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The attorney escrow process in the Czech Republic in 2026 is the standard mechanism by which buyers and sellers safeguard the purchase price during a property transaction. An independent attorney holds the funds in a dedicated escrow account and releases them to the seller only after the buyer is registered as the new owner in the Cadastre of Real Estate. Since 1 January 2026, every attorney opening an escrow must first register it in the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register maintained by the Czech Bar Association (Česká advokátní komora), and clients should not transfer funds until ČAK confirmation is received.
This guide sets out the complete procedure, eligibility, documents, timeline, costs, and common pitfalls, so that buyers (especially expats), sellers, estate agents and solicitors can navigate every step with confidence.
Attorney escrow (advokátní úschova) is a neutral payment arrangement in which a Czech-licensed attorney receives the purchase price from the buyer, holds it in a separate bank account, and disburses it to the seller once pre-agreed release conditions are met, most commonly, the successful registration of ownership in the Cadastre. The arrangement protects both parties: the buyer knows the funds will not reach the seller until title has transferred, and the seller knows the money is already secured before signing over the property.
Any buyer or seller may use attorney escrow, regardless of nationality or residency status. Foreigners, including EU/EEA citizens and third-country nationals, can buy most types of Czech real estate without a special permit, although agricultural and forestry land may be subject to additional conditions. Attorney escrow is not legally mandatory, but it has become the prevailing market standard. Industry observers expect its use to increase further now that the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register provides an additional transparency layer. Notaries can also hold escrow in the Czech Republic, but attorneys remain the dominant choice for residential and commercial transactions because they typically handle the entire purchase, drafting the contract, filing the cadastre application, and administering the escrow, as a single engagement.
Before a transaction can proceed through attorney escrow, several prerequisites must be in place. The earlier an escrow lawyer in the Czech Republic is instructed, the smoother the process will be. As a rule, buyers should engage a lawyer before signing the purchase agreement, not after.
If the buyer will not be present in the Czech Republic to sign documents, a notarised power of attorney (plná moc) authorising a representative is required. For non-EU documents, an apostille or superlegislation is necessary depending on the country of origin. All documents in a language other than Czech must be accompanied by a certified Czech translation prepared by a sworn translator (soudní překladatel). EU national ID cards are generally accepted, but a certified copy plus translation is recommended to prevent cadastre queries.
Czech attorneys are subject to anti-money-laundering obligations under the AML Act (zákon č. 253/2008 Sb.). Before accepting funds into escrow, the attorney will carry out know-your-customer (KYC) checks, which typically include verifying identity documents, confirming the source of funds with recent bank statements (usually the preceding three to six months), and confirming the beneficial owner of the purchasing entity if the buyer is a company. Buyers should have a bank account from which they can send an international or domestic SEPA transfer and should be prepared to provide supporting documentation promptly. Delays in AML checks are one of the most frequent causes of transaction hold-ups.
The following numbered steps describe the complete attorney escrow process from initial agreement through to fund release. Each step identifies the responsible actor and the typical duration. The consolidated timeline table below can be used as a planning checklist.
The buyer and seller (or their agents) agree the key commercial terms: price, payment timeline, property description (including parcel and lot numbers from the Cadastre) and any special conditions such as a mortgage discharge by the seller’s bank. The escrow attorney, or the buyer’s own lawyer, drafts or reviews the purchase agreement (kupní smlouva). Both parties sign. The agreement must specify the exact escrow release conditions so there is no ambiguity later. This step typically takes one to seven days depending on the complexity of negotiations.
The escrow attorney prepares a separate escrow agreement (smlouva o advokátní úschově) setting out the parties, the escrow account details, the amount to be deposited, the release conditions, and the procedure if the cadastre application is rejected. The agreement must reference the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register and confirm that funds will only be requested after ČAK confirmation has been received. The buyer, seller and attorney each sign originals. This step usually takes one to three days.
This is the new mandatory checkpoint for 2026. The escrow attorney enters the escrow details into the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register (advokátní kniha úschov). ČAK processes the entry and sends confirmation to both the depositor (buyer) and the beneficiary (seller). The attorney also pays the statutory CZK 500 contribution to the ČAK Guarantee Fund for that escrow. Confirmation is typically issued within one business day, although buyers should allow up to five business days during peak periods. Do not transfer funds until this confirmation is in hand, it verifies that the escrow has been properly registered and that the attorney’s account details are correct.
Only after receiving ČAK confirmation should the buyer initiate the bank transfer. The transfer should be made to the exact account number specified in the ČAK confirmation and the escrow agreement. For domestic SEPA transfers, clearance is usually same-day to two business days. International transfers from non-SEPA countries may take longer. The attorney will confirm receipt of funds to both parties. This is the point at which how to pay for property in the Czech Republic becomes critical, always use the verified escrow account, never a personal account or agent-held account.
