How Bulgarian Employers Can Adapt to Czech Labour Contracts: Practical Issues to Watch When Hiring
Bulgarian employers entering the Czech market face a complex labour law framework that differs significantly from Bulgarian regulations. The Czech Labour Code imposes strict requirements for employment contracts, fixed-term limitations, and substantial employer obligations. Understanding these requirements is essential to avoid fines reaching millions of Czech crowns and operational disruptions that could damage your expansion plans.

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Understanding the Czech Labour Code framework
The Czech Republic operates under a continental labour law system fundamentally different from Bulgaria's approach. The Czech Labour Code (Act No. 262/2006 Coll.) is mandatory for all employment relationships and leaves significantly less room for employer flexibility than many Bulgarian employers expect. This is not a document you can interpret loosely or adapt to your company's preferences, as it establishes binding minimums that protect employees and create direct liability for employers who fall short.
Bulgarian employers accustomed to more discretionary labour practices often underestimate how strictly Czech authorities enforce these requirements. The State Labour Inspection Authority (Státní úřad inspekce práce, or SUIP) conducts routine audits, investigates complaints, and imposes penalties that can reach up to 10 million Czech crowns for serious violations.
Unlike Bulgaria, where some regulatory flexibility exists in practice, the Czech system combines detailed legal requirements with rigorous enforcement. ARROWS Law Firm lawyers regularly handle cases where Bulgarian employers have faced significant penalties due to non-compliance with Czech labour regulations, and they understand the specific challenges your company faces when entering this market.
The three essentials of a valid Czech employment contract
Every employment contract in the Czech Republic must be in writing and include three essential elements that serve as the legal foundation of your employment relationship. These are not suggestions—they are mandatory requirements, and missing even one of them can render your entire contract invalid or subject to challenge.
Element one: type of work
The first essential is a clear agreement on the type of work the employee will perform. This must define the range of work tasks without being so broad that it allows you to assign any type of work to the employee. The specification should be detailed enough to create certainty but flexible enough to accommodate reasonable variations within the agreed role.
Many Bulgarian employers make the mistake of drafting extremely broad job descriptions thinking this gives them maximum flexibility. In practice, Czech courts interpret overly broad descriptions as unfair and may limit them to more specific tasks.
Additionally, if you later try to assign work outside the agreed scope without employee consent, you breach the employment contract. The employee can refuse such work, and you cannot use this as grounds for dismissal—instead, you would need to follow formal contract amendment procedures.
Element two: place of work
The second essential is specifying the place or places of work where the employee will perform their duties. You cannot transfer an employee to a different location without their written consent, even if you own multiple offices in different cities. If you operate facilities in both Prague and Brno, your contract must explicitly authorize work in both locations or clearly designate which office is the primary workplace.
This requirement creates practical complications for Bulgarian employers managing multinational teams. If you later discover you need an employee to work partially from a different city, you must obtain written agreement or formally amend the contract. Remote work arrangements also fall under this requirement; if work is to be performed from home, this must appear in the contract as an agreed place of work.
Element three: date of commencement
The third essential is the date when employment commences. This date is significant because it triggers multiple legal obligations: the start of probation periods, the accrual of annual leave entitlements, and the calculation of notice periods. The date must be specific; vague references like "as soon as possible" do not satisfy this requirement.
Beyond these three essentials, you must also provide employees with written information about annual leave entitlements, notice periods, weekly working hours, salary details, and any collective bargaining agreements that apply. This information can be included in the contract itself or provided through separate written notifications within 7 days of the commencement of employment.
microFAQ – Legal tips on essential contract elements
1. Can I use a contract that only includes the three essentials and omits other information?
Yes, technically the contract is valid if it includes type of work, place of work, and start date. However, the Labour Code requires you to inform employees in writing about additional terms either in the contract or through a specific written notification. Failing to provide this information creates liability.
2. What happens if my contract is missing one of the three essentials?
The contract is invalid. This creates serious consequences: the employee can claim the contract never existed, or conversely, courts may infer an employment relationship exists based on factual performance of work but without the terms you intended.
