FAQ

Here is a list of frequently asked questions and our expert answers. We hope this will assist you in your buying and selling process, although we are also personally available to help with these and any other questions and support you may need.

Real estate sales tax is a tax paid by the acquirer of real estate in the Republic of Croatia, and it amounts to 3% of the agreed purchase price, i.e. the market price based on the assessment of the tax administration. The acquirer of real estate can be exempted from the obligation to pay real estate sales tax if he meets the prescribed conditions.

Property is to be ready by Summer 2026.

A solemnized rental agreement is a contract concluded by the lessor and the lessee at a notary public, and the notary public, in addition to checking the proper form, also confirms the content of the contract, and such a contract contains an enforceable clause that protects the Lessor in the event that the Lessee does not fulfill its contractual obligations. Although there is no obligation to conclude a solemnized lease agreement, it brings advantages. With the enforcement clause, the lessor protects himself from various risks such as the collection of due and unpaid rents, overhead costs or various damages in the real estate, so that an immediate forcible enforcement is carried out on all the movable and immovable assets of the Lessee, and on all accounts with third-party legal entities that deal with the Lessee’s payment transactions for the purpose of payment. If the Lessee does not hand over the property in question to the Lessor, free from all persons and belongings of the Lessee, after the expiration of the Lease Agreement or the notice period established by the Agreement, the Notary Public will, at the request of the Lessor, attach a certificate of enforceability to the Agreement

Citizens or legal entities from member states of the European Union acquire the right of ownership of real estate in the Republic of Croatia under the same conditions as for the acquisition of ownership rights for citizens of the Republic of Croatia and legal entities with headquarters in the Republic of Croatia, with the exception of real estate in exempted areas such as agricultural land and for the acquisition of ownership rights does not require the consent of the Ministry of Justice.

Citizens or legal entities from outside the member states of the European Union need the consent of the Ministry of Justice to acquire ownership rights to real estate in the Republic of Croatia, and they can only obtain this consent if there is reciprocity for the acquisition of ownership rights to real estate in the Republic of Croatia between the citizen’s state and the Republic of Croatia, and the list countries with which there is reciprocity can be checked in the section Information on reciprocity in the acquisition of real estate ownership rights between the Republic of Croatia and countries outside the European Union, the Republic of Iceland, the Principality of Liechtenstein, the Kingdom of Norway and the Swiss Confederation.

In order to obtain the OIB in Croatia, a foreign citizen must go to a tax office and fill out the Request for determining and assigning a personal identification number, and must attach a copy of the passport or, if he is a citizen of the European Union, a European identity card. If it is a foreign legal entity, it is necessary to go to the tax office, and together with the Request for determination and allocation of OIB, it must attach the Deed of Incorporation (decision or extract from the competent register, which must be in the Croatian language or translated into the Croatian language by an authorized court interpreter).

Distance from Split center is 15 min
Distance from Trogir center is 20 min
Distance from the airport is 15 min
Distance from the airport is 15 min
Distance from the hiking trail is 10 minutes walk
Distance from the highway is 25 min

Plot sizes go from 504 m2 up to 586 m2.

Detailed schedules of local ferry lines can be found at www.jadrolinija.hr