With the purchase price secured in escrow, the attorney files the proposal for entry (návrh na vklad) with the relevant Cadastre of Real Estate office (katastrální úřad). The application package includes the signed purchase agreement, proof that the escrow is funded, and any required supporting documents (mortgage discharge, power of attorney, certified translations). Electronic submissions to the Czech Cadastral Office (ČÚZK) are processed faster than paper filings, typically five to ten business days versus up to thirty business days or more for complex or contested applications. The cadastre will publish a notice of pending registration (plomba) on the title, alerting third parties that a change of ownership is in progress.
Once the cadastre approves the application, the buyer is officially registered as the new owner. The attorney obtains the updated cadastre extract (výpis z katastru nemovitostí) confirming the transfer. The attorney then records the completion date in the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register. If the cadastre raises queries or requires corrections, the attorney responds on behalf of the parties, this can extend the timeline by several weeks in exceptional cases.
With the release escrow conditions satisfied, typically, presentation of the updated cadastre extract showing the buyer as the registered owner, the attorney releases the purchase price to the seller. If the seller has an outstanding mortgage, the attorney may pay the seller’s bank directly to secure a discharge, with the remainder going to the seller. Release normally occurs the same day the attorney confirms registration or within the release window agreed in the escrow agreement (usually zero to three business days). The attorney issues final receipts and a settlement statement to all parties. For commercial transactions, VAT handling and any other tax obligations should be confirmed with a Czech tax adviser at this stage.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Sign purchase agreement and instruct lawyer | Buyer, Seller, their lawyers / estate agent | 1–7 days (depends on negotiation) |
| 2. Draft and sign escrow agreement; attorney prepares escrow entry details | Buyer, Seller, Escrow Attorney | 1–3 days |
| 3. Attorney registers escrow in ČAK Electronic Escrow Register; ČAK sends confirmation to parties | Escrow Attorney → ČAK → Buyer/Seller | 1–5 business days (typically 1 day) |
| 4. Buyer transfers funds to specified escrow account (only after ČAK confirmation) | Buyer / Buyer’s bank | 1–3 business days (bank transfer time) |
| 5. Attorney files cadastre application / proposal for entry | Escrow Attorney | Application: 1–5 days; cadastre processing: 5–30 business days |
| 6. Cadastre registers buyer as owner; attorney records completion in ČAK register | Cadastre Office; Escrow Attorney | Included in step 5 processing; some cases longer |
| 7. Attorney releases escrow funds to seller / pays mortgage / settles fees | Escrow Attorney | Same day to 3 business days after registration confirmation |
Gathering the correct escrow requirements documents before instructing the attorney prevents delays at every subsequent stage. The table below lists each document, who issues it, and any special notes for expat buyers. Missing or incorrectly formatted documents are the single most common reason for cadastre queries and processing delays, so it is worth treating this as a formal checklist.
| Document | Notes (Who Issues It, Format, Validity) |
|---|---|
| Signed purchase agreement (kupní smlouva) | Issued by parties; original signed copies; must specify price, parties, parcel IDs and release conditions. |
| Escrow agreement (smlouva o advokátní úschově) | Drafted by escrow attorney; must reference ČAK registration and release conditions; signed originals for attorney files. |
| ID documents (passport / national ID) | Buyer and seller; passports for expats; include certified Czech translation if document is not in Czech; for EU IDs, copy plus translation recommended. |
| Proof of title / extract from Cadastre (výpis z katastru) | Obtained from ČÚZK (online or paper); seller provides up-to-date extract confirming seller is the registered owner. |
| Power of attorney (if using a proxy) | Notarised or officially apostilled depending on country of origin; certified translation into Czech required. |
| Proof of source of funds / bank statements | Bank-issued statements; AML compliance: recent 3–6 months; translated if necessary. |
| Documents for cadastre application (proposal for entry) | Purchase agreement, proof of payment instructions, seller consent / mortgage discharge documents; attorney compiles and files. |
| Mortgage release / bank consent (if seller has a mortgage) | Bank-issued discharge or consent document; needed before cadastre can register buyer as owner. |
| Tax confirmation / proof of payment (if applicable) | Evidence of any applicable tax payment; include receipts. Confirm current obligations with a tax adviser. |
Expat buyers should pay particular attention to the documents needed for cadastre registration: the cadastre will not accept a purchase agreement that lacks precise parcel identification numbers, and any foreign-language documents without sworn Czech translations will be returned. A documents checklist for Czech property purchases tailored to foreign buyers is a useful reference to work through alongside this table.
How long does property transfer take in the Czech Republic? The answer depends on the complexity of the title, whether the seller has an outstanding mortgage, and whether the submission to the Cadastre is electronic or paper-based. The timeline table in the step-by-step procedure above provides the baseline. The following notes address the main sources of variation.