3. If I want to change the place of work later, what must happen?
You must obtain written consent from the employee. Without consent, the transfer violates the contract. You cannot use this as grounds for dismissal, and attempting to force the transfer could create liability for breach of contract.
Fixed-term contracts: the three-year maximum and the two-renewal rule
Bulgarian employers often use fixed-term contracts more extensively than Czech law permits. The Czech system imposes strict limitations designed to prevent what regulators view as disguised permanent employment through repeated short-term contracts. Understanding these rules is essential because exceeding them automatically converts your fixed-term contract to permanent employment.
The core limitation: three years and two renewals
A fixed-term contract cannot exceed three years from the date the first fixed-term contract was concluded. Additionally, it can be renewed a maximum of two times. This means the legal maximum is three consecutive fixed-term contracts (the initial one plus two renewals), provided the total duration does not exceed three years.
This creates a specific framework: if you hire an employee on January 1, 2024, on a one-year fixed-term contract, you can renew it twice. Once you reach the limit of three contracts or three years, any further engagement automatically becomes permanent employment. You cannot avoid this outcome by creating gaps between contracts or by using different contract types.
Exceptions for seasonal and replacement work
Czech law recognizes legitimate reasons for longer fixed-term arrangements. If there are serious operational reasons or the work is of a special nature (which must be defined in a written agreement with trade unions or internal regulations), exceptions may apply. However, these exceptions are strictly interpreted.
The difficulty lies in proving that the operational reasons are sufficient to bypass the statutory limits. The State Labour Inspection Authority scrutinizes these claims carefully. If you claim an exception but cannot prove legitimate grounds, inspectors will reclassify the contract as regular indefinite employment.
ARROWS Law Firm lawyers specialise in advising Bulgarian employers on whether their specific operational needs qualify for these exceptions and can document the basis for your classification to protect against challenges.
What happens at the expiration of a fixed-term contract
When a fixed-term contract reaches its agreed end date, the employment relationship ends automatically. No notice period is required, and no severance is paid unless agreed otherwise.
However, a critical risk exists: if the employee continues to perform work after the contract expires with the employer's knowledge, the contract automatically transforms into an indefinite (permanent) contract. This is often where employers face unexpected disputes—they intend to end the relationship but allow the employee to work "a few more days," inadvertently creating a permanent employee.
microFAQ – Legal tips on fixed-term contract limits
1. If I have a three-year contract and want to keep the employee, what are my options?
You must convert them to permanent employment. This happens automatically if they continue working. Alternatively, you can explicitly sign an amendment changing the contract to indefinite duration.
2. Can I avoid the three-year limit by hiring the employee through an agency or as an independent contractor?
No. Czech authorities actively investigate such arrangements under "disguised employment" provisions (known as the "Švarc system"). If the relationship meets employment criteria it will be reclassified as employment regardless of the contract label.
3. What counts toward the three-year and two-renewal limit if I have employed someone, they left, and I rehire them years later?
The previous contracts stop counting once three years have passed since the last fixed-term contract ended. So if your first fixed-term contract ended in 2023 and you rehire in 2027, the clock resets.
Probationary periods: strict rules and limitations
The Czech Labour Code regulates probationary periods strictly. Unlike some jurisdictions where probation can be informal, in the Czech Republic, it must be agreed upon in writing to be valid.
Maximum probationary periods
For regular (non-managerial) employees, the maximum probationary period is three consecutive months. For managerial employees (those who have the authority to manage subordinates), the maximum is six consecutive months.
The probationary period must be agreed in writing at the latest on the day employment commences. You cannot impose a probationary period after the employee starts work. Additionally, the probationary period cannot be longer than half of the agreed duration of the fixed-term employment relation.
Extension of probationary periods
Crucially, a probationary period cannot be extended by mutual agreement once validly established, unless the original period was shorter than the statutory maximum. You cannot extend beyond the statutory limits (3 or 6 months).
