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I am going to the Czech Republic for 90 days without a visa, what documents do I need with me?
Please advise. My husband is going to the Czech Republic to work on a visa. I go with him without a visa for 90 days (in order to improve the Czech language and find an employer there, then get a work visa, etc.). I will live with him near the dormitory provided by the employer. We will be given a room. What documents do I need to avoid problems (passport and insurance for 90 days)? I hesitate about the ticket (not sold on my dates yet), proof of residence, and how to make money. Thank you.
Translated automatically from Ukrainian. View original
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9 subscribers  • asked 2020-02-115 years ago
Answers  •  29
аватар ollennka
A messy story, of course. It is unlikely that the border guards will believe that you are just going to idly live in the Czech Republic for 90 days without working. Do not talk about 90 days, say that for a week as a tourist. Make refundable hotel/hostel reservations and a refundable return ticket.
аватар zolyshka111
Nothing cloudy, one of the millions of real stories of illegal workers (((
The author, firstly, go not with your husband, buy a bus ticket back (you can return it, unlike cheap low-cost airlines), book a hotel or hostel for a week through booking with the condition of free cancellation. Take things with you to a minimum, so that would be enough for a week of vacation and go. The purpose of the visit is tourism and all that.
аватар Vataman
Thanks for the answers. But I really do not go to work.))) I just want to be with my husband, because he has a work visa for two years, before that I went 2 times for 3 months. Three months can still be separate, and more is very difficult. So I decided that I would go with him for 90 days, look, pull up my Czech and find an agency that will help find a job and make documents for legal work.
Maybe someone has a proven agency in Prague that does legal work.
аватар zolyshka111
Why do you need those agencies. I was in Prague for the New Year, I met our compatriots in almost every cafe or shop. They were even at gas stations. The guide said that the largest diaspora in the Czech Republic is Ukrainians, I am sure that you will find a job in the area without any problems.
аватар ollennka
In, for sure, in our hotel, too, in Karlovy Vary, a Ukrainian was sitting at the reception, judging by the "dialect". It seems to me that in the Czech Republic, even Czech is not particularly needed if you work in the HoReCa industry, the vast majority of tourists are Russian-speaking. So without agencies you can get a job.
аватар Vataman
I will hope that I will find everything without any problems. ))) thanks again for the answers.
аватар Natasha59
HoReCa, studying educational program ... The name "HoReCa" (acronym) comes from the first two letters in the words Hotel, Restaurant, Cafe.
аватар ollennka
))) Hospitality industry in general.
аватар kolyan_cat
You can easily find a job. True, it will be very difficult with a legal one. Poland allows Ukrainians to legally work on a visa-free basis, the Czech Republic does not. All legal work - only on a work visa, of which there are few in the Czech Republic, about 30 thousand a year.
90% of Ukrainians who work in the Czech Republic work illegally, they came using a Polish work visa.
аватар zolyshka111
kolyan_cat, well, they work, and this is the main thing))) after the collapse of the union, how many left to work in Italy, Portugal, etc. Many settled down and received citizenship. The whole of Western Ukraine is on earnings, few people are legal, there is no trouble in this.
аватар dima_80_
At the border, just do not talk about 90 days of stay, say that you are going to Prague for a few days. Usually they ask for money at the Polish border. Amounts of 100-150 euros should be enough. Plus, you can say that there is still money on the card. There were never any particular problems.
аватар ollennka
At the age of twenty, I also worked "black" and did not see any trouble in this. But with age, it still draws to official employment, social packages and other joys of life ... At least there is confidence that vacations and sick days will be paid humanly. So I support the author's desire to still look for legal work.
аватар Vataman
I need to try legally in the Czech Republic, on a visa, to be with my husband. If they deport or something else, it will be ...... A man sat there for exactly 4 years. I have already resigned in Ukraine, so I will try to find an employer in these 90 days and try to legalize my diploma, but it will be difficult))))
Thank you all for the advice. Already booked a hostel for 2 weeks, Friends who live there, threw me, but an invitation where they wrote down all their details, phones. Money, insurance, passport will be. I hope everything will be fine)))
аватар kolyan_cat
You know, I tend to think that "tourism" with accommodation in a hostel, for 2 weeks, would be suspicious. I think I still need to say that I'm going with my husband, I want to live with him, we are a family, I will come from time to time. This is a normal human practice, family and all that.
My wife so wanted to apply for a visa on the grounds that I have a work visa and I live permanently in Poland, but at a consultation at the consulate she was told that she could travel without a visa and live with me 90/180, i.e. a visa will give the same thing and you don’t need to do it, she did just that.
аватар ollennka
Well, you are not in a hostel, I suspect you live, and the level of income allows you to support yourself and your family. And you yourself write that Ukrainians can legally work in Poland without a visa, but here the Czech Republic ...
