Electricity prices in Czechia 2025
In 2025, the average wholesale day-ahead electricity price in Czechia was 2.368 Kč /kWh (▲14% vs 2024). Below is the month-by-month breakdown plus a chart of how prices moved through the year.
Monthly breakdown — 2025
| Month | CZK/MWh | CZK/kWh | MW |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 2025 | 3,116.10 Kč | 3.116 Kč | 8,130 |
| February 2025 | 3,219.62 Kč | 3.220 Kč | 8,373 |
| March 2025 | 2,424.96 Kč | 2.425 Kč | 7,531 |
| April 2025 | 1,931.88 Kč | 1.932 Kč | 6,865 |
| May 2025 | 1,775.61 Kč | 1.776 Kč | 6,523 |
| June 2025 | 1,872.72 Kč | 1.873 Kč | 6,542 |
| July 2025 | 2,234.90 Kč | 2.235 Kč | 6,289 |
| August 2025 | 1,892.92 Kč | 1.893 Kč | 6,267 |
| September 2025 | 2,246.51 Kč | 2.247 Kč | 6,565 |
| October 2025 | 2,365.83 Kč | 2.366 Kč | 7,145 |
| November 2025 | 2,721.35 Kč | 2.721 Kč | 7,805 |
| December 2025 | 2,618.19 Kč | 2.618 Kč | 7,643 |
Czechia generates around 36 TWh annually from its six VVER reactors at Dukovany and Temelín — over 40% of the national supply — making nuclear the backbone of the system. ČEPS, the national TSO, operates the CZ bidding zone synchronously inside the Central European block and runs the OTE day-ahead market. Lignite from the Most basin still provides ~32% of generation but is scheduled to phase out by 2038.
Two new EPR1200-class reactors are under construction at Dukovany — first concrete poured in 2024, commercial operation targeted for 2036. Wind has been politically constrained for decades and contributes under 1% of generation; solar, by contrast, has expanded to over 4 GW following the 2023 net-billing reform.
Czechia is a large net exporter, with around 14 TWh of surplus heading west to Germany and south to Austria each year.