OfficialRequirements
University admission

MSc Computer Science Admission Requirements in Czechia

A taught Master's in algorithms, systems, software engineering and AI/ML, usually expecting a computing or strongly quantitative first degree. To apply for a MSc Computer Science in Czechia you'll need: computing background (programming & algorithms), a grade/GPA threshold, English proof, transcripts and references, often a GRE score. Sourced from official admission bodies and verified 2026-06-20.

Source: Study in Czechia — Admissionsofficial-bodyVerified 20 June 2026
Compiled from official sourceson 20 June 2026 — pending independent human verification.Always confirm the exact figure with the official source linked above. See our methodology.

Understanding MSc Computer Science in Czechia

How admission to a Master's in Czechia works

Admission to a MSc Computer Science in Czechia is decided by the university, not by a single national rulebook — so the requirements below are the common core that almost every Czech institution asks for, with the exact thresholds set on each program's own page. Getting in is about evidencing four things: that you hold the right prior qualification, that your grades clear the bar, that you can study in the language of instruction, and that your application stands out on its own merits.

Meeting the minimum is necessary but rarely sufficient at selective programs: a strong statement of purpose and well-chosen references are often what separate similar applicants, so treat them as core, not paperwork.

Qualifications, grades and credential recognition

Two things are checked here: that your previous qualification is recognised as equivalent to the Czech standard, and that your grade clears the program's threshold. For non-local degrees, equivalence is often assessed formally (a credential evaluation), which can take weeks — so start it early rather than at deadline time.

Grade thresholds are quoted on each program page in the local scale. Convert your own grades to that scale to check where you stand, but remember the university's own conversion is the one that counts — an unofficial converter that flatters your average can give false confidence.

Proving you can study in the language

English-taught programs require a recognised test (IELTS, TOEFL, PTE or Duolingo); programs taught in the local language require a local-language certificate instead. The required test and the minimum overall and per-section scores are set by the program — a common trap is clearing the overall score but missing a single section minimum.

Book the test early: seats fill up and results can take up to two weeks to arrive. If your prior education was conducted in English, some universities waive the test entirely — always ask before paying for one.

Admission tests (GRE / GMAT)

Many quantitative Master's programs in Czechia require or recommend the GRE. Confirm whether it's required, recommended or waived for your specific program, and if you'll submit one, book early enough that the official score report reaches the program before its deadline.

Documents to prepare, and how to time them

Beyond grades and language, you'll assemble official transcripts and certificates (often with certified translations), a statement of purpose tailored to this exact program, one to three references from people who know your work, and an up-to-date CV. Each is explained in full below, with how to prepare it and the mistakes that weaken an application.

Work backwards from the program deadline. References and credential evaluations depend on other people and institutions, so request them first; the statement of purpose is the piece most worth your own time. Once admitted, your offer letter is also the document that unlocks the next stage — the student visa — so an early admission gives the whole downstream process room to breathe.

What you need

  • Computing background (programming & algorithms)

    Required

    A Bachelor's in computer science or a related field, with demonstrable programming, data structures and algorithms coursework. Some programs accept a strong conversion/bridging record.

    What it is

    A completed qualification at the level below your target programme, recognised as equivalent in the destination — a school-leaving certificate for a Bachelor's, a Bachelor's for a Master's, a Master's for most PhDs.

    Why it's required

    Admission depends on holding the right prior qualification at a recognised standard; equivalence is checked for non-local degrees.

    How to get it
    1. Confirm your qualification is recognised as equivalent (some systems require a credential evaluation).
    2. Prepare certified copies and translations.
    3. Address any foundation-year requirement for shorter schooling systems.
    Tips
    • Credential recognition (e.g. uni-assist, WES) can take weeks — start early.
    Common mistakes
    • Assuming equivalence without checking the destination's recognition rules.
  • Minimum grade / GPA

    Required

    Each program sets its own academic threshold (e.g. a UK 2:1, a German grade conversion, or a GPA cut-off). Confirm the exact requirement on the university's program page.

    What it is

    The academic threshold the programme sets — for example a UK 2:1, a German grade conversion, or a GPA cut-off.

