
An updated advisory on 14 April from VisaInfoGuide reiterates that citizens of the Czech Republic may enter Uzbekistan visa-free for stays of up to 30 days. The clarification, based on a fresh review of official sources, comes as Central Asia gains popularity among Prague-based digital nomads and adventure-tour operators seeking alternatives to saturated Schengen destinations. Under the scheme, Czech travellers need only present a passport—valid for at least six months—and proof of onward or return travel.
For Czech nationals who may still need assistance with documentation—whether for stays exceeding 30 days, work permits, or onward travel to neighbouring countries—VisaHQ’s Prague portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) offers step-by-step guidance and expedited processing. Its specialists monitor the same government bulletins cited above and can flag rule changes before departure.
Immigration officers may also request evidence of sufficient funds, travel insurance and accommodation bookings. Long-term work or study remains outside the visa-free scope and requires prior authorisation. For mobility teams managing project engineers in the region, the policy removes a paperwork layer and allows short-notice deployment. However, security advisers remind companies that Uzbekistan mandates registration with local authorities if travellers stay more than three nights outside registered hotels, and that corporate equipment can attract customs scrutiny. Travel agencies in Prague have already added Tashkent and Samarkand to spring promotional campaigns, citing the simplified entry regime and new twice-weekly flights via Istanbul. Business chambers meanwhile see the move as an opportunity to deepen Czech-Uzbek trade ties in mining technology and urban-rail projects.
For Czech nationals who may still need assistance with documentation—whether for stays exceeding 30 days, work permits, or onward travel to neighbouring countries—VisaHQ’s Prague portal (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/) offers step-by-step guidance and expedited processing. Its specialists monitor the same government bulletins cited above and can flag rule changes before departure.
Immigration officers may also request evidence of sufficient funds, travel insurance and accommodation bookings. Long-term work or study remains outside the visa-free scope and requires prior authorisation. For mobility teams managing project engineers in the region, the policy removes a paperwork layer and allows short-notice deployment. However, security advisers remind companies that Uzbekistan mandates registration with local authorities if travellers stay more than three nights outside registered hotels, and that corporate equipment can attract customs scrutiny. Travel agencies in Prague have already added Tashkent and Samarkand to spring promotional campaigns, citing the simplified entry regime and new twice-weekly flights via Istanbul. Business chambers meanwhile see the move as an opportunity to deepen Czech-Uzbek trade ties in mining technology and urban-rail projects.