India → Czechia: the Long-term Visa for the Purpose of Studies (and Long-term Residence Permit for the Purpose of Studies) roadmap
The standard route for non-EU students staying over 90 days is the Long-term Visa for the Purpose of Studies (valid up to 1 year), which transitions to a Long-term Residence Permit for the Purpose of Studies for multi-year programmes. Both require enrolment at an accredited Czech institution under Section 64 of the Aliens Act, proof of accommodation, comprehensive health insurance, and proof of funds. The key caveat: time spent on a study permit counts at only one-half toward permanent residence, so a student route realistically means about 10 years of actual study/residence before PR eligibility, then a further 5 years to citizenship; confidence is medium-high on procedure but the proof-of-funds figure varies by source (formula-based ~CZK 116,000/year vs simplified ~CZK 81,400/year quotes), so treat the exact funds number as approximate.
Moving from India
- You apply for the Long-term Visa for the Purpose of Studies (and Long-term Residence Permit for the Purpose of Studies) at the Czechia consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves India, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in India usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Czechia's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your India documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a India passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any India to Czechia applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Czechia.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Third-country (non-EU/EEA) national accepted into studies that qualify under Section 64 of Act No. 326/1999 Coll.: accredited university programme, language/professional preparation for such a programme, or secondary/vocational studies via an exchange programme
- Original confirmation of enrolment or confirmation of studies from the institution
- Proof of secured accommodation in the Czech Republic for the stay
- Proof of sufficient funds (or a commitment from a public authority/host organisation to cover costs) based on the subsistence minimum of CZK 3,130/month
- Comprehensive (travel/medical) health insurance valid in the Czech Republic
- Clean criminal record certificate from the home country; parental consent if under 18
Your step-by-step roadmap
Secure admission and prepare documents
- Get accepted and obtain the original confirmation of enrolment from an accredited institution
- Arrange accommodation proof, comprehensive health insurance, and proof of funds (~CZK 81,400 to 116,000/year)
- Obtain a home-country criminal record certificate and required translations/apostilles
Apply at the Czech embassy
- Book an appointment and lodge the application in person at the Czech diplomatic mission abroad
- Submit biometrics, the application form, and pay the CZK 2,500 administrative fee
- Await processing (up to 60 days)
Arrive and register
- Enter Czechia, collect the long-term visa, and register with the Foreign Police / Ministry of the Interior within the deadline
- For permits, attend biometric appointment and collect the residence card (ePKP)
Maintain and extend status
- Renew the study visa/permit before expiry as long as you remain enrolled (extension fee CZK 1,000, often waived for students)
- Transition from long-term visa to long-term residence permit for studies for programmes longer than one year
Transition toward settlement
- After graduation, switch to an employment/Employee Card or Blue Card route to accrue full-credit residence time
- Apply for permanent residence after meeting the 5-year continuous-residence rule (study years counted at half)
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: Expect roughly 60 days processing for the initial visa, with the permit covering the study programme and renewed annually; permanent residence is realistically reachable around year 10 (because study time counts at half) and citizenship some years after that.
Citizenship: Permanent residence requires 5 years of continuous residence, but study time is credited at only one-half, so a pure student route effectively needs about 10 years before PR; citizenship by naturalisation then requires roughly 10 years of total legal residence including at least 5 years as a permanent resident, plus a Czech language exam (B1) and civics test.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.