End-to-end, a straightforward residential purchase using the attorney escrow process in the Czech Republic in 2026 takes approximately three to six weeks from signing the purchase agreement to fund release. Complex transactions, involving corporate buyers, multiple properties, or agricultural land, can take two to three months.
Understanding how to pay for property in the Czech Republic includes knowing every cost line beyond the purchase price itself. The table below itemises the typical fees. All figures should be confirmed with the instructed attorney before engagement, and buyers should request a written fee estimate as part of the engagement letter.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Attorney fees (transaction and escrow handling) | CZK 10,000 – CZK 50,000+ | Varies by firm, property value and complexity. Often a fixed fee or a percentage of the purchase price. Includes escrow account administration. Request a written fee estimate. |
| Bank transfer fees | CZK 0 – CZK 500 per transfer (domestic SEPA) | International transfers may incur higher charges depending on buyer’s bank and country of origin. |
| ČAK Guarantee Fund contribution | CZK 500 per reported escrow | Statutory contribution paid by the attorney. May be reflected in overall legal fees. |
| Cadastre filing fee | CZK 100 – CZK 2,000 | Depends on type of proposal and whether submission is electronic. Confirm current schedule with ČÚZK. |
| Mortgage discharge / bank fees | Varies | Seller’s bank may charge administrative fees for issuing discharge documents. |
| Transfer tax / other taxes | Typically no separate real estate transfer tax for private sales | For commercial transactions, VAT or other taxes may apply. Confirm current tax treatment with a Czech tax adviser. |
| Notary fees (if used) | CZK 500 – CZK 5,000+ | Optional depending on transaction. Translations and notarisation add cost. |
Is there a real estate transfer tax in the Czech Republic? For private sales of residential property, there is typically no separate real estate transfer tax. However, income tax on any capital gain realised by the seller may apply, and commercial property transactions may attract VAT. Tax rules change periodically, so buyers and sellers should obtain current advice from a qualified Czech tax adviser before completion. A Czech property purchase timeline and costs summary can help buyers budget accurately from the outset.
The most significant procedural change for the attorney escrow process in the Czech Republic in 2026 is the mandatory use of the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register (advokátní kniha úschov). Effective from 1 January 2026, every attorney who accepts client funds or securities into escrow must register the escrow in this centralised electronic system operated by the Czech Bar Association.
Under the register requirement, the attorney enters the escrow details, parties, amount, release conditions and account information, into the system. ČAK then sends a confirmation to both the depositor (typically the buyer) and the beneficiary (typically the seller). The attorney must also record the date on which funds are actually received and, later, the date on which they are released. For each reported escrow, the attorney pays a statutory contribution of CZK 500 to the ČAK Guarantee Fund. This fund provides a safety net: if an attorney misappropriates escrow funds, affected clients may claim compensation from the fund, subject to the caps and claim deadlines set out in ČAK’s published guidance.
The practical effect for buyers, sellers and estate agents is straightforward: always request written ČAK confirmation before transferring the purchase price to the escrow account. The confirmation verifies that the escrow is properly registered, that the attorney is authorised, and that the account details are correct. This is a simple but effective safeguard, early indications suggest that the register has already reduced instances of funds being sent to incorrect or unverified accounts.
| Feature | Attorney Escrow | Direct Bank Transfer to Seller |
|---|---|---|
| Funds held by neutral third party | Yes, attorney holds funds in a dedicated separate account | No, funds go directly to seller’s account |
| Release tied to cadastre registration | Yes, release conditions enforced by attorney | No, seller receives funds regardless of registration outcome |
| ČAK Guarantee Fund protection | Yes, CZK 500 contribution per escrow; compensation available | No |
| AML / KYC verification | Yes, attorney performs mandatory checks | Bank performs standard checks only |
| Risk if registration fails | Low, funds returned per escrow clause | High, buyer must pursue seller for refund |
| Cost | Attorney fees (CZK 10,000–50,000+) | Bank transfer fees only |
For a detailed comparison, see our forthcoming guide Attorney escrow vs bank escrow for expat buyers in the Czech Republic.
The following illustrative conditions are commonly used in Czech escrow agreements. They are provided for reference only and do not constitute legal advice, buyers should have their own attorney review and adapt any clause to their specific transaction.
The attorney escrow process in the Czech Republic in 2026 provides buyers with a robust, regulated mechanism for protecting the purchase price during property transactions. The addition of the ČAK Electronic Escrow Register has strengthened that protection by adding an independent verification checkpoint before funds are transferred. By following the step-by-step procedure outlined above, and by insisting on clear release conditions, proper ČAK confirmation, and verified account details, buyers can proceed with confidence.
To find an experienced Czech Republic real estate lawyer who can manage your escrow and cadastre registration, browse the Global Law Experts directory. Early engagement with a qualified attorney is the single most effective step you can take to protect your investment.
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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