User:JustinePorto/Public toilets in the Czech Republic

Public toilets in the Czech Republic have a number of words to describe them including záchody, toalety, totaleta , Veh-Tseh and WC. There are few public toilets in Prague, and street level ones often have a fee.

Public toilets
The local words for public toilets include záchody, toalety, totaleta , Veh-Tseh and WC. The words for women's toilets are zeny or dámy, while the words for men's toilets are muzi and páni.

A 2021 study found there were 15 public toilets per 100,000 people. There are not many public toilets in Prague, though a few automated toilets on the street do exist in the more touristy parts of the city.

There is a Euro Key, which allows people with disabilities to have it to access 12,000 otherwise locked public toilets in Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, the Netherlands, Slovakia and Switzerland.

Toilet paper is not generally provided at public toilets. Instead, it is sold by the sheet by attendants. The most common type of toilet is a sit toilet. Most public toilets in Prague charge a small fee to enter of around Kč5-10.