Study abroad in Czech Republic
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Czech Republic.
Capital
Prague
Languages
Czech
Academic Year
Most universities run winter semester from September or October to January/February and summer semester from February to June.
Population
About 10.9 million
Typical Budget
EUR 750 - 1,300/month
Overview
A high-value Central European exchange base with Prague prestige, strong transport links, and lower costs than most Western capitals.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Czech Republic.
The Czech Republic is a strong option for students who want a beautiful European base, manageable costs, and a mix of historic university life and practical city living. Prague is the main magnet, but Brno and Olomouc can be easier socially and financially. It is especially useful for students who want travel access across Central Europe without paying Paris, Amsterdam, or Copenhagen prices.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Czech Republic.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
Generally safe for students. Main issues are tourist-area theft in Prague, housing scams, and language friction in some administrative contexts.
Before You Land
A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival
Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.
Arrival Connectivity
Sort an eSIM before you land
Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
Public WiFi
Have a backup for shared networks
Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Very safe
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Moderate cost
EUR 750 - 1,300/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Prague is one of Europe's most beautiful and affordable capital cities — exceptional quality of life at relatively low cost, thriving student nightlife, and strong English-language university programmes.
- Charles University and Prague's technical universities attract large international communities.
- Tourism makes central Prague expensive for renting; student areas (Žižkov, Vinohrady) are still reasonable.
- Easy Schengen travel hub — weekend trips across Europe are cheap and convenient.
Small Towns
- Brno is the undiscovered gem of Czech student life — cheaper than Prague, with a young population (Masaryk University), excellent quality of life, and a friendly local scene.
- Olomouc (Palacký University) has a historic old town, very low costs, and a compact university-city atmosphere.
- Less English infrastructure outside Prague — Brno and Olomouc push Czech language learning harder.
- Smaller cities have no tourist crowds — a more authentic Czech experience.
Culture
Social Norms
- People can seem reserved at first; friendships often build through repeated meetups.
- Punctuality and practical directness are appreciated.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace07:00–09:00
Morning
Early starts common. Light breakfast at home — bread, cheese, cold cuts. Pekárna (bakeries) and rohlík (bread roll) culture everywhere. Coffee from a café or kolej (dorm) kitchen.
11:30–13:30
Midday
Lunch is the hot meal of the day. Menza (university canteen) offers subsidised three-course meals for students. Restaurants serve lunch menus until 14:00.
14:00–18:00
Afternoon
Study or part-time work. Czech work culture values efficiency — meetings end by 17:00. Beer is acceptable at any hour without social judgment.
18:00–21:00
Evening
Dinner lighter than lunch — soup and a snack or leftovers. Pubs fill up from 18:00; Czechs linger for hours over half-litres of pilsner.
21:00–03:00
Night
Prague nightlife is excellent and cheap. Žižkov and Vinohrady neighbourhoods are student hotspots. Clubs like Klub 007 and Cross Club stay open to 05:00.
Food Culture
University canteen meal
CZK 80-160Canteens and lunch menus are the easiest way to keep costs low.
Use lunch menus instead of tourist-centre restaurants in Prague.
Svíčková (beef sirloin in cream sauce)
CZK 150–280 / EUR 6–11Slow-cooked beef sirloin smothered in a velvety root vegetable cream sauce, served with bread dumplings and cranberry jam. A national comfort dish.
Order it at a traditional hospoda (pub) rather than a tourist restaurant — you will pay half the price for the same quality.
Trdelník (chimney cake)
CZK 60–120 / EUR 2.50–5Dough wrapped around a rod and roasted over coals, then rolled in sugar and cinnamon. A popular street food found near tourist squares.
Skip the tourist-centre versions; find a bakery version in local neighbourhoods for half the price.

Czech craft beer (pivo)
CZK 30–60 / EUR 1.20–2.50Czech Republic has the world's highest beer consumption per capita. Pilsner Urquell, Budvar, and Kozel are the most common; local hospoda draught beer is extremely cheap.
A half-litre draft pivo at a local pub costs less than a small water bottle at a tourist venue — always drink at a hospoda, not a bar on the main square.
Langos (fried dough)
CZK 50–100 / EUR 2–4Deep-fried flatbread topped with sour cream and cheese, or garlic oil — a filling and cheap street food from Czech and Slovak markets and fairs.
Find langos at outdoor markets and Christmas fairs; it is one of the most filling cheap snacks in the country.
Goulash with bread dumplings
CZK 120–220 / EUR 5–9Rich beef stew seasoned with paprika, onions, and caraway, served with knedlíky (Czech bread dumplings). A hearty, inexpensive staple at Czech pubs.
Lunch specials (polední menu) between 11am and 2pm usually include goulash and a drink for under CZK 160.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Learn basic Czech greetings and admin words — 'dobrý den', 'děkuji', 'prosím' open doors.
Use public transport passes — Prague's Lítačka monthly pass (CZK 550) covers all zones.
Compare Prague with Brno if budget matters — Brno has a strong student scene and rents 30% lower.
Keep printed copies of all documents (visa, accommodation contract, insurance) — Czech administration prefers paper.
Open a bank account with Moneta, Raiffeisen, or use Revolut/Wise — SEPA works but a Czech IBAN simplifies rent and deposits.
Register your address with the Foreign Police within 3 business days of arrival if non-EU.
Buy your Opencard (Prague transit) with student status — unlocks discounted fares on all metro, tram, and bus.
Use lunch menus (polední menu, 11am-2pm) at non-tourist restaurants — CZK 120-180 for a full hot meal.
