Croatia · Working

Work remote.
Keep it foreign.

Croatia's rules are unusually clear: work for anyone outside Croatia and the state wants nothing — no income tax on nomad-permit earnings. Work for anyone inside Croatia and you need a permit your employer applies for. Here's the 2026 landscape.

Figures verified 9 July 2026
The key numbers · 2026
  • Digital nomad permit income bar: €3,622.50/month; qualifying remote income: 0% Croatian income tax
  • Local employment income: 15–23% / 25–33% municipal rates, threshold €60,000/yr
  • Average net salary: €1,527/month (Feb 2026, DZS) · minimum wage €1,050 gross (2026)
  • No US–Croatia totalization agreement — self-employed Americans face double social-security exposure
  • Canada–Croatia social security agreement: in force since 1 May 1999 (CPP/OAS coordination)
  • State pension age in Croatia: 65 for men, rising to 65 for women by 2030 — relevant only if you build a Croatian contribution record

Remote work: the clean setup

If your employer or clients are outside Croatia, the digital nomad permit is the intended vehicle: up to 18 months' residence and a statutory exemption from Croatian income tax on that remote income. The boundary is bright: no Croatian employer, no Croatian clients, no work "performed for" the Croatian market. Cross it and you're in stay-and-work permit territory retroactively — don't.

US self-employed, read twice. With no totalization agreement, a self-employed American in Croatia can owe US self-employment tax (15.3%) and, outside the nomad exemption, Croatian contributions too — with no mechanism to credit one against the other. Employees of US companies are simpler. Either way, model the social-security side before you commit, not just income tax.

Working for a Croatian employer

Third-country nationals need a stay-and-work permit, applied for by the employer, generally with a labour-market test through HZZ (the Croatian Employment Service) unless the role is on a shortage list. Croatia issues tens of thousands of these a year — but overwhelmingly for tourism, construction, and transport. For our readers the realistic use is different: a genuine part-time or consulting role with a Croatian company is one of the few routes whose years count toward the 5-year long-term residence clock. If settling matters to you, that's worth knowing.

Self-employment and the paušalni obrt

Croatia's flat-tax sole trader regime (paušalni obrt) taxes small businesses on presumed income with minimal bookkeeping — popular with locals running rentals, crafts, and services. It requires a residence basis that allows work, brings monthly pension and health contributions, and its thresholds change with tax reforms. For most American and Canadian arrivals it's a later-stage option, not a move-week decision. Get a Croatian accountant (knjigovođa) — they're inexpensive and essential.

The pension-contribution question

Canadians: the 1999 social security agreement lets you totalize Croatian and Canadian periods to qualify for CPP/OAS or a Croatian pension, and prevents double contributions on assignment. Americans: no such agreement exists — Croatian contribution years and US Social Security credits live in separate universes. US Social Security remains payable to US citizens resident in Croatia; the gap is about contributions and eligibility-combining, not payment.

In this section

Guides

Coming soon

The nomad tax exemption, precisely

What income qualifies, what doesn't, and the paper trail to keep.

Coming soon

Paušalni obrt for expats

The flat-tax regime's brackets, contributions, and who it actually suits.

Coming soon

The totalization gap, quantified

What no US agreement costs a self-employed American — with worked examples.

Sources

  1. MUP — Temporary stay of digital nomads (definition, no Croatian employer/clients): mup.gov.hr (checked 9 Jul 2026)
  2. MUP — Work of third-country nationals (stay-and-work permits): mup.gov.hr
  3. Digital-nomad income tax exemption — Croatian Income Tax Act; corroborated by PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries — Croatia: taxsummaries.pwc.com
  4. SSA — Status of totalization agreements (Croatia not in force): ssa.gov (checked 9 Jul 2026)
  5. Canada–Croatia social security agreement (1 May 1999): canada.ca
  6. DZS — average net salary (Feb 2026); minimum wage 2026 per government regulation, Narodne novine
This page is general information, not legal or tax advice. Work-permit quotas, shortage lists, and contribution rules change; confirm with MUP, HZZ, or a professional before acting.
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