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Jan 9, 2026

Czech Consulate in Dresden freezes employee-card and business-visa appointments

Czech Consulate in Dresden freezes employee-card and business-visa appointments
Employers that route Czech work-permit cases through Dresden have received an unpleasant New-Year shock. On 2 January the Czech Consulate quietly imposed a “zero-quota” for standard employee-card and long-term business-visa submissions; only applications filed under Czech government talent programmes or by a short list of preferred nationalities (such as the US and Canada) are still being accepted. The announcement, published without fanfare on the mission’s website, left HR calendars across Saxony blank.([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-08/cz/czech-consulate-in-dresden-freezes-standard-employee-card-and-business-visa-slots/))

According to the Foreign Ministry, staff have been redeployed to handle a surge in family-reunification and protection cases after Germany registered record asylum numbers last autumn. Immigration advisers say strategy also played a role: Berlin has become a springboard for non-EU IT contractors who enter the Schengen Area on German visitor visas and commute weekly to clients in Prague or Brno, sidestepping Czech labour-market tests.

The freeze forces companies to reroute filings to Vienna, Bratislava or Warsaw—posts with smaller Czech quotas and longer lead times. Projects that planned March start dates may need remote onboarding, amended service contracts or an in-country employee-card conversion for assignees already inside Schengen. Visa specialists recommend auditing all Visapoint or MFA-portal bookings; appointments dated after 2 January are deemed void unless covered by an exemption.

Czech Consulate in Dresden freezes employee-card and business-visa appointments


Amid this reshuffle, VisaHQ can step in to coordinate alternative consular appointments, oversee document legalisations and track ever-changing quotas in real time. Its dedicated Czech Republic page (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) lets employers compare slot availability in Vienna, Bratislava and Warsaw and receive instant alerts, helping mobility teams keep project timelines on track despite the Dresden freeze.

Costs are also climbing. Detours mean extra travel and translation fees, while certificate legalisations must now pass through different authorities. Insiders warn the freeze could last until Germany’s own temporary border checks with Czechia, extended this week to 15 March, are lifted.

Action points for mobility teams: 1) build at least eight additional weeks into project timelines; 2) monitor quota alerts across the Czech consular network; 3) brief business leaders on higher relocation budgets; and 4) explore remote-work contingencies for critical staff until appointment capacity normalises.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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