1. Prague (Praha) – 1,330,000
The capital and largest city, known for its Old Town and castle.
2. Brno – 380,000
Second-largest city, a center of education and technology.
3. Ostrava – 285,000
Industrial city in the northeast.
4. Plzeň – 175,000
Home of Pilsner beer.
5. Liberec – 105,000
Northern city with a historic textile industry.
6. Olomouc – 100,000
Baroque university city in Moravia.
7. České Budějovice – 94,000
Home of the original Budweiser beer.
8. Hradec Králové – 92,000
Elegant city with Art Nouveau architecture.
9. Ústí nad Labem – 90,000
River port and industrial hub.
10. Pardubice – 90,000
City known for horse racing and gingerbread.
11. Zlín – 75,000
Planned industrial city built by the Baťa shoe company.
12. Havířov – 73,000
Postwar planned city near Ostrava.
13. Kladno – 68,000
Industrial city near Prague.
14. Most – 66,000
Coal mining town with a relocated historic district.
15. Opava – 56,000
Historic Silesian city.
16. Frýdek-Místek – 55,000
Twin-city near the Beskid Mountains.
17. Karviná – 51,000
City in the coal mining region of Silesia.
18. Jihlava – 50,000
Medieval mining city in the Highlands.
19. Teplice – 50,000
One of the oldest spa towns in Europe.
20. Karlovy Vary – 48,000
World-famous spa town.
21. Děčín – 48,000
Transport hub on the Elbe River.
22. Chomutov – 47,000
Northwest Bohemian industrial city.
23. Prostějov – 43,000
Textile and sports town.
24. Třebíč – 35,000
UNESCO-listed town with Jewish heritage.
25. Tábor – 34,000
Hussite historical town in southern Bohemia.
The above is subject to change.
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