Czech Republic Transport
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Important information about driving
In the Czech Republic, it follows the right side.
Travelling by plane
Main airport: the most frequent entry into the country is Václav Havel Prague Airport (formerly Ruzyně Airport). Airports in Brno in Tuřany and Leoš Janáček in Ostrava are also developing, where low-cost airlines and charters are flying. National transport is virtually non-existent
Traveling by train
The train network in the Czech Republic is very dense compared to other countries. Unfortunately, the train is usually slower and more expensive than bus transport. Relatively very fast connection is only on the line Prague – Ostrava.
Main train routes
There are four main corridors through which international connections transit: – ** 1. corridor: ** Germany (Berlin – Dresden) – Děčín – Prague – Pardubice – Česká Třebová – Brno – Břeclav – (Wien / Bratislava – Budapest) Austria / Slovakia – Hungary – ** 2. corridor: ** Poland (Gdańsk – Warzsawa – Katowice) – Petrovice u Karviné – Ostrava – Přerov – Břeclav – ** 3. Corridor: ** France – Germany (Paris – Frankfurt aM) – Cheb – Pilsen – Prague – Ostrava – (Zilina – Kosice – Lviv) Slovakia – Ukraine – ** 4. corridor: ** Sweden – Germany (Stockholm – Dresden) – Děčín – Prague – Tábor – Veselí nad Lužnicí – České Budějovice – Horní Dvořiště – (Linz – Salzburg – Ljubljana – Rijeka – Zagreb) ** – ** Austria and further to the Balkans
Travelling by bus
The country has a very busy bus service, both domestic and international. Basically, you can get to practically every village. In most cases, bus transport is faster and cheaper than train transport