Hire in The Czech Republic

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Hire in The Czech Republic

Czech hiring execution typically requires a defensible employment contract, compliant leave handling, and clear onboarding controls for foreign and local workers. Employers should align contract terms, payroll setup, and termination workflow before local hiring.

22. August 2024
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Operational snapshot

Hire in The Czech Republic

Czech hiring execution typically requires a defensible employment contract, compliant leave handling, and clear onboarding controls for foreign and local workers. Employers should align contract terms, payroll setup, and termination workflow before local hiring.

Hauptstadt

Prague

Payroll cycle

Monthly

Employer contribution

33.8%

Languages

Czech

Währung

Czech Koruna

Last reviewed

23. März 2026

Employment and compliance summary

Employer cost and contributions

Employer planning should include salary commitments, mandatory payroll administration, and paid-leave exposure rather than relying on base pay alone. Operational budgets should be tested...

  • Employer planning should include salary commitments, mandatory payroll administration, and paid-leave exposure rather than relying on base pay alone.
  • Operational budgets should be tested together with local registration, employment paperwork, and exit-risk assumptions.

Payroll and tax operations

Payroll setup should stay aligned with local employment terms and the employer's reporting obligations from the first pay cycle. Employers should confirm salary timing, deductions, and...

  • Payroll setup should stay aligned with local employment terms and the employer's reporting obligations from the first pay cycle.
  • Employers should confirm salary timing, deductions, and recordkeeping before onboarding or worker-status changes.

Leave and holiday rules

Leave entitlement should be tracked consistently and kept aligned with payroll and employment records. Holiday balances and absence handling should be reviewed before role changes or final...

  • Leave entitlement should be tracked consistently and kept aligned with payroll and employment records.
  • Holiday balances and absence handling should be reviewed before role changes or final settlement.

Termination and notice

Employment exits should be reviewed against local labour-law procedure, notice handling, and supporting documentation. Final pay, unused leave, and written records should be checked together...

  • Employment exits should be reviewed against local labour-law procedure, notice handling, and supporting documentation.
  • Final pay, unused leave, and written records should be checked together before termination is executed.

Minimum Wage

The Czech Republic has established a national minimum wage to ensure fair compensation for workers. As of January 1, 2024, the minimum wage has been increased to 18,900 CZK per month for full-time employees working 40 hours per week. This translates to an hourly rate of 112.50 CZK.

The minimum wage applies to all employees regardless of their employment contract type or the size of their employer. It’s important to note that this is the base rate, and many sectors or job positions may have higher minimum wages based on collective agreements or company policies.

YearMonthly Minimum Wage (CZK)Hourly Minimum Wage (CZK)
202418,900112.50
202317,300103.80
202216,20096.40
Minimum Wage in the Czech Republic (2022-2024)

Income Tax

The Czech Republic employs a progressive income tax system for individuals. As of 2024, there are two tax brackets:

  1. 15% for annual income up to 1,582,812 CZK
  2. 23% for annual income exceeding 1,582,812 CZK

It’s crucial to note that the tax is calculated on the super-gross salary, which includes the employee’s gross salary plus the employer’s health and social security contributions.

Annual Income (CZK)Tax Rate
Up to 1,582,81215%
Over 1,582,81223%
Income Tax Rates in the Czech Republic (2024)

Employees in the Czech Republic are entitled to various tax deductions and credits, including:

  • Basic tax credit of 30,840 CZK per year
  • Child tax credit (varies based on the number of children)
  • Student tax credit of 4,020 CZK per year (if applicable)

Payroll Cost

Employers in the Czech Republic are responsible for making significant contributions to social security and health insurance on behalf of their employees. These contributions are calculated as a percentage of the employee’s gross salary.

Contribution TypeEmployer RateEmployee RateTotal
Social Security24.8%7.1%31.9%
Health Insurance9.0%4.5%13.5%
Total33.8%11.6%45.4%
Social Security and Health Insurance Contributions in the Czech Republic (2024)

The social security contributions cover pension insurance, sickness insurance, and unemployment insurance. It’s important to note that there’s an annual cap on social security contributions, set at 2,110,416 CZK for 2024.

Overtime Pay

In the Czech Republic, standard working hours are 40 hours per week. Any work performed beyond this is considered overtime. The Labor Code regulates overtime work and compensation as follows:

  • Employees can work up to 8 hours of overtime per week and a maximum of 150 hours of overtime per year.
  • Overtime work must be compensated at a rate of at least 125% of the employee’s regular hourly wage.
  • Alternatively, employers and employees can agree on compensatory time off instead of overtime pay.

For work during weekends or on public holidays, additional premiums apply:

Work TypePremium Rate
Overtime25%
Weekend10%
Holiday100%
Premium Rates for Special Working Hours in the Czech Republic

Employers must carefully track and record all overtime hours to ensure compliance with labor laws and accurate compensation for employees.

By understanding these key aspects of pay and tax in the Czech Republic, employers can ensure compliance with local regulations and maintain fair compensation practices for their workforce.

Reviewed by

Role: Senior Reviewer für länderspezifische Employment Compliance

Team: PIO Compliance Research Team

Last reviewed

23. März 2026

Sources

Reviewed by Eric Tian, Senior Country Employment Compliance Reviewer at the PIO Compliance Research Team, against public labour-code, annual leave, and termination references available for the Czech Republic as of the review date.

Referenced sources

Labour law
Labor authorityJurisdiction: Czech Republic
Open source

Publisher

Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs

Checked

24. März 2026

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