However, the law mandates an automatic extension for obstacles to work. If an employee is unable to work during the probationary period due to full-day obstacles (illness, vacation, other paid/unpaid leave), the probationary period is automatically extended by the number of these working days.
This automatic extension requires careful tracking; if you hire an employee on January 1 with a three-month probation, but the employee is sick for 5 working days in February, the probationary period automatically extends until April 7.
Working hours, overtime, and rest periods
The Czech Labour Code imposes mandatory limits on working hours and overtime that are more restrictive than many Bulgarian employers anticipate. These requirements apply regardless of employee consent or compensation level, and violations trigger both administrative penalties and potential liability to employees.
Standard working hours and maximum overtime
The standard working week in the Czech Republic is 40 hours, typically spread over five days. This is the legal maximum for regular working time. Overtime work is strictly limited: employees cannot be required to work more than 8 hours of overtime per week or 150 hours per calendar year unless they specifically agree in writing to exceed these limits.
Even with written employee agreement, the maximum overtime cannot exceed an average of 8 hours per week over a consecutive period of 26 weeks (or 52 weeks if a collective agreement permits).
Certain categories of employees are completely prohibited from overtime work, regardless of circumstances. Pregnant employees and adolescent workers cannot work overtime under any circumstances, and parents caring for children under one year cannot be ordered to work overtime.
Compensatory rest and time off
When employees work overtime, they are entitled to at least 25% of average earnings as a premium on top of their wages, or compensatory time off. Priority is given to payment unless the employer and employee agree on time off.
Employees also have statutory rights to rest: a minimum of 11 consecutive hours of daily rest between shifts and 35 consecutive hours of weekly rest. Since 2023, legislation has further clarified that daily rest must be truly continuous.
microFAQ – Legal tips on working hours and overtime
1. If my Bulgarian employee is used to working 45 hours per week, can I require this in the Czech Republic?
No. The legal maximum regular hours are 40 per week. Hours beyond this are overtime. You cannot contractually override this—the Labour Code is mandatory.
2. What happens if I exceed the 150-hour annual overtime limit?
You can only exceed 150 hours if the employee agrees (usually in the contract). Even with agreement, you cannot breach the 26/52-week average limits. The State Labour Inspection Authority can impose fines up to 500,000 CZK.
3. Can I prevent employees from taking rest days?
No. Rest periods are mandatory for health and safety.
Termination, notice periods, and severance
Terminating employment in the Czech Republic is formalistic. The "at-will" employment concept does not exist.
Valid grounds for termination by employer
The Labour Code specifies the exact grounds on which employers may dismiss employees. These include operational grounds (redundancy), failure to meet job requirements, breach of work discipline, or health reasons based on a medical certificate. Simply deciding an employee "isn't a fit" is not a valid legal ground once the probation period ends.
Notice periods and immediate termination
The standard notice period is at least two months. Crucially, under Czech law, the notice period starts on the first day of the calendar month following the delivery of the notice.
If you deliver a termination notice on January 2nd, the two-month notice period begins on February 1st and ends on March 31st.
Immediate termination is permitted only for extremely serious breaches of discipline or criminal convictions. It is an exceptional measure and highly scrutinized by courts.
Severance payments
Severance is mandatory if termination is due to organizational reasons (redundancy). The amount depends on the duration of employment, ranging from one to three times the average monthly earnings depending on tenure.
If termination is due to an occupational accident or disease, severance is at least 12x average earnings. No severance is legally required for termination due to misconduct or poor performance.
Probationary period termination
During the probationary period, either party may terminate the employment in writing for any reason or no reason. While the law recommends 3 days' notice, it is legally effective as of the day of delivery unless a later date is specified. No severance applies.
Social security and health insurance obligations
Bulgarian employers operating in the Czech Republic must register for and pay mandatory social security and health insurance contributions for all employees working in the CZ territory.