    Why it's required

    It's a primary admission filter; meeting it is necessary (though not always sufficient) to be considered.

    How to get it
    1. Find the exact threshold on the programme page.
    2. Convert your grades to the destination's scale to check you qualify.
    3. Strengthen a borderline application with test scores or relevant experience.
    Tips
    • Grade-conversion tools are indicative — the university's own conversion is what counts.
    Common mistakes
    • Relying on an unofficial conversion that overstates your grade.
  • English language proficiency

    Required

    Proof of English, typically IELTS, TOEFL, PTE or Duolingo. Common thresholds are around IELTS 6.0–6.5 for Bachelor's and 6.5–7.0 for Master's, but the university sets the exact score. Czech English-taught programmes typically require IELTS 6.0–6.5 or equivalent.

    What it is

    Evidence you can study in the language of instruction — usually an English test (IELTS, TOEFL, PTE, Duolingo) for English-taught programmes, or a local-language certificate (TestDaF, DELF, TOPIK, JLPT, etc.) for programmes taught in the local language.

    Why it's required

    Universities and immigration authorities both want assurance you can follow the course and function day to day. The required test and score are set by the programme, and the visa often relies on the same evidence.

    How to get it
    1. Confirm which tests your programme accepts and the minimum overall and per-section scores.
    2. Book the test early — seats fill up and results can take up to two weeks.
    3. Sit the test (or a re-sit if needed) so a valid score is ready before admission deadlines.
    Tips
    • Check the score validity window — most tests are valid for two years.
    • Some universities waive the test if your prior education was in English; ask before paying.
    • The Duolingo English Test is cheaper and faster, but confirm your university accepts it.
    Common mistakes
    • Meeting the overall score but missing a per-section minimum.
    • Booking too late, so results arrive after the admission or visa deadline.
    Duolingo English Test
    Take the Duolingo English Test

    Cheaper and faster than IELTS, accepted by many German universities. Check your programme accepts it first.

    Book the test

    Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

  • Academic transcripts & certificates

    Required

    Official transcripts and degree/graduation certificates, often with certified translations and sometimes credential evaluation.

    What it is

    Official academic transcripts and degree/graduation certificates, often with certified translations and sometimes a formal credential evaluation.

    Why it's required

    They prove what you studied and how you performed — the core evidence behind any admission decision.

    How to get it
    1. Request official transcripts from your institution.
    2. Obtain certified translations if not in an accepted language.
    3. Order a credential evaluation where the destination requires one.
    Tips
    • Order several certified copies — multiple applications each need originals.
    Common mistakes
    • Submitting unofficial or untranslated documents.
  • Statement of purpose / motivation letter

    Required

    A focused statement explaining your background, fit, and goals for this specific program.

    What it is

    A statement of purpose explaining your background, why this specific programme, and your goals.

    Why it's required

    It's where you turn a list of grades into a coherent case for admission and fit — often decisive between similar applicants.

    How to get it
    1. Research the programme's strengths and name specific modules/faculty.
    2. Connect your past, the programme, and your future plan.
    3. Edit ruthlessly and have someone proofread it.
    Tips
    • Tailor each letter — generic statements are obvious and weak.
    Common mistakes
    • Reusing one generic letter across programmes.
  • Letters of recommendation

    Required

    Usually one to three academic or professional references, depending on the level.

    What it is

    One to three references (academic or professional, depending on level) who can speak credibly to your ability.

    Why it's required

    They provide independent validation of your record and potential, which admissions committees weigh heavily.

    How to get it
    1. Choose referees who know your work well.
    2. Give them your CV, the programme details and plenty of time.
    3. Follow up politely before deadlines.
    Tips
    • A specific, enthusiastic letter beats a senior but generic one.
    Common mistakes
    • Asking a big name who barely knows you.
  • CV / résumé

    Required

    An up-to-date academic/professional CV.

    What it is

    An up-to-date academic/professional CV summarising your education, experience, skills and achievements.

    Why it's required

    It gives admissions a fast, structured overview and supports your statement and references.

