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Czech Republic Practical Travel Info

Visa rules by nationality, money in koruna, safety, and getting connected.

The Czech Republic is a full Schengen Area member. Most Western passport holders (US, Canada, UK, Australia, NZ) can currently enter visa-free for up to 90 days within any 180-day period — no visa, no ETIAS yet. ETIAS (a pre-travel authorization, not a visa) is expected to start operating in Q4 2026 with a transition period before it becomes mandatory in 2027 — check the current status before booking. The currency is the Czech koruna (CZK) — the country has not adopted the euro. Prague is very safe; the real risks are pickpockets and currency-exchange scams, not violent crime.

The unglamorous section that actually saves your trip: whether you need a visa (short answer for most Western passports — no, not yet), what money to use (it's not the euro, despite the EU flag on every gift shop), what could actually go wrong, and how to get online the moment you land.

Questions people actually ask

Do I need a visa for the Czech Republic?
Most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and all EU/Schengen citizens) can enter visa-free for tourism for up to 90 days within any 180-day period, since the Czech Republic is a full Schengen member. Always confirm the current rule for your specific passport before booking, and watch for ETIAS's rollout during 2026–2027.
Does the Czech Republic use the euro?
No — the currency is the Czech koruna (CZK), despite the country being an EU member. Some very touristy spots in Prague accept euros, but at a poor exchange rate; always pay in koruna.
Is Prague safe for tourists?
Yes, violent crime against visitors is rare. The real everyday risks are pickpocketing on crowded trams and in Old Town Square, and currency-exchange or taxi overcharging scams — both are easy to avoid once you know what to look for.