Don't
Do not treat Prague Old Town prices as normal Czech prices — exit the tourist zones for everything except sightseeing.
Do not leave visa/accommodation documents until the last moment — Czech administration works at its own pace.
Do not assume English solves every local office interaction — bring a Czech-speaking contact for municipality visits.
Do not change money at airport or Old Town currency exchanges — rates are 5-10% worse than bank ATMs.
Do not drink alcohol visibly underage or in non-permitted public spaces — fines are enforced.
Do not skip the Foreign Police registration if non-EU — it is a visa condition and has follow-on consequences.
Do not assume the Charles Bridge area represents affordable Czech life — most locals never eat or drink there.
Do not leave housing search until after arrival — Prague student accommodation is competitive.
Lifestyle & Travel
Prague pub crawl & Czech beer culture
Czech beer (pivo) is the cheapest and often best in Europe — 0.5L for CZK 30-50. Zizkov district has the highest pub density per capita in the world.
Learn morePrague historic city walk
UNESCO city centre entirely walkable for free. Charles Bridge and Old Town Square are stunning at dawn before tourists arrive. Student ID halves castle entry.
Learn moreCesky Krumlov day trip
UNESCO medieval town built around a bend in the Vltava River. Prettier and less crowded than Prague. Student castle entry CZK 140. Canoe rental on the river.
Learn more
Bohemian Switzerland hiking
Pravcicka Brana — largest natural sandstone arch in Europe. Free trails, boat tour CZK 150. Train from Prague 2h. Spectacular sandstone canyon landscape.
Learn moreMoravian wine region cycling
Czech Republic best wine comes from Moravia. Cycle through vineyards and stop at local wine cellars (sklep) for CZK 30-60/glass. Bike hire CZK 200-400/day.
Learn morePilsner Urquell brewery tour
Birthplace of pilsner lager. Brewery tour CZK 300 including beer tasting from unfiltered tank beer. A must-do for anyone who drinks beer.
Learn morePrague clubbing and nightlife
Prague has one of the most diverse and affordable club scenes in Europe. Cross Club, Ankali, MeetFactory are student favourites. Entry EUR 3-8.
Learn moreTelc and Lednice-Valtice day trip
Two of Czech Republic most beautiful small towns — Telc has a perfectly preserved Renaissance square. Both are UNESCO and severely under-touristed.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- PID Linka pass or monthly pass (CZK 550) covers all Prague public transport. Much cheaper than per-trip tickets.
- Czech crown (CZK) is the currency — not euros. Exchange at banks or post offices; avoid airport kiosks (bad rates).
- Prague is one of the safest cities in Europe but pickpocketing is common on tram 22 and in tourist areas. Use inside pockets.
- Albert, Billa, and Lidl are main supermarkets. Rohlik.cz delivers groceries cheaply. Student cooking is very affordable.
- ISIC card gives student discounts at most museums, theatres, and transport across the Czech Republic.
Benefits & Scholarships
Personalize this layer
Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.
Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Student transport discounts
Student and youth discounts can make city and intercity transport affordable.
Local transport and rail providers
Official sourceUniversity canteens
Menza meals are a major budget tool.
Host universities
Official sourceCentral Europe travel
Prague, Brno, Vienna, Berlin, Krakow, and Budapest are realistic weekend links.
Rail and bus operators
Official sourceVisa Requirements
Difficulty: EasyPassport or national ID, with residence registration obligations for longer stays
EU students do not need a visa but should follow residence/reporting requirements for longer stays.
Long-term visa or residence permit for study
Non-EU students should check the route based on stay length and nationality and start after host-university confirmation.
Application Checklist
4 steps-
1
Check whether you need a visa or only EU registration/reporting.
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2
Get host-university confirmation and accommodation proof early.
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3
Keep passport, insurance, funds proof, and photos ready.
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4
Ask the international office about local registration after arrival.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
The Czech Republic has a public health insurance system (Veřejné zdravotní pojištění) funded by employer and employee contributions. EU students with a valid EHIC card access medically necessary care at Czech public rates — the EHIC is widely recognised and accepted. Non-EU students must hold private health insurance that explicitly meets Czech visa and residence permit requirements (minimum cover: CZK 60,000 / ~EUR 2,500 per year; repatriation included). Healthcare quality is good, especially in Prague and Brno university hospitals.
Student Needs
EU students: bring EHIC and consider a supplementary private policy for faster access and specialist coverage. Non-EU students: purchase a compliant private plan before applying for your long-stay visa — Maxima Insurance and Slavia Insurance are commonly accepted by the Czech Foreign Police. Keep the policy document and an insurance card accessible at all times. To see a GP (praktický lékař), contact your university's international office for a list of English-speaking practices near campus.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 112 for any emergency (unified line) or 155 specifically for ambulance. Hospital emergency departments (pohotovost) treat all patients regardless of insurance — billing is handled after stabilisation. For non-urgent care during evenings and weekends, Prague and Brno have out-of-hours GP services (pohotovostní ordinace). University health centres on campus are often the most accessible first contact for minor issues.
Public Coverage Notes
EHIC covers medically necessary treatment at Czech public health facilities at the same rates as insured Czech residents.
Non-EU students: comprehensive private insurance is a visa requirement — budget approximately EUR 100-300/year for a compliant plan.
Emergency
112Cities to Explore
Prague
Central Europe's classic exchange capital: major universities, a dense tram and metro network, beautiful everyday scenery, and student costs that are still…
Open City Guide
Brno
The Czech Republic's easier student city: strong universities, lower pressure than Prague, a real cafe and bar scene, and fast access to…
Open City Guide