential reporting tool for suspected competition infringements. The likely practical effect is an increase in whistleblower‑originated investigations. Companies should review and, if necessary, upgrade their internal reporting channels to ensure suspected issues are surfaced and addressed internally before a regulator complaint materialises.
Actionable steps for compliance teams:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact LENKA ČÍŽKOVÁ at Havlík Švorčík and Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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