In August 1925, the first 200 vz. 24s were delivered for acceptance testing and subsequently approved, with the secretary of the testing commission praising the weapon: "I consider this weapon, after removal of the defects which were found, to be fully adequate for its purpose, combat at close range." While the vz. 24 was produced at an acceptable rate, deliveries were still late: an order for 20,000 pistols ordered for the army was expected to be completed by December 1924, but was only completed by June 1926. An order of 100,000 pistols to be delivered between 1924 and 1928 was delivered between August 1925 and December 1931. According to Ezell, about 172,000 pistols were built from 1925 to 1938, while Kliment and Nakládal give a figure of over 180,000 pistols. Several hundred pistols were exported to
Lithuania in 1929, 1930, and 1934 while
Poland purchased 1,700 pistols between 1929 and 1930. According to Hogg, these Polish imports were a slightly modified variant designated as the
Wz. 1928. In 1929, the Polish Department of Armaments decided to purchase a license to manufacture the vz. 24 to replace its hodgepodge inventory of handguns, but after objections from the army and experts, who considered the design as too complicated and firing too weak of a cartridge, the Polish Army ultimately adopted the
FB Vis pistol instead. The vz. 24 was succeeded in production by a simplified version chambered in
.32 ACP, the
vz. 27. Unlike its predecessor, the vz. 27 was issued to police and security guards instead of the armed forces. In 1936, following complaints from the
Czechoslovak Air Force, demanding a cheaper and simpler to operate pistol, a second redesign designated as the
vz. 38 was adopted, with production starting in 1938. However, not a single pistol ever reached the armed forces before the
German occupation of Czechoslovakia.
Slovakia seized over ten thousand vz. 24s when it declared its independence from Czechoslovakia in March 1939. Pistols seized by the Germans during their occupation were designated as the
Pistole 24(t). After
World War II, the Česká Zbrojovka factory produced spare parts for the vz. 24 and vz. 27 while a small batch of pistols was assembled using pre-war parts in 1946. In 1958 Czechoslovakia supplied the
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen with 603 surplus vz. 24 pistols. ==Operators==