land referanse

Tsjekkia — Arbeidskalender, løns- og mva-referanse

Den raskeste ruten til dette markedets feriekalender, lønplanlegging og momsregler.

🇨🇿 CZKEurope/Prague21% standard mva

Neste helligdag

Jan Hus Day · man. 6. juli 2026

national

Arbeidsdager

254 arbeidsdager 2026

8 offentlige helligdager

Ordinær moms

21% standard

15% · 10%

løneksempel

45 000,00 CZK → 36 000,00 CZK net

Gjennomsnittlig månedlig eksempel

Kjerneruter for dette markedet

Åpne nøyaktig arbeidsflyt du trenger uten å forlate land kontekst.

Kommende offentlige helligdager

Neste ferier betyr mest for forfallsdatoer, bemanning og lønudbetaling.

DatoHelligdagType
man. 6. juli 2026Jan Hus Daynational
man. 28. sep. 2026Czech Statehood Daynational
tor. 24. des. 2026Christmas Evenational
fre. 25. des. 2026Christmas Daynational

2026 månedlig kapasitet

Et raskt månedlig syn før du åpner siden med fullt arbeidsdager.

1

21 arbeidsdager

1 helligdager i måned

2

20 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

3

22 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

4

21 arbeidsdager

1 helligdager i måned

5

20 arbeidsdager

1 helligdager i måned

6

22 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

7

22 arbeidsdager

1 helligdager i måned

8

21 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

9

21 arbeidsdager

1 helligdager i måned

10

22 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

11

21 arbeidsdager

0 helligdager i måned

12

21 arbeidsdager

3 helligdager i måned

lønnsliste referanse

Øyeblikks bilde av lønplanlægning

Gjennomsnittlig brutto månedlig45 000,00 CZK
Gjennomsnittlig månedlig netto36 000,00 CZK
Minstelønn220,00 CZK / hourly
Lønmodellår2026

mva-referanse

Standard og redusert satser

standard sats21%
Reduced15%
Reduced10%
Zero-rated0%

regionalt kontekst

Nasjonalt grunnlag, lokalt review hvor nødvendig

Tsjekkia har ytterligere regionalt kontekst som kan påvirke operasjonell planlegging. Tallene ovenfor viser først nasjonallinjen.

PragueCentral BohemiaMoravian-SilesianSouth Moravia

Tsjekkia — land referanse

Den raskeste ruten til dette markedets feriekalender, lønplanlegging og momsregler.

Work culture and weekly rhythm in the Czech Republic

The Czech Republic operates a forty-hour standard workweek under the Labour Code, with most office workers running an eight- or nine-to-five rhythm with a thirty-minute lunch break. The five-day Monday-to-Friday pattern is universal, and recent labour code amendments have introduced clearer rules on remote work cost reimbursement and right to disconnect.

Statutory paid leave is twenty working days per year for most employees, with collective agreements in many sectors adding a fifth week (twenty-five days). Public sector employees are entitled to twenty-five working days, and the cultural expectation is that office workers in Prague and Brno take a substantial summer block plus several shorter breaks.

Prague and Brno have established themselves as significant technology and shared services hubs over the past two decades, with strong English-speaking workforces and well-developed startup ecosystems. The cost of living relative to Western European hubs and the high quality of life have attracted both international employers and remote workers from across Europe.

Public holiday landscape in the Czech Republic

The Czech Republic observes thirteen public holidays per year, including New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Labour Day, Liberation Day on 8 May, Saints Cyril and Methodius Day on 5 July, Jan Hus Day on 6 July, Saint Wenceslas Day on 28 September, Independent Czechoslovak State Day on 28 October, Struggle for Freedom and Democracy Day on 17 November, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Saint Stephen's Day on 26 December.

When a public holiday falls on a weekend, no substitute day is granted in the private sector. The summer concentration of historical commemorations on 5 and 6 July produces a notable mid-summer break window, and the November-to-December stretch from Struggle for Freedom and Democracy Day through Christmas creates a long quiet period in most office sectors.

The cultural pattern of taking the bridge day around midweek holidays is similar to neighbouring Germany and Austria. May, with Labour Day and Liberation Day eight days apart, often produces a low-capacity week with multiple bridge days observed by significant parts of the workforce.

Salary and payroll fundamentals in the Czech Republic

Czech payroll uses a progressive personal income tax with rates of fifteen percent up to a high income threshold and twenty-three percent above it. Employee social and health contributions total eleven percent of gross (6.5 percent social and 4.5 percent health), and the combined effective rate on a typical middle-income salary is between twenty and thirty percent depending on tax credits.

