Most long-term rentals in the Czech Republic run on standard 12-month leases with a security deposit of one to three months' rent, with listings concentrated on Czech-language portals like Sreality and the agent-free Bezrealitky. Contracts are legally binding in Czech, so newcomers often use a relocation agent or have the lease checked before signing, and as a foreigner you must report your place of residence to the authorities (the Foreign Police for most arrivals) shortly after arrival.
Lo básico del alquiler
- Contrato habitual
- 1 año
- Fianza
- 3 mes(es) de renta
- Amueblado
- Amueblado + sin amueblar
- Mercado de media estancia
- Mercado de media estancia moderado
- Registro de domicilio
- Obligatorio
Comisión de agencia: When you find a flat through a real estate agent, the agency commission is typically one month's rent and is usually paid by the tenant. Going direct to landlords (e.g. via Bezrealitky) avoids the agency fee.
Registro de domicilio
Foreigners must report their place of residence after arrival. EU citizens report to the Foreign Police Service within 30 days of entry if they expect to stay longer than 30 days; third-country nationals report within 3 working days of arrival (or within 30 days if they entered on a long-stay D/VR visa to collect a residence permit, in which case the report is made to the Ministry of the Interior). The obligation is waived if your accommodation provider (hotel/hostel/other lodging) reports it for you.
Tus derechos como inquilino
Residential leases are governed by the Czech Civil Code, which caps the security deposit ("jistota") at a maximum of three times the monthly rent (Section 2254(1)); the deposit secures unpaid rent, utilities and damages, and the landlord may deduct only clearly provable claims. The Code requires the deposit returned without undue delay at the end of the lease (commonly around a month after move-out once accounts are settled), and the tenant is entitled to statutory interest on it.
Conviene saber
- Deposit is legally capped at three months' rent under the Civil Code, with a clear definition of what it may be used for
- Agent-free portals such as Bezrealitky connect tenants directly with landlords, letting you skip the commission fee
- Mid-term furnished options for stays of roughly 1-12 months are available through nomad-oriented platforms like Flatio, easing a soft landing
- Landlord screening tends to be lighter than in the US/UK, with fewer documentation hurdles for tenants
A tener en cuenta
- The legally binding lease is the Czech-language version even when an English translation is provided, so have it reviewed before signing
- Upfront costs add up fast: deposit, first month's rent and any reservation/agency fee can mean several months' rent to move in
- Utilities and a building service charge are usually billed on top of the advertised rent, not included
- Deposits are held directly by the landlord (no government-backed protection scheme), so document the flat's condition in a handover protocol to avoid disputes
- Register your place of residence within the deadline for your status (3 working days for many third-country nationals, 30 days for EU citizens) to stay compliant
Dónde buscar
Las plataformas se enumeran solo a título orientativo — no las respaldamos ni las clasificamos.
Alquilar en Czech Republic: preguntas frecuentes
Alquilar en Czech Republic: preguntas frecuentes
¿Cuánta fianza necesito para alquilar en Czech Republic?
Los propietarios suelen pedir alrededor de 3 mess de renta como fianza, además del primer mes por adelantado, más cualquier comisión de agencia (when you find a flat through a real estate agent, the agency commission is typically one month's rent and is usually paid by the tenant. going direct to landlords (e.g. via bezrealitky) avoids the agency fee.). Cuenta con esa suma como un pago único antes de llegar.
¿Tengo que registrar mi domicilio en Czech Republic?
Sí — Foreigners must report their place of residence after arrival. EU citizens report to the Foreign Police Service within 30 days of entry if they expect to stay longer than 30 days; third-country nationals report within 3 working days of arrival (or within 30 days if they entered on a long-stay D/VR visa to collect a residence permit, in which case the report is made to the Ministry of the Interior). The obligation is waived if your accommodation provider (hotel/hostel/other lodging) reports it for you.
¿Puedo encontrar alquileres amueblados o de corta estancia en Czech Republic?
Amueblado + sin amueblar y el mercado de media estancia en el que se apoyan los nómadas es mercado de media estancia moderado. Empieza tu búsqueda en Sreality.cz, Bezrealitky.cz, UlovDomov.cz.
Fuentes
- Government Registration of residence by an EU citizen after arrival in the Czech Republic - Portal of Public Administration (gov.cz) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Registration of residence by a third-country national after arrival in the Czech Republic - Portal of Public Administration (gov.cz) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Registration after Arrival - Integration Centre Prague (ipc.gov.cz) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Can the Landlord Demand More Than Three Months' Rent as a Security Deposit? - Mgr. Anna Vejmelkova, attorney (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Rental deposit in the Czech Republic - when is it returned and what can be deducted - Mgr. Anna Vejmelkova, attorney (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Aggregated index Czech Republic Rental Laws: Pro-landlord, Neutral or Pro-tenant? - Global Property Guide (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Renting Czech Property - Expats.cz (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Intro to Renting in the Czech Republic - Foreigners.cz Blog (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Media Mid-term flat & apartment rentals Prague - Flatio (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15