Employer contribution rates
As of 2025, employers must pay 24.8% of the employee's gross assessment base for social security and 9% for health insurance. Employees contribute roughly 11.6%, which the employer deducts from their gross wage. The total cost to the employer is roughly 34% on top of the gross salary.
Registration and reporting obligations
You must register the company as an employer and every new employee with the Czech Social Security Administration (CSSA) and the relevant health insurance companies typically within 8 days.
Non-payment is not just a debt; it involves penalties and, in significant cases, criminal liability.
Special situations: EU citizens and foreign workers
If you employ Bulgarian citizens to work locally in the Czech Republic, they fall under the Czech social security system (Lex Loci Laboris principle). You cannot keep them on Bulgarian social security unless they are formally "posted workers" (with an A1 form) meeting strict temporary criteria. If they work permanently in CZ, they must be in the Czech system.
Minimum wage requirements
The Czech Republic has a statutory minimum wage. For 2025, the monthly minimum wage is 20,800 CZK for a standard 40-hour working week. The corresponding hourly minimum wage is approximately 124.40 CZK.
Furthermore, Czech law includes "Guaranteed Wages" (zaručená mzda) for the private sector, which sets higher minimums for more complex jobs. As of 2025, this system has been simplified into 4 groups, where salary levels for qualified work are higher than the basic minimum wage. You must ensure your salaries meet the level appropriate for the job complexity, not just the absolute minimum.
microFAQ – Legal tips on minimum wage
1. If I pay an employee 20,800 CZK plus bonuses, do I meet the requirement?
The minimum wage generally applies to the basic rate excluding overtime and certain premiums. However, care must be taken that the guaranteed wage level for the specific role is met.
2. What if I hire someone part-time?
The minimum wage is proportional. For 20 hours/week, the monthly minimum is half (10,400 CZK in 2025), but the hourly rate remains 124.40 CZK.
Common mistakes Bulgarian employers make when hiring in Czech Republic
Understanding where Bulgarian employers typically encounter problems can help you avoid costly errors. ARROWS Law Firm lawyers have identified recurring patterns in their work with Bulgarian clients entering the Czech market.
Mistake one: drafting overly flexible contracts
Bulgarian employers often draft contracts granting themselves discretion to assign "any work required." Czech courts interpret such contracts narrowly. If a role is not agreed upon specifically, the employee can refuse tasks outside the defined scope.
Mistake two: misunderstanding fixed-term contract expiry
Employers often let a fixed-term contract expire but allow the employee to come to work the next day to "finish up." This tacitly converts the contract to permanent employment. Once converted, you cannot terminate them without a valid statutory reason and notice period.
Mistake three: ignoring probationary period formalities
Failing to sign the probation clause before the work starts renders the probation invalid. The employer then discovers they cannot fire an underperforming new hire easily because, legally, there is no probation period.
Mistake four: misclassifying employees as independent contractors
Using trade license holders (OSVČ) to perform regular employee work is illegal. Czech authorities actively investigate "hidden employment." Penalties include fines up to 10 million CZK and assessment of all unpaid taxes and insurance contributions with penalties.
Mistake five: incorrect notice period calculation
Assuming the notice period starts immediately upon delivery. Bulgarian employers are often shocked to learn they must pay an employee for nearly three months after deciding to fire them (due to the "first day of next month" rule).
Cross-border employment and international considerations
If a Bulgarian company hires someone to work in Prague, mandatory provisions of Czech law apply regardless of choice of law clauses in the contract. You cannot opt out of Czech minimum wage, working hours, or termination protection for employees working in CZ.
Posting of workers
If sending Bulgarian employees to CZ temporarily, you must comply with the Posted Workers Directive. This involves notifying the Czech Labour Office and ensuring the employee receives at least the Czech minimum standards if they are higher than Bulgarian ones.
