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If you are looking to buy an apartment in the Czech Republic as a foreign national, the good news is that Czech law places no blanket restriction on who can purchase residential property. Both EU and non‑EU citizens may acquire flats, houses and commercial premises in their own name. The practical challenge, however, is not eligibility, it is navigating contracts drafted in Czech, verifying title through the Land Registry, timing payments correctly and avoiding the contract pitfalls I see catching expat buyers every month. At Caring Legal, I guide international clients through each of these steps, and this tier 2 guide to buying an apartment in the Czech Republic distils the process into the exact sequence you should follow.
Whether you are relocating to Prague for work, investing from abroad or helping a corporate assignee secure housing, use the checklist below as your roadmap. Every section links to a specific milestone in the transaction so you can track where you are and what comes next.
Czech law does not prohibit foreign nationals from acquiring residential real estate. According to the EURAXESS Czech Republic guidance portal, a foreigner can buy a house or a flat in the Czech Republic provided they are a citizen of the EU, hold a permanent residence permit, or fall within another recognised category. In practice, the purchase process is the same regardless of nationality, and the transfer of ownership can normally be completed within one to two months with no special documentation required from a foreigner, as confirmed by the InfoCizinci portal for foreign nationals.
EU and EEA citizens face no ownership restrictions whatsoever. They buy under the same legal conditions as Czech nationals. Third‑country nationals, including citizens of the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and other non‑EU states, can also purchase property directly in their own name. The only practical difference is that non‑EU buyers may face additional scrutiny from banks when applying for a Czech mortgage, and they should confirm that property ownership alone does not automatically confer a residence permit.
Special restrictions apply only to state‑owned assets and certain agricultural or forest land, which may require approval from the relevant land office. For standard residential apartments in urban areas, which is what most expat buyers target, no government approval, permit or prior authorisation is needed. If you are purchasing through a Czech legal entity (s.r.o.), the process is slightly different but the eligibility position remains the same.
Czech property listings use a shorthand system that confuses many international buyers. The two main portals, Sreality.cz and Expats.cz, list apartments using codes such as 2+kk, 3+1 or 4+kk, alongside area figures that may refer to usable floor space or total built area. Understanding these terms before you view a single property will save you from misreading the size and layout of what you are buying.
When browsing listings, pay attention to whether the property is sold as osobní vlastnictví (personal ownership) or družstevní byt (co‑operative share). Only personal ownership gives you a title recorded in the Land Registry. Co‑operative shares transfer differently and carry additional risks that I recommend discussing with a lawyer before committing. Also watch for the distinction between užitná plocha (usable area) and celková plocha (total area including common parts), these figures can differ by 15–25 %.
Due diligence is the single most important step in the entire transaction. Before you sign anything or pay a deposit, you or your lawyer must verify the seller’s title, check for encumbrances and confirm the legal status of the property. Foreign buyers who navigate the Czech Land Registry system, EU rules on ownership and tax compliance requirements without proper legal assistance risk costly mistakes, as noted by the ARWS legal advisory team.
In my experience, the following items should be verified before you commit to any binding agreement:
| Item to check | Where to verify | Typical document |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership and title | CUZK Land Registry (online or in person) | Land Registry extract (výpis z KN) |
| Liens, mortgages, easements | Section C/D of the Land Registry extract | Same extract, Sections C and D |
| Condominium status and debts | SVJ committee or property manager | SVJ meeting minutes, fund statement |
| Building permits / zoning | Local building authority (stavební úřad) | Building permit documentation |
| Energy certificate | Seller (legally obligated to provide) | Energy performance certificate (PENB) |
| Seller’s tax and utility debts | Seller’s declaration; municipal tax office | Written confirmation / clearance letter |
I advise my clients never to sign a reservation agreement until at least the Land Registry extract has been reviewed and the SVJ financial position confirmed. These two checks alone catch the majority of problems I encounter in practice.
The contract phase is where most legal risk sits. Czech property transactions typically involve two or three agreements in sequence, and the protective clauses in each one determine whether your deposit is safe and your purchase is enforceable.
The standard sequence is:
| Agreement type | Typical deposit | Refundability |
|---|---|---|
| Reservation agreement (rezervační smlouva) | 3–5 % of purchase price | Usually non‑refundable if buyer withdraws without cause; refundable if seller breaches |
| Preliminary purchase contract (smlouva o smlouvě budoucí kupní) | 5–10 % (may absorb reservation deposit) | Refundable if conditions precedent not met (e.g., title defect, mortgage rejection) |
| Final purchase contract (kupní smlouva) | Full purchase price deposited into escrow | Released to seller only after Land Registry records buyer’s ownership |
I recommend insisting on the following protective clauses in every purchase contract:
Do you need a Czech lawyer or notary? In my professional view, the answer is unequivocally yes. While Czech law does not strictly require a notary for standard apartment purchases, it does require that the signatures on the deed submitted to the Land Registry be officially verified (úředně ověřený podpis). A Czech lawyer who specialises in real estate will draft or review your contract, hold funds in escrow and handle the Land Registry submission. Notaries can also perform these functions. What matters is that you have an independent legal representative, not the seller’s agent, protecting your interests.