Employer-side social and health contributions add 33.8 percent on top of gross (24.8 percent social and 9 percent health), producing a total employer cost of approximately 1.34 times the gross salary. This figure is similar to Slovak and Polish levels but lower than Austrian or German equivalents.

The Czech tax system includes child tax credits, dependent spouse credits and various other deductions that can materially reduce the effective rate for families and lower-income workers. Self-employed workers (OSVČ) operate under a separate tax regime that includes the option of a flat-rate tax (paušální daň) for those with turnover below one million CZK annually.

VAT, invoicing and the business framework in the Czech Republic

The Czech Republic applies a standard VAT (DPH) rate of twenty-one percent and a reduced rate of twelve percent (food, water, newspapers, books, accommodation, public transport, certain medical equipment, social housing). The two-tier system was simplified in 2024 by merging the previous fifteen and ten percent rates into the single twelve percent reduced rate, which reduced the number of edge cases.

Czech invoice content requirements follow the EU directive. The simplified invoice format is permitted for transactions below ten thousand CZK gross. Invoices must be retained for ten years for VAT purposes, which is longer than the typical EU norm.

The Czech VAT registration threshold is two million CZK in annual turnover (approximately eighty thousand euros), one of the higher thresholds in the EU. Above the threshold, registration is mandatory with monthly or quarterly returns depending on turnover. Foreign businesses providing digital services to Czech B2C customers must register through the EU's OSS scheme.

Practical planning tips for the Czech Republic

When recruiting in the Czech Republic, evaluate Brno and Ostrava in addition to Prague. The technology and shared services markets in regional Czech cities are strong and often more cost-competitive than Prague while offering high English fluency and a stable workforce.

Plan around the cluster of historical commemorations in early July (Cyril and Methodius, Jan Hus). The two-day holiday window combined with the surrounding weekends often produces a four- to five-day continuous break that affects mid-summer project schedules.

If your business sells to Czech customers above the registration threshold, plan for the move to control statements and electronic VAT reporting that has been ongoing since 2016. The Czech tax authority's digital infrastructure is well-developed and Czech accounting software providers support it natively.

Ofte stilte spørsmål

Korte svar på spørsmålene folk oftest stiller før de bruker siden som grunnlag.

What is included on the Tsjekkia page?
The country page links together holidays, working days, salary planning, VAT references and the most relevant calculators.
How should I use the country page?
Use it as the starting point for that market, then open the holiday, salary or VAT route that matches your task.
Are regional differences covered?
The page highlights regional considerations where they matter, but local verification may still be needed for final decisions.
Are the salary and VAT figures legal advice?
No. They are planning references and should be confirmed against official country sources before regulated use.
Hva viser Tsjekkia-landsiden meg?
Tsjekkia-siden kombinerer fire pilarer: helligdagskalenderen for inneværende og kommende år, antall arbeidsdager per måned, lønnsplanleggingsmodellen med gjeldende skattetrinn og bidrag og momsrammen med alle gjeldende satser og fakturaregler. Hver pilar leder til en dedikert kalkulator eller årsspesifikk dybdeside.
Hvordan sammenligner Tsjekkia seg med nabolandene?
Nærliggende land-seksjonen nederst på siden lenker direkte til nærliggende markeder. De mest nyttige sammenligningene er vanligvis brutto-netto delta, mva og antall helligdager.
Er Tsjekkia-lønnstall pålitelige for et tilbud?
Kalkulatoren reflekterer gjeldende trinn og satser og gir et rimelig estimat for planlegging av et tilbud. For den faktiske lønnsslippen i en bindende kontrakt, bekreft med en lokal lønnsadministrator.
Hvor kommer Tsjekkia-helligdagsdatoene fra?
Data følger offisielle regjerings- og departementspublikasjoner. Regionale helligdager registreres separat slik at HR-planleggere kan bygge nøyaktige kalendere for distribuerte team.
Kan jeg planlegge en prosjektfrist med Tsjekkia-arbeidsdagstellingen?
Ja. Den månedlige tellingen trekker allerede fra nasjonale helligdager og standardhelger. For prosjekter avhengig av by eller region, sjekk også den regionale seksjonen.
Viser Tsjekkia-siden mva-regler for grenseoverskridende salg?
Standard- og reduserte satser er direkte synlige; kalkulatoren dekker vanlige scenarier. B2B- og B2C-regler under EU-OSS forklares i de lenkede ressursartiklene.

Lønnskalkulatorer

Utforsk alle lønnsverktøy for dette landet: brutto-netto, netto-brutto og arbeidsgiver­kostnader.

Helligdagsår

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Arbeidsdager per måned

Drill ned i en hvilken som helst måned for den nøyaktige listen over arbeidsdager, offentlige helligdager og en fullstendig planleggingsoversikt.

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