
The Czech Labour Office reported on 12 May that the national unemployment rate dipped to 4.9 % at the end of April, down 0.1 percentage points month-on-month and the lowest reading so far in 2026. Vacancies climbed to 94,483—about 3 % more than in March—driven by seasonal hiring in construction, hospitality and automotive supply chains. For employers running expatriate or cross-border staffing programmes, the numbers translate into a shallower domestic talent pool and potentially longer lead times for filling specialist roles. Sectors already reliant on foreign workers—IT, engineering and healthcare—face renewed competition for bilingual candidates, particularly as neighbouring Germany’s growing skills-visa schemes lure Czech-based professionals westward.
Companies that need to bring talent into the Czech Republic can simplify the visa and work-permit process through VisaHQ, which provides online application tracking, tailored document checklists and direct liaison with Czech consulates worldwide (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/). Outsourcing the paperwork to VisaHQ allows HR teams to stay focused on recruitment strategy while ensuring full compliance with local immigration rules.
Relocation providers are advising companies to accelerate single-permit filings where possible, citing the government’s recent statutory reduction of processing time to 60 days. HR managers should also watch the migration bill currently in preparation, which could introduce quotas if unemployment falls further. In practical terms, the tight labour market may push up salary benchmarks and housing allowances in Prague, Brno and Ostrava, impacting assignment budgets for the second half of 2026.
Companies that need to bring talent into the Czech Republic can simplify the visa and work-permit process through VisaHQ, which provides online application tracking, tailored document checklists and direct liaison with Czech consulates worldwide (https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/). Outsourcing the paperwork to VisaHQ allows HR teams to stay focused on recruitment strategy while ensuring full compliance with local immigration rules.
Relocation providers are advising companies to accelerate single-permit filings where possible, citing the government’s recent statutory reduction of processing time to 60 days. HR managers should also watch the migration bill currently in preparation, which could introduce quotas if unemployment falls further. In practical terms, the tight labour market may push up salary benchmarks and housing allowances in Prague, Brno and Ostrava, impacting assignment budgets for the second half of 2026.