
Cross-border commuters and logistics managers will need to factor extra time into schedules after Berlin quietly prolonged “temporary” checks at the Czech–German land border until 15 March 2026. The notice, published in Germany’s Federal Gazette on 29 December and confirmed by Czech officials on New Year’s Day, allows Federal Police to continue spot inspections of cars, coaches and trains.
The controls were reintroduced in September 2025 to counter irregular migration and now cover all nine German land borders. On the Czech frontier, motorists report delays of up to 40 minutes during peak periods, and rail operators say ad-hoc inspections have disrupted EuroCity timetables between Prague and Berlin.
VisaHQ’s online platform can help commuters, logistics managers, and other travelers quickly confirm any visa or documentation requirements for Germany, the Czech Republic, or onward destinations, arrange courier collection of passports, and receive real-time alerts on policy changes such as the extended border checks. For streamlined support and compliance tools, visit https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/
For the estimated 12,000 Czech residents who commute daily to Bavaria and Saxony—and for companies shipping just-in-time automotive components—unpredictable checks translate into lost productivity and potential breach of service-level agreements. The Czech government has so far resisted reciprocal controls but is pressing Brussels for compensation, arguing that Schengen’s free-movement benefits are being eroded.
Best practice: instruct business travellers to carry passports or national ID cards on all cross-border trips, ensure third-country assignees have their Czech residence cards at hand and build extra buffer time into transport schedules, especially for perishable or critical goods.
The controls were reintroduced in September 2025 to counter irregular migration and now cover all nine German land borders. On the Czech frontier, motorists report delays of up to 40 minutes during peak periods, and rail operators say ad-hoc inspections have disrupted EuroCity timetables between Prague and Berlin.
VisaHQ’s online platform can help commuters, logistics managers, and other travelers quickly confirm any visa or documentation requirements for Germany, the Czech Republic, or onward destinations, arrange courier collection of passports, and receive real-time alerts on policy changes such as the extended border checks. For streamlined support and compliance tools, visit https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/
For the estimated 12,000 Czech residents who commute daily to Bavaria and Saxony—and for companies shipping just-in-time automotive components—unpredictable checks translate into lost productivity and potential breach of service-level agreements. The Czech government has so far resisted reciprocal controls but is pressing Brussels for compensation, arguing that Schengen’s free-movement benefits are being eroded.
Best practice: instruct business travellers to carry passports or national ID cards on all cross-border trips, ensure third-country assignees have their Czech residence cards at hand and build extra buffer time into transport schedules, especially for perishable or critical goods.