аватар kolyan_cat
yes, but a "tourist" traveling for 2 weeks with accommodation in a hostel, it's kind of clear to the horse that this is not a tourist. It seems to me that if the husband has a legal job, the company provides a room in a hostel, then there is no point in inventing a legend about tourism. Of course, you don’t need to talk about 90 days of living, it’s enough to say that you will live with your husband for 2 weeks, the husband promised to organize trips to tourist places, something like that.
аватар Igor_m
Take a bus tour to Prague, for example, get off at the desired stop.
аватар ollennka
Why, many tourists live in hostels. I overdid it with two weeks, however, it’s a bit too much for Prague.
аватар zolyshka111
Igor_m, but this is the most dirty advice in relation to the group and the guide! On the way back at the border, you know how many problems the guide, drivers and the whole group will have!!!
аватар Igor_m
zolyshka111, I am a layman in group tours, a little less than zero, and my friend traveled to Austria in a group, booked a hotel in advance and stayed there to finish walking after the group drove home. What is the crime?
аватар zolyshka111
Well, your friend doesn't know HOW they let the group pass without him on the way back at the border, right? As I understand it, he silently left the group somewhere, conditionally, at a gas station in Europe.
The crime is that the guide and the company that organizes the tour are responsible that from the EU to Ukraine, after a tour that lasts a certain number of days, exactly as many people by surname should return as they entered the EU by this bus. It's logical. Now you understand what is the dirty trick of your advice?
аватар ollennka
To be honest, for the first time I hear that the bus must leave in the same composition as it drove in. They are not entering on a group visa.
Bus tour guides do not really like such renegades, but if a tourist culturally warns about his plans and writes all the necessary papers, which assumes full responsibility for further transportation and will not have any claims against the travel agency, then they go forward. Everyone will have problems if a tourist simply disappears without warning.
аватар Igor_m
zolyshka111, thanks for the clarification, but new questions have appeared in connection with this, or rather, the conclusions made by me:
-are there special rules for entry/exit to/from the EU for groups?
- the period of stay of tourists is limited by the duration of the tour? (is it in the passport?)
- to whom are the guide and the company responsible, how is this responsibility regulated?
I did not find answers to these questions in the EU legislation, but they are important. Can you help with an answer?
A friend after excursions in Vienna, Salzburg and somewhere else went to a ski resort for a week, he warned about this in advance, there were no more questions for him. I flew back by plane.
"HOW on the way back at the border they let the group pass without him" - I did not understand. They don’t let them out of the EU, or they don’t let them into Ukraine?
аватар Igor_m
I apologize to everyone that got off topic, I really strayed from the tourist herds, I went wild.
аватар pauluholja
So many answers do not reread. Everyone is right in their own way.
We have just returned from a month and a half stay in Prague.
We went back and forth from Mukachevo with a change in Kosice for a ridiculous amount - 780 UAH.
Took a ticket in advance with a return in a month. (So ​​cheaper)
No one at the border will be surprised by your tickets. The main question - do you have money. Sometimes there are enough answers, sometimes (they even say they list, especially on the Polish border, which is not allowed). Definitely answer that you are going for 3-4 days. The amount of cash in uo depends on it. The card does not pass ...
You can take out insurance for a minimum price and for a minimum number of days. Still, it does not cover anything.
Although the local police, for example in Prague, can check the availability of insurance. So when walking, try not to be like ours. Believe me, in a short hour, if observant, from afar distinguish ours on many grounds.
Returning back is no problem at all. Especially through Uzhgorod. but the MAIN THING
аватар pauluholja
THE MAIN THING - the Slovak must count the amount of days. If there is more than a few hours - prepare for deportation with red tape.
Who cares about the subtleties and tricks of staying in the Czech Republic - to make friends so that it is clear that someone needs it.
аватар pauluholja
Prague is something incredible!
Especially when you have room, money and an hour :)
аватар kolyan_cat
Here is an example of how ill-conceived advice can ruin a trip for those who listen to it. I'm talking about insurance.
I do not know on the basis of what the conclusion was made that "insurance does not cover anything, and a stupid, excuse me, proposal to take insurance" for a minimum number of days.
Insurance is required for the entire duration of the trip. It covers 90% of cases. Even breaking a leg, for example, and being treated "for one's own" - the bill will go more expensive than the whole trip for 2 with restaurants and hotels. And the insurance covers it.
Go abroad and save 100 UAH. on insurance - this is the highest degree of stupidity and redneck, sorry again.
аватар Pachok
There were problems with "defectors" from tourist groups before visa-free travel came into effect. I would even say - long before that.
Nobody counts heads now, people join the group and leave it as they want and where they want. This is usually agreed with the guide.
I agree with kolyan_cat - insurance must be purchased for the entire period. Not for the sake of the police, who allegedly will grab tourists on the street and check their insurance, but for the sake of their own health.
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