Two real routes, and which one is yours
The Czech Republic gives nomads two genuine long-stay options, and the right one depends almost entirely on your passport and your work. The zivno long-term business visa, built on a Czech trade licence, is the workhorse: open to any nationality, used by freelancers and small-business people across the expat economy, and the route most nomads end up on. The Digital Nomad Program, launched in 2023, is a faster track but a narrower door, limited to certain nationalities working in IT or marketing. Both produce a one-year long-term visa that renews into a residence permit and counts toward permanent residence, so the choice is about eligibility and speed, not about ending up somewhere different.
What unites them is that the Czech system wants evidence and patience. Proof of income or funds, accommodation, insurance, a clean record, biometrics, and a foreign-police registration after you arrive. The paperwork is heavier than in a place like Mexico, but the payoff is a real European residence in one of the continent's most livable countries, with permanent residence at the end of the road.
The zivno business visa is the workhorse
For most nomads, the zivno is the route. It starts with a zivnostensky list, a trade licence, which you obtain for a specific business activity. Many foreigners register a free trade, the category that covers IT, consulting, design, language teaching, and dozens of other services with no special qualification needed, and the licence itself is issued within days and is valid for 180 days before you need a business registration number. With the licence in hand you apply for the long-term visa for the purpose of business.
The financial test is the part that surprises people, because it is not a monthly salary check. Instead you show funds in a Czech bank account, historically around 124,500 CZK plus enough to cover your accommodation, evidencing that you can support yourself. Round that out with proof of accommodation, comprehensive travel and health insurance, and a clean criminal-record certificate, and you lodge the application at a Czech embassy abroad. After approval and arrival you give biometrics, register with the foreign police, and convert toward a longer residence permit at renewal. The whole thing rewards a relocation agent if your Czech is weak, but it is a well-trodden path with thousands of expats on it.
The Digital Nomad Program, and its fine print
The Digital Nomad Program sounds like the obvious choice and is, for the minority who qualify. It does not create a brand-new permit; it fast-tracks the existing long-term visa for eligible remote professionals, cutting waiting times. The eligibility is the catch, and it is strict on three fronts at once.
First, nationality. The program is open only to citizens of a set list, which by 2026 covers Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the four added in early 2025: Brazil, Israel, Mexico, and Singapore. Second, your field: it was built for IT specialists and widened in 2025 to include marketing, but it is not a general remote-work visa. Third, the money and credentials: income of about 69,836 CZK a month, roughly 3,200 US dollars and equal to 1.5 times the Czech average wage, plus a degree or at least three years of relevant experience. Clear all three and you get a faster long-term visa that runs a year and then renews as a two-year residence permit. Miss any one of them and you are back to the zivno.
EU citizens and the Schengen clock
Two groups have an easier time. Citizens of the EU and EEA enjoy full freedom of movement and can live and work in the Czech Republic without any visa, registering their residence after arrival. Everyone else gets the standard Schengen allowance, 90 days in any 180-day period, shared across the whole Schengen area that the Czech Republic belongs to, with no right to local work.
Treat the tourist window as a scouting trip, not a lifestyle. It is the natural way to test Prague, find an apartment, and start a zivno application, but living long term on back-to-back Schengen stays does not work, since the clock is area-wide and you cannot reset it by hopping to Vienna or Berlin. For a real base you need one of the long-term routes.
How to approach it in practice
Sort your eligibility first, because it decides everything downstream. If you hold one of the listed nationalities, work in IT or marketing, and clear the income bar, pursue the Digital Nomad Program for the faster timeline. If not, plan for the zivno: pick your trade, line up the trade licence, and gather the funds proof, accommodation, insurance, and an apostilled criminal-record certificate for the embassy application. Budget for a relocation agent or immigration lawyer, since the Czech paperwork and the foreign-police steps reward local help.
Then, before you cross into tax residency, read the tax page carefully, because the zivno and the lump-sum flat tax interact in ways that decide your real bill, and the worldwide system means structure matters. For the longer arc of settling, the residency page covers permanent residence and citizenship, and the Prague city guide covers the base where almost all of this plays out.