Once the purchase contract is signed and the purchase price deposited in escrow, the next step is registration of the ownership transfer at the Czech Land Registry (Katastrální úřad), administered by CUZK. This is the step that makes you the legal owner, until the Land Registry records the change, the seller remains the owner on paper.
The process works as follows:
| Step | Responsible party | Typical timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Execution of the purchase deed with verified signatures | Buyer, Seller, Lawyer/Notary | 1–3 days |
| Filing the application for registration (návrh na vklad) with CUZK | Lawyer or Notary (on behalf of both parties) | Filed immediately after execution |
| CUZK protective notice period (plomba) | Land Registry | 20 days (mandatory waiting period) |
| CUZK review and decision on registration | Land Registry | Approximately 30 days from filing (can be longer if deficiencies found) |
| Escrow release to seller | Escrow agent (lawyer/notary/bank) | Within 3–5 business days of confirmed registration |
The 20‑day plomba (protective notation) period is a safeguard built into the Czech system. Once the application is filed, the Land Registry marks the property with a notation alerting anyone checking the extract that a transfer is pending. During this period, the current registered owner and any third parties are notified and may raise objections. After the 20 days expire without objection, the Land Registry proceeds to examine the deed and, if everything is in order, registers the new owner.
From filing to final registration, the typical total time is approximately 30 days, though backlogs at certain Land Registry offices can extend this. I always advise clients to factor in up to eight weeks as a realistic outside estimate, and to structure the escrow release so that funds are not transferred to the seller until the registration decision is issued.
Understanding the full cost of buying an apartment in the Czech Republic goes beyond the purchase price. The following table summarises the typical fees and taxes you should budget for.
| Fee type | Who pays | Typical rate or amount |
|---|---|---|
| Real estate transfer tax (daň z nabytí nemovitých věcí) | Abolished in September 2020 | 0 % (no longer applicable) |
| Land Registry registration fee | Buyer (usually) | CZK 2,000 per application |
| Legal fees (lawyer/notary) | Buyer | CZK 15,000–60,000+ depending on complexity |
| Real estate agent commission | Typically seller, but varies | 2–5 % of purchase price (plus VAT) |
| Annual property tax (daň z nemovitých věcí) | Owner | Varies by location and property size; often CZK 1,000–5,000 for a standard apartment |
| Capital gains tax (if reselling within 5/10 years) | Seller | 15 % on gain (exemptions apply after ownership thresholds) |
Prague apartment prices continue to rise, with city‑centre flats regularly listed above CZK 120,000 per square metre on portals such as Expats.cz and Sreality.cz. Outside Prague, prices in cities like Brno and Plzeň are materially lower. Regardless of location, the transactional costs listed above apply uniformly and should be factored into your total budget from the outset.
Foreign buyers are eligible for mortgages in the Czech Republic, but must satisfy strict income verification and documentation requirements. Czech banks typically lend up to 80 % of the property’s appraised value (the loan‑to‑value cap mandated by the Czech National Bank) and will require proof of income, employment contracts, tax returns and identification, all of which may need to be officially translated into Czech.
From what I am seeing in practice, mortgage approval for expats takes approximately four to eight weeks, depending on the bank and the complexity of the applicant’s income structure. If your income is earned outside the Czech Republic or denominated in a foreign currency, the bank may apply a haircut to its income assessment or require additional documentation.
For clients transferring large sums from abroad, I recommend using a foreign‑exchange specialist rather than a standard bank wire to convert funds into Czech koruna (CZK). The savings on exchange rates can be significant on a transaction worth several million CZK. I also advise completing the currency transfer before the escrow deadline to avoid delays that could jeopardise the contract timeline.
When reviewing a purchase contract or reservation agreement, treat any of the following as a warning sign that requires immediate legal attention:
Once the Land Registry confirms your ownership, several administrative steps remain. If you are an EU citizen residing in the Czech Republic, you must register your address at the local Foreign Police office within 30 days of moving in. Non‑EU nationals on a visa or residence permit should note that proof of accommodation, a document confirming you have a legal place to stay, is required for residency applications and must be signed by the property owner and officially verified.
Beyond registration, transfer the utility accounts (electricity, gas, water) into your name, introduce yourself to the SVJ committee if you have purchased in a condominium, and file your first property tax return by 31 January of the year following your purchase. Keep all purchase documentation, the contract, Land Registry extract, escrow confirmation and energy certificate, in a secure location, as you will need them for any future sale, tax filing or mortgage refinancing.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martina Kačerová at Caring Legal.
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