Croatian home prices rose 14.1% in 2025 — and the smaller inland markets rose fastest of all (+19.3%). It's still far below Western Europe, and Americans and Canadians can buy. But remember what a deed doesn't do here: it buys you a home, not a residency track.
Figures verified 9 July 2026US and Canadian citizens can buy Croatian property as individuals with consent from the Ministry of Justice, granted on the basis of reciprocity — broadly available for Canadians and for most US states, but treatment technically varies by state, and consent adds months to a purchase. The common workaround is buying through a Croatian company (a j.d.o.o. or d.o.o.), which needs no consent but adds accounting obligations. Agricultural land is generally off-limits to non-EU buyers either way. A lawyer, not the agent, should run your title check — Croatia's land registry has historic quirks, especially in Dalmatia.
| Cost | Amount (2026) |
|---|---|
| Real estate transfer tax (resale property) | 3% of market value (buyer pays) |
| VAT (new builds, instead of transfer tax) | 25%, normally built into the price |
| Agent commission | Typically 2–3% + VAT per side (market practice) |
| Lawyer + notary + registration | Roughly 1–2% (market practice) |
| Annual property tax (non-primary residences, from 2025) | €0.60–€8.00/m²/yr, set by the municipality; primary residences and long-term rentals exempt |
The 2025 property tax deliberately targets empty homes and short-term tourist lets — exactly the categories a foreign-owned coastal apartment falls into. At the €8 maximum, a 100 m² apartment costs €800/year. Check the municipality's adopted rate before you buy, not after.
Long-term rentals are scarce on the coast because owners earn more from tourists: many leases run September to June, then evict for the summer. Zagreb has a more normal year-round market (~€680/month for a 1-bed; market estimates, 2026 — Croatia publishes no official rent index). Register your lease-based address at the police within 3 days of arrival; an unregistered lease is a residency problem, not just a tax one. Rent through a winter before you buy anywhere you haven't lived through one.
Reciprocity consent, the company route, title checks, and the realistic timeline.
Adopted municipal rates, the exemptions, and what it means for coastal apartments.
How coastal renting actually works, and how to secure a year-round home.
Croatian title histories can be tangled, and foreign buyers need the consent process handled right. We'll introduce you to an English-speaking property lawyer we've independently vetted.