A guide to employment laws in the Czech Republic

Learn how employment laws in the Czech Republic work, covering contract types, employee rights, notice periods, and termination rules. Everything employers need.

czech republic

Employment laws in the Czech Republic are codified in the Czech Labor Code, supplemented by the Employment Act, Anti-Discrimination Act, and Sickness Insurance Act. European Union (EU) directives layer on top, especially around working time and equal treatment. 

So if you are planning to hire in the Czech Republic, you need to understand all the employment laws. 

This guide walks through the contract types open to you, employee rights in the Czech Republic, and the statutory termination process. 

It also explains how Payoneer Workforce Management supports compliant engagement of talent in the Czech entity.

Key employment laws in the Czech Republic

The labor law compliance in the Czech Republic rests on national legislation, with EU directives layering on top for working time, parental leave, and equal treatment. Five core acts cover the ground:

  • Czech Labor Code: The primary statute that governs contracts, working time, leave, and termination.
  • Employment Act: Covers labor market access, work permits for foreign nationals, and Labor Office obligations.
  • Anti-Discrimination Act: Prohibits workplace discrimination based on race, gender, age, religion, disability, and other protected characteristics.
  • Sickness Insurance Act: Governs sick pay, maternity, paternity, and parental benefits administered by the Czech Social Security Administration (ČSSZ).
  • EU directives: The Czech Republic implements directives on working time, parental leave, and equal treatment. The flexi-amendment brought significant updates to contract flexibility, notice periods, and trial period rules.

Contract employment laws in the Czech Republic

Czech law requires every employment contract in the Czech Republic to be in writing, in Czech & English, before the work begins. The employee keeps one signed copy, and you keep the other. 

Types of contracts

The labor law in the Czech Republic recognizes two primary contract types, plus two flexible agreements for shorter or part-time work:

  1. Indefinite-term contract: Employment runs until either party terminates it under statutory grounds. Any contract without a stated end date is presumed indefinite by law.
  2. Definite or fixed-term contract: This type of contract has a fixed duration or is for project-based tasks, as per local laws.

Essential contract terms

Typically, these items must appear in every employment contract in the Czech Republic:

  1. Type of work, including job title, role, and responsibilities.
  2. Place of work, with specific location or locations.
  3. Start date.
  4. Salary, with a breakdown of components.
  5. Working hours, full-time or part-time.
  6. Names and identification details of both parties.

The employee can agree to write in another language, but Czech is the starting point.

Minimum wage in the Czech Republic

From January 1, 2026, the statutory minimum wage is CZK 22,400 per month, or CZK 134.40 per hour. 

Salary must be paid in Czech koruna by bank transfer. 

Working hours in the Czech Republic

The standard work hours are 40 hours, with a 12-hour daily shift cap. 

Overtime laws in the Czech Republic

Weekly overtime should not exceed eight hours on average across the reference period. Moreover, annual overtime caps are set at 150 hours by default. 

With the employee’s written consent, the ceiling rises to 416 hours.

Additionally, overtime laws in the Czech Republic mandate pay at 125% of average earnings, or compensatory time off as an alternative. For deeper detail on cost calculations, see our guide to the Czech Republic payroll.

Mandatory benefits

You must enroll every employee in statutory benefits through the Czech Social Security Administration (ČSSZ) and the chosen health insurance fund:

  • Pension insurance through the state pension scheme.
  • Sickness insurance for income protection during illness or maternity.
  • Public health insurance through one of the approved Czech health insurance funds.
  • Mandatory accident insurance at industry-classified rates.
  • State employment policy contributes to unemployment support.

The employment laws in the Czech Republic also prescribe statutory leave entitlements that sit alongside these benefits:

  • Annual leave: Minimum 20 working days per year. See our guide to leave policy in the Czech Republic for full details.
  • Sick leave: Up to 380 calendar days, with the employer paying wage compensation for the first 14 days at 60% of reduced average earnings, and ČSSZ paying from day 15.
  • Maternity, paternity, and parental leave: Administered by ČSSZ under the Sickness Insurance Act.

There is no statutory requirement for a 13th-month salary or bonus, meaning any year-end payments are provided only if specified in the employment contract. 

In addition, total employer contributions amount to approximately 34.36% of the gross salary, though this may vary depending on the industry classification. For a detailed employment costs breakdown, you can use our employee cost calculator.

Termination laws in the Czech Republic

There is no at-will dismissal. To end the relationship as the employer, you need one of the eight statutory grounds prescribed in the Labor Code:

  • An employee may choose to resign, leading to the end of the employment relationship.
  • The employment relationship can also be concluded through mutual agreement between both parties.
  • During the probationary period, either party may decide to end the arrangement if it is not a good fit.
  • In certain cases, the employer may initiate termination due to misconduct, performance issues, or absence without leave.

Notice period in the Czech Republic

The notice period in the Czech Republic varies depending on whether the employee is on probation or not. 

  • If the employee is serving probation, they are terminated with immediate effect. 
  • After probation, the standard notice period is two months. 

Severance pay in the Czech Republic

The Czech structure sits between Slovakia, which has comparable severance scaling, and Germany, where statutory severance is rare.

Severance pay in the Czech Republic is owed when termination is for organizational reasons or for health-related reasons. The amount scales with service:

Length of serviceSeverance owed
Less than one yearOne month’s average earnings
One to two yearsTwo months’ average earnings
Two years or moreThree months’ average earnings

Moreover, different rules apply for work injuries and occupational diseases. 

If termination follows a workplace health hazard, severance pay in the Czech Republic is replaced by a one-off compensation of 12 months’ average earnings. 

The labor law compliance in the Czech Republic is one of the more demanding regimes in Central Europe. The defined dismissal grounds, a written-form mandate for contracts, the Švarc system pressure on contractor classification, and ongoing changes from the flexi-amendment all sit on your plate at once.

Payoneer Workforce Management operates as a temporary work agency, so you can compliantly engage and pay Czech talent. We support with the contracts in Czech, the filings, the statutory benefits, and the termination paperwork.

Book a demo today.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

In the Czech Republic, there are two main types: indefinite-term and fixed-term contracts. As their names suggest, indefinite contracts are typically for permanent roles, whereas fixed contracts are for roles with pre-defined duration or tasks.

Effective January 1, 2026, the statutory minimum wage is set at CZK 22,400 per month, or CZK 134.40 per hour. 

The work week in the Czech Republic is 40 hours. However, a single shift can not exceed a 12-hour cap. 

Payoneer Workforce Management operates as a temporary work agency in the Czech Republic and assists with contracts, payroll, statutory benefits, and termination, with compliance support. The unified platform also supports compliant engagement of employees and contractors across 160+ countries from a single dashboard.


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