Do Czech citizens need a visa for Turkey?
No. Czech ordinary passport holders do not need a visa to enter Turkey for tourism or short business. You are admitted visa-free: there is no e-Visa to buy, no form to file and no consulate appointment to book. The exemption covers stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period — the standard short-stay allowance. Work, study and longer stays generally fall outside it and need permission arranged in advance.
How long can Czech citizens stay in Turkey?
Up to 90 days within any 180-day period. That is a rolling calculation, not a per-trip allowance: on any given day, count backwards 180 days and add up the days you have already spent in Turkey. If the total reaches 90, you must wait before returning. Most holidays never come close, but if you fly to Turkey several times a year — a spring city break, a fortnight on the coast, a winter visit — or plan one long, slow trip, do the arithmetic before you book. Overstaying can carry fines and affect future entries, so treat the 90 days as a hard ceiling.
Do you need to apply for anything? (official portal evisa.gov.tr)
Nothing. There is no application to complete, no fee to pay and no e-Visa to buy — you simply turn up with a valid travel document. This is worth stressing, because third-party "visa" websites will happily sell Czech travellers a Turkey e-Visa they do not need, sometimes for a thousand koruna or more. If you want to check your own position, the only authoritative source is the Republic of Türkiye portal at evisa.gov.tr, which confirms the current rule for each nationality free of charge.
Which travel document should you carry?
Travel on a passport valid for the whole of your stay — it is the document no airline or border officer will question. Turkey does admit certain European nationalities on a national identity card instead, but that is a separate list kept by the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs and it changes, so do not assume it covers you: confirm your own position on the official portal before relying on it. Your airline is a second, independent hurdle, as carriers set their own document policy and apply it at check-in.
Cost: is there a fee?
None. Visa exemption means exactly that: there is no visa fee for Czech citizens, no service charge and no payment page to reach. If a website asks you for money for a Turkey visa as a Czech national, it is not the government and you do not need what it is selling. The only costs are the ordinary ones — flights, hotels, and any accommodation tax your hotel adds to the bill.
Documents needed
For a visa-free tourist trip you will generally need a valid travel document and your return or onward ticket. Officers may also ask for proof of accommodation and sufficient funds for your stay, so keep your hotel booking and itinerary handy. Travel insurance is not an entry condition for Czech visitors, but it is sensible. Children travelling with you need their own document — they are not covered by yours.
At the airport
Immigration is usually a formality. Present your passport at the counter; there is no visa to show and no fee to pay. Officers may ask where you are staying, how long for and when you fly home. Your passport is stamped on entry and exit, and those stamps are what the 90-day count is measured from — so let them stamp it.
Apply on the official portal
The only official place to apply is the Republic of Türkiye e-Visa portal. Avoid third-party sites that charge inflated fees.
Go to evisa.gov.tr →