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Czech A1

Czech A1 Test — Beginner Level

25 questions · 25 min · CEFR A1 · Beginner

Free to take. Test your Czech at A1 level: grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. Get your official certificate for just €8 (incl. EU VAT).
25
Questions
25 min
Duration
A1
Beginner
€8
€8 (incl. EU VAT)

What You Get

Take the Czech A1 Test — Free →

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What A1 Means for Czech

Czech A1 is the first level of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages, where you can handle basic interactions in everyday Czech situations. At this level, you understand common phrases like greetings (dobrý den, ahoj), simple questions about where you live or what you do, and can introduce yourself using basic sentence patterns. You recognize familiar words on signs, menus, and short notices when they use high-frequency vocabulary.

Your speaking ability at A1 covers essential needs. You can ask for a coffee (Prosím kávu), tell someone your name and nationality, or explain that you are learning Czech. These conversations work when the other person speaks slowly and is willing to repeat or rephrase. Reading simple texts like a café menu or a basic email about meeting times is possible if the content is predictable. Writing at this level means filling out forms with personal details or sending a short message about where you are and when you will arrive.

Czech A1 requires roughly 80 to 100 hours of focused study for most learners. The language presents specific challenges at the beginner stage, including seven grammatical cases that change word endings and a distinction between perfective and imperfective verb aspects. At A1, you work mainly with present tense verbs and the most common case patterns, building a foundation of approximately 500 to 700 words that cover daily survival topics.

What You Can Do at A1

Who Needs Czech A1

Czech A1 certification helps au pairs and childcare workers who need to demonstrate basic language ability before moving to the Czech Republic for family placements. Many au pair agencies require proof of at least A1 level Czech or a commitment to reach it within the first three months of placement. International students applying to preparatory programs at Czech universities often need A1 as a starting point, particularly for one-year Czech language courses that prepare you for degree programs taught in Czech. Some scholarship programs document your starting level to track progress over the funded period.

Expat spouses relocating to Prague, Brno, or other Czech cities for a partner's job assignment use A1 certificates to show effort in integration, which can strengthen applications for family reunification permits or long-term residence. Customer service roles in tourist areas sometimes list A1 Czech as preferred, particularly for hotel reception staff or tour guides who primarily work in English but need basic Czech for local coordination. Volunteer programs in the Czech Republic may ask for A1 proficiency to ensure you can handle daily logistics and basic safety communication, even when the volunteer work itself happens in English.

Examinizer vs the CCE

The official Czech Certificate Exam (CCE), administered by the Institute for Language and Preparatory Studies at Charles University, is the only internationally recognized state language test for Czech. Universities and immigration authorities accept only the CCE when official proof of language proficiency is legally required for residence permits, citizenship applications, or admission to Czech-taught degree programs. The CCE A1 exam costs approximately 1,500 to 2,000 CZK and is offered at specific testing centers on fixed dates throughout the year.

Examinizer is not officially accredited and cannot replace the CCE for legal or institutional requirements. Our Czech A1 test provides an instant certificate useful for personal skill documentation, CV enhancement, or informal proof of language level for employers who do not mandate official certification. Many job seekers include Examinizer results on applications to demonstrate current language ability while preparing for the CCE. The test is available anytime online, costs less than official exams, and gives immediate feedback on your Czech skills across reading, writing, listening, and grammar at the A1 level.

How the Examinizer Test Works

You answer 25 questions that adapt to your responses, calibrated across the full CEFR range so the test can pinpoint A1 accurately whether you land above or below it. There is no registration required to start. You get your level immediately after the last question, and if you want a record of it, the PDF certificate with a verification QR code arrives by email within 30 seconds of payment, for €8 (incl. EU VAT).

Common Questions About the Czech A1 Test

Most learners reach Czech A1 after 80 to 100 hours of study, which translates to about three to four months if you study six hours per week. This timeline assumes consistent practice with a mix of vocabulary learning, grammar exercises, and listening exposure. Czech grammar is more complex than Romance languages due to its case system, so beginners often need extra time on noun and adjective declensions. If you already speak another Slavic language like Polish or Slovak, you might reach A1 in 50 to 60 hours because of shared vocabulary and grammatical structures. Daily practice, even for 20 minutes, accelerates progress more than irregular longer sessions.

The test covers present tense conjugation of regular verbs, basic noun declension in nominative and accusative cases, personal pronouns, and simple sentence construction with subject-verb-object word order. You need to recognize and use common prepositions like "v" (in), "na" (on), "do" (to), and "z" (from) with the appropriate cases. Questions include adjective agreement in gender and number, possessive pronouns like "můj" (my) and "tvůj" (your), and the verb "být" (to be) in present tense. The test does not expect mastery of all seven cases, but you should understand when to use nominative for subjects and accusative for direct objects. Past tense appears only in recognition exercises, not production tasks.

No, Czech immigration authorities only accept the official Czech Certificate Exam (CCE) from Charles University for visa and residence permit applications. The Ministry of Interior specifies which language tests meet legal requirements for long-term residence, permanent residence, and citizenship, and only government-recognized exams qualify. Examinizer certificates document your language skills for personal records or job applications where employers do not specify official certification, but they have no legal standing in immigration processes. If you need language proof for a visa, you must register for the CCE at an authorized testing center. Use Examinizer to assess your readiness before investing in the official exam.

Czech A1 requires recognition of approximately 500 to 700 words covering essential topics like family, food, housing, work, and daily routines. You should actively use about 300 to 400 of these words in speaking and writing, while the remaining vocabulary is for passive recognition in listening and reading contexts. The test includes high-frequency verbs like "mít" (to have), "chtít" (to want), "jít" (to go), and "dělat" (to do), along with common nouns for everyday objects, places, and people. Numbers from zero to 100, days of the week, months, and basic time expressions are essential. Quality matters more than quantity at this level, so focus on using core vocabulary correctly with appropriate case endings rather than memorizing extensive word lists.

The current online format focuses on reading comprehension, listening comprehension, written production, and grammar knowledge, but does not include a live speaking component. You complete written tasks that simulate real speaking situations, such as introducing yourself, describing your daily routine, or writing a short message to arrange a meeting. These tasks assess your productive language ability without requiring video recording or live conversation with an examiner. Speaking skills develop alongside writing at A1 because both use the same vocabulary and grammatical structures. For jobs or programs requiring spoken Czech assessment, you would need an exam format with an oral component, such as the full CCE. Our test accurately measures A1 proficiency in the skills it covers.