Risks and sanctions: what violations can cost your business
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Risks and sanctions |
How ARROWS helps (office@arws.cz) |
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Invalid or missing contract essentials: Contract lacking required terms is invalid; risk of fines up to 10 million CZK (if deemed illegal work) or administrative fines up to 500,000 CZK. |
Contract preparation and review – ARROWS Law Firm drafts compliant contracts protecting your interests. |
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Fixed-term contract violations: Unwanted conversion to permanent employment; severance liability. |
Fixed-term contract structuring – ARROWS advises on proper sequencing and statutory exceptions. |
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Probationary period mismanagement: Invalid probation leading to inability to terminate underperformers. |
Probationary period design – We ensure agreements are signed on time and drafted correctly. |
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Overtime violations: Fines up to 500,000 CZK; back-pay claims. |
Working time compliance – We help structure shifts and overtime agreements legally. |
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Wrongful termination: Invalid termination leads to the obligation to pay wages for the entire duration of the dispute (often years) + reinstatement. |
Termination strategy – ARROWS manages the dismissal process to ensure valid grounds and correct notice delivery. |
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Minimum wage/Guaranteed wage violations: Fines up to 2 million CZK; back-pay orders. |
Wage review – We verify your compensation structure against statutory guaranteed levels (groups 1-4). |
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Disguised employment ("Švarc system"): Penalties up to 10 million CZK; massive tax/insurance arrears. |
Worker classification review – We analyze work arrangements to ensure distinction between contractors and employees. |
Executive summary for management
Key business implications for Bulgarian employers entering Czech market:
- Mandatory compliance framework: The Czech Labour Code applies to all employees working in Czech territory. You cannot contract out of these protections.
- Fixed-term contract traps: Contracts convert to permanent status automatically if limits are exceeded or work continues past expiry.
- Termination is rigid: Firing an employee typically takes 2+ months and requires valid statutory grounds. "At-will" employment does not exist.
- Enforcement is active: The Labour Inspectorate fines for hidden employment and overtime violations are significant.
- Strict formalities: Probation must be signed before work starts; notice periods follow strict calendar rules.
Conclusion
Understanding Czech labour law is not optional for Bulgarian employers—it is a prerequisite for legally compliant operations. Violations create substantial penalties, employee claims, and operational disruptions.
ARROWS Law Firm specialises in advising foreign employers navigating Czech labour law. Whether you are hiring your first Czech employee or managing a large team, our specialists can provide the guidance necessary to avoid costly mistakes.
Contact ARROWS Law Firm at office@arws.cz to discuss your needs.
FAQ – Frequently asked legal questions about Czech labour contracts
1. If I am a Bulgarian company registered only in Bulgaria, can I hire Czech employees directly?
Yes, you can register as a "foreign employer" with Czech social security and tax authorities without forming a CZ subsidiary. However, full payroll compliance is required. ARROWS can assist with this setup.
2. What is the difference between a "DPP" and an employment contract?
A DPP (Agreement to Complete a Job) is for limited tasks (max 300 hours/year). Recent amendments (2023/2024) have added requirements like vacation scheduling for DPPs, making them less flexible than before, but they remain useful for short-term projects.
3. Can I require an employee to work unlimited overtime if they consent?
No. Statutory limits (150 hours/year generally, max 416 with consent) apply.
4. If an employee is on sick leave, does the probationary period pause?
Yes, it extends automatically by the number of working days spent on sick leave or other full-day obstacles.
5. What notice must I provide for termination?
Two months, starting the first day of the following month. Warning letters are required prior to termination for performance issues.
6. If a fixed-term contract ends, do I need to give notice?
No, it ends automatically on the date specified. Do not let the employee work past this date if you intend for the relationship to end.
Disclaimer: The information contained in this article is for general informational purposes only and serves as a basic guide to the issue. Although we strive for maximum accuracy in the content, legal regulations and their interpretation evolve over time. To verify the current wording of the regulations and their application to your specific situation, it is therefore necessary to contact ARROWS Law Firm directly (office@arws.cz). We accept no responsibility for any damage or complications arising from the independent use of the information in this article without our prior individual legal consultation and expert assessment. Each case requires a tailor-made solution, so please do not hesitate to contact us.
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