If you are new to Czechia — whether as a visitor, a recent arrival, or someone who has been here a while but hasn't needed healthcare yet — the Czech insurance system can feel opaque. For sexual health specifically, the key fact is that the most important services are available to you immediately, regardless of your insurance or residency status.
🛡️ Dům Světla: No Insurance, No Registration, No Barrier
Dům Světla (aids-pomoc.cz) is free and anonymous. You do not need Czech health insurance, a residency permit, or any form of ID to attend. Book online or walk in, and you will receive the same free testing and support as any Czech resident.
Sexual health care at Dům Světla is open to everyone. Tourist, new arrival, undocumented — you are eligible. There is no insurance check and no registration requirement.
This is your entry point for testing, STI screening, HIV counselling, and PrEP navigation regardless of how long you have been in the country.
🇪🇺 Tourists: Your EHIC at Czech Hospitals
If you need hospital care — for example, for PEP outside Dům Světla hours — and you are visiting from the EU or EEA, your EHIC (European Health Insurance Card) entitles you to state-provided care at the same terms as a Czech insured patient.
Bring your EHIC to the hospital pohotovost (emergency department). Present it at registration alongside your passport. PEP is urgent medical care and will be treated as such. If you don't have your EHIC with you in a genuine emergency, go anyway — sort the paperwork afterwards.
Non-EU visitors do not have EHIC coverage. Hospital emergency care will be billed. The 28-day PEP course is expensive at retail — travel insurance that covers emergency medical care should cover this. Do not delay seeking PEP over cost concerns.
📋 New Residents: The Zdravotní Pojišťovna Requirement
Anyone who legally resides or is employed in Czechia must take out Czech health insurance (zdravotní pojišťovna). The largest insurer is VZP (Všeobecná zdravotní pojišťovna — vzp.cz). Others include ČPZP, OZP, ZP MV, and RBP. All are required to cover the same standard benefits package.
Registration is required from the start of your stay as a legal resident. Bring your residency permit or employment contract to the pojišťovna office, along with your passport.
Your průkaz pojištěnce (insurance card) is issued after registration and must be presented at every healthcare encounter. Keep it with you.
The doplatek (copayment) system: Czech insurance covers most care, but you pay a copayment (doplatek) for prescription medications and some procedures. For PrEP via an HIV Centrum, this is approximately 500–1,000 CZK/month. For hospital care, copayments vary.
🩺 Registering with a Praktický Lékař (GP)
Your praktický lékař (family doctor) handles non-specialist primary care — general illness, referrals, and basic tests. Find one accepting new patients via your pojišťovna's online finder, or ask at your local health centre (zdravotní středisko).
You do not need to register with a GP to use Dům Světla, and your GP cannot initiate PrEP reimbursement — that requires an HIV Centrum specialist. For sexual health, Dům Světla is your primary contact, not your GP.
English is widely spoken at Bulovka Hospital's HIV Centrum and at Dům Světla. Outside Prague, more Czech may be needed. See Czech Vocabulary: The Health System for key phrases.
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