Trade Licence in Czech Republic: Practical Guide for Expats (2026)
A Czech trade licence is often the first practical step for expats who want to freelance, invoice clients, or operate as self-employed persons in Czechia. This guide explains how the process works, what registrations usually follow, and what to check before choosing this route.
What is a Czech trade licence?
A Czech trade licence, often referred to as živnostenské oprávnění or informally as živnostenský list, authorises an individual to carry out business activities in Czechia under the Trade Licensing Act. For many expats, it is the legal basis for working as a freelancer, consultant, contractor or sole trader.
In practice, having a trade licence does not only mean that you can issue invoices. It also means that you enter the Czech self-employment system and may have follow-up obligations towards the tax office, Czech Social Security Administration and health insurance provider.
Who needs a trade licence in Czech Republic?
You usually need a Czech trade licence if you want to perform business activities independently, repeatedly and for profit. This can include consulting, IT services, marketing, translation, design, business support, advisory services or other freelance work.
Typical expat use cases
A trade licence is commonly used by expats who work as freelancers, consultants, independent contractors or small business owners in Czechia.
When to be careful
If you work for one client only, follow fixed working hours, use the client’s tools and report like an employee, the setup should be reviewed carefully.
If you are still deciding whether Czech self-employment is the right model, start with our self-employment guide for expats. It explains when self-employment may make sense and when employment may be safer.
What foreigners should know before applying
Foreigners can apply for a trade licence in Czech Republic, but the process depends on immigration status. EU, EEA and Swiss citizens usually follow a simpler route. Third-country nationals may need to align their trade licence setup with their Czech residence or visa purpose.
| Applicant type | Practical point | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| EU, EEA or Swiss citizen | Usually simpler registration process | You still need correct identification, address and business activity details. |
| Third-country national | Residence / visa status must be checked | Self-employment may need to match your permitted purpose of stay. |
| Person already employed in Czechia | Self-employment can sometimes run alongside employment | This may affect social security, health insurance and tax treatment. |
Third-country nationals should be especially careful. A Czech trade licence alone does not automatically solve immigration status. If you need a long-term visa for entrepreneurship, the immigration process is separate from the trade licence registration itself.
How to apply for a trade licence in Czechia
Trade licence registration is handled through the Trade Licensing Office. You can submit the application in person, electronically, by post, or through Czech POINT. For electronic submissions, the official route is usually the Single Registration Form application.
Typical documents and information
For a standard application, you should expect to provide identification, information about your business activity, registered office details and proof of payment of the administrative fee. For certain regulated activities, professional competence or special authorisation may also be required.
| Submission method | Typical fee | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Electronic submission | CZK 800 | Usually submitted via the Trade Licensing Register / data box route. |
| In person or by post | CZK 1,000 | Used when starting a trade business at a municipal trade licensing office. |
| Czech POINT | CZK 50 service fee may apply | Useful for selected public administration contact point submissions. |
Official information is available through gov.cz, the Trade Licensing Register portal and the Single Registration Form application.
Single Registration Form: what it does and what to check
The Single Registration Form, known in Czech as Jednotný registrační formulář or JRF, is designed to make the start of Czech self-employment easier. Instead of dealing with several authorities separately, the form can be used for the trade licence application and selected registrations or notifications towards other Czech authorities.
In practice, the JRF can be used for basic registration with the tax office, Czech Social Security Administration, health insurance company and, where relevant, the employment office. However, this only works if the relevant parts of the form are completed correctly and submitted as part of the process.
When it can work automatically
If you complete the JRF properly and select the relevant authorities, the trade licensing office can forward the selected information to the tax office, social security administration and health insurance company.
When you should verify separately
If the JRF was not completed fully, if your status is more complex, or if you are not sure which authorities were selected, you should verify the registrations directly with each institution.
| Authority | What the JRF may cover | What to check afterwards |
|---|---|---|
| Trade Licensing Office | Trade licence notification or application | That the correct trade activity was registered and the trade licence is active. |
| Tax office | Basic tax registration for self-employment | That the tax registration was processed and your tax obligations are correctly understood. |
| Czech Social Security Administration | Notification of self-employment activity | That the activity is correctly recorded as main or secondary and that advance payments are clear. |
| Health insurance company | Notification of self-employment activity | That your health insurer registered the activity and confirmed the correct advance payment treatment. |
Tax, social security and health insurance registrations
The trade licence is only one part of the setup. Once you start self-employment in Czechia, you usually need to deal with three practical compliance areas: income tax, social security and health insurance.
Income tax
Self-employed persons normally report their income through a Czech personal income tax return unless they qualify for and correctly use a different regime, such as the flat tax regime.
Social security
Self-employed persons may need to register with the Czech Social Security Administration and pay monthly pension insurance advances.
Health insurance
Czech health insurance obligations depend on your status, insurance provider and whether the activity is treated as main or secondary self-employment.
VAT
VAT is a separate area. Freelancers with cross-border clients or higher turnover should check VAT registration and reporting rules early.
If you want to understand how employment cost compares to gross salary, you can also use our Czech payroll calculator 2026.
Flat tax regime: useful, but not automatic
Some Czech freelancers use the flat tax regime, where income tax, social security and health insurance are paid through one fixed monthly payment. This can be administratively attractive, but it is not always the best option.
Whether the flat tax regime makes sense depends on your income, expense structure, VAT position, tax residency, family situation and long-term plans. It should not be chosen only because it looks simpler on the surface.
Common mistakes expats make
Czech self-employment can be relatively straightforward when the setup is clean. Problems usually start when the trade licence is treated as a simple formality and the follow-up obligations are ignored.
Starting work before checking status
Especially for third-country nationals, immigration status should be checked before relying on self-employment income.
Assuming the JRF solved everything
The Single Registration Form is helpful, but only if the relevant parts were completed and forwarded correctly. Always check the outcome.
Ignoring social and health insurance
A trade licence may trigger insurance obligations even if income is irregular or the work is only part-time.
Using freelancing to replace employment
If the relationship is employment in substance, a trade licence does not automatically remove employment law, payroll or compliance risk.
FAQ: Trade licence Czech Republic
Can foreigners get a trade licence in Czech Republic?
Yes. Foreigners can apply for a Czech trade licence. The practical requirements depend mainly on whether the person is an EU, EEA or Swiss citizen, or a third-country national.
Does the Single Registration Form register me for tax, social security and health insurance?
It can. The Single Registration Form can be used for selected registrations with the tax office, Czech Social Security Administration and health insurance company. However, the relevant parts must be completed correctly.
How long does trade licence registration take?
Timing depends on the completeness of the application and the type of trade. For reporting trades, the right to carry out the trade can arise once the registration is properly completed.
What taxes do freelancers pay in Czechia?
Czech freelancers usually deal with personal income tax, social security and health insurance. Depending on turnover and client structure, VAT may also become relevant.
Is Czech flat tax worth it?
It depends. Flat tax can simplify administration, but it is not automatically cheaper or better. Income level, expenses and VAT status should be reviewed first.
Can I work for one client only as a freelancer?
It is not automatically prohibited, but it can create compliance risk if the relationship looks like employment in practice.