Czech Railway Reports Zero SPAD Incidents Since 2025
Czech’s exclusive ETCS operation eliminated all SPAD incidents on equipped lines since 2025, the Supreme Audit Office confirmed, with trains hitting 160 km/h.

PRAGUE, Czech Republic – The Czech Supreme Audit Office (NKÚ) reported that since exclusive European Train Control System (ETCS) operation began in 2025, no signal-passed-at-danger incidents have occurred on equipped lines and trains have commercially exceeded 160 km/h on two sections of the Prague–České Budějovice corridor.
What Are the Technical Specifications?
ETCS is a radio-based train control system that continuously supervises speed and movement authorities, using trackside balises and GSM-R radio to prevent overspeed and signal passing. The Czech network uses ETCS on both core TEN‑T corridors and, under the updated 2025 strategy, will deploy simpler, cost‑effective variants—including lower ETCS levels and the ETCS PZV system—on secondary lines. The NKÚ audit confirmed that exclusive ETCS operation has enabled speeds above 160 km/h for the first time in Czech commercial service, while infrastructure on the Brno–Přerov route is designed for 200 km/h once exclusive ETCS is in place. The exact current route length equipped with ETCS was not disclosed in the audit.
Key Technical Data
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Technology / System Name | European Train Control System (ETCS) |
| Total Value | Not disclosed |
| Parties Involved | Ministry of Transport, Správa železnic |
| Timeline / Completion | Exclusive operation from 2025; additional 730 km by 2030; total network reach 1,400 km by 2033 |
| Country / Corridor | Czech Republic, priority on TEN‑T core network |
| Maximum Speed Achieved | 160 km/h (commercial); 200 km/h (infrastructure design on Brno–Přerov) |
| Safety Performance | Zero accidents and zero SPAD incidents on ETCS‑equipped lines since 2025 |
Where Does This Technology Stand in the Market?
ETCS competes with legacy national train protection systems such as Germany’s PZB/LZB, France’s KVB/TVM and Italy’s SCMT, all of which lack cross-border interoperability. The EU mandates ETCS for new high‑speed and TEN‑T core corridors, and over 70,000 track‑km of ETCS had been contracted across Europe by the end of 2023 (Source: European Commission, 2024). The Czech Republic’s zero‑SPAD record mirrors the safety records achieved by early adopters like Switzerland, which operates over 1,800 route‑km of ETCS Level 2 (Source: Swiss Federal Railways, 2023). The Czech target of 1,400 km by 2033 represents a focused, cost‑conscious rollout compared to Germany’s 5,200 route‑km in operation by 2024 (Source: DB Netz, 2024). The Czech strategy to use low‑cost ETCS PZV on regional lines echoes Sweden’s ETCS Limited Supervision concept. Meanwhile, the broader Czech signalling market is shifting toward industrial Ethernet and cloud‑based traffic management platforms (Source: IndexBox, 2025)—a trend that strengthens the data‑communication backbone required for ETCS Level 2 and future Level 3 deployments.
Editor’s Analysis
The NKÚ’s recommendation to weigh costs on non‑TEN‑T lines highlights a European dilemma: meeting interoperability mandates within constrained budgets. The Czech solution—full ETCS on busy corridors, simpler variants elsewhere—mirrors strategies in Sweden and the Netherlands and could become a template for smaller EU states. The push for a European ETCS coordinator, spearheaded by Czech authorities, seeks to resolve fragmented technical specifications and speed cross‑border services. The zero‑SPAD record validates the safety case, but the true capacity gains—expected once lineside signals are removed—will hinge on further investment in cloud‑based traffic management and industrial Ethernet infrastructure, consistent with the Czech signalling market’s 2025 direction (Source: IndexBox, 2025).
FAQ
Q: What is ETCS and how does it prevent red‑light running?
A: ETCS is a radio‑based train control system that continuously monitors a train’s speed and movement authority. It automatically triggers braking if a train is about to pass a stop signal or exceed a speed limit, removing the risk of human error.
Q: How many kilometres of Czech rail are currently equipped with ETCS?
A: The exact current route length was not disclosed in the audit. The network plans to add 730 km by 2030 and reach a total of 1,400 km by 2033, prioritising lines that carry 90% of national rail traffic.
Q: Why is the Czech Republic pushing for a European ETCS coordinator?
A: The coordinator would manage cross‑border technical specification updates and reduce fragmentation. Czech authorities believe that faster standardization is needed to facilitate seamless international train movements and accelerate the removal of legacy national systems.






