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 2026If 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.
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.
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.
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.
What income qualifies, what doesn't, and the paper trail to keep.
The flat-tax regime's