    How to get it
    1. Keep it concise and relevant to the programme.
    2. Quantify achievements where possible.
    3. Use a clean, consistent format.
    Tips
    • Mirror the language of the programme's focus areas.
    Common mistakes
    • Padding with irrelevant detail or leaving gaps unexplained.
  • Valid passport / ID

    Required

    A valid passport for international applicants (used on the application and later for the visa).

    What it is

    A valid travel document covering your intended stay. Many countries also require validity for a buffer beyond your course end date (commonly six months) and blank pages for the visa.

    Why it's required

    The visa is issued into your passport and your identity is verified against it. An expiring or damaged passport will stop the application.

    How to get it
    1. Check your passport's expiry against the destination's validity rule and renew early if needed.
    2. Make sure there are enough blank visa pages.
    3. Keep the biographic-page details consistent with every other document you submit.
    Tips
    • Renew well ahead — passport renewals in some countries take weeks or months.
    • Carry certified copies and keep a scan in the cloud.
    Common mistakes
    • Applying with a passport that expires during the course.
    • Name spelling mismatches between passport and admission documents.

Sometimes required

  • Application fee

    If applicable

    Many universities charge a non-refundable application fee; pay it with a low-FX provider if applying from abroad.

    What it is

    A non-refundable fee many universities charge to process an application.

    Why it's required

    It's a gate to submission; an unpaid fee means an incomplete application.

    How to get it
    1. Budget for fees across all the programmes you apply to.
    2. Pay with a low-FX method if applying from abroad.
    3. Check for fee waivers you may qualify for.
    Tips
    • Some universities waive fees for early or scholarship applicants.
    Common mistakes
    • Missing a waiver you qualified for, or paying high card-FX fees.
    Wise
    Transfer tuition & funds with low FX fees

    Send proof-of-funds or tuition to Germany at the real exchange rate instead of losing money to bank markups.

    Send money with Wise

    Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

  • GRE score (often required)

    If applicable

    Many quantitative Master's programs require or recommend the GRE — confirm on the program page.

    What it is

    A standardised graduate admission test — the GRE for many quantitative Master's programmes, or the GMAT (or GRE) for MBAs.

    Why it's required

    Selective programmes use these scores to compare applicants from different education systems. Where required or recommended, a competitive score strengthens admission.

    How to get it
    1. Check whether your target programme requires, recommends, or waives the test.
    2. Prepare and book a test date so the score is ready before the deadline.
    3. Send the official score report to your programmes.
    Tips
    • Many programmes publish a typical score range — aim for it.
    • Some waive the test for strong academic records or work experience.
    Common mistakes
    • Assuming a waiver without confirming it in writing.
    • Booking too late to report scores before deadlines.

Your application checklist

Tick items off as you prepare them. Print or save when done.

0 / 10 ready
  • Duolingo English Test
    Take the Duolingo English Test

    Cheaper and faster than IELTS, accepted by many German universities. Check your programme accepts it first.

    Book the test

    Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

  • Wise
    Transfer tuition & funds with low FX fees

    Send proof-of-funds or tuition to Germany at the real exchange rate instead of losing money to bank markups.

    Send money with Wise

    Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Frequently asked questions

What English score do I need for a MSc Computer Science in Czechia?

Proof of English, typically IELTS, TOEFL, PTE or Duolingo. Common thresholds are around IELTS 6.0–6.5 for Bachelor's and 6.5–7.0 for Master's, but the university sets the exact score. Czech English-taught programmes typically require IELTS 6.0–6.5 or equivalent.

What grades do I need for a MSc Computer Science in Czechia?

A Bachelor's in computer science or a related field, with demonstrable programming, data structures and algorithms coursework. Some programs accept a strong conversion/bridging record.

Do I need the GRE for a MSc Computer Science in Czechia?

Many quantitative Master's programs require or recommend the GRE — confirm on the program page.

What documents do I need to apply for a MSc Computer Science in Czechia?

You'll typically need: Computing background (programming & algorithms), Minimum grade / GPA, English language proficiency, Academic transcripts & certificates, Statement of purpose / motivation letter, Letters of recommendation, CV / résumé, Valid passport / ID. Each is explained in full on this page.

Last verified 20 June 2026 by OfficialRequirements System. Each university sets its own exact thresholds — always confirm on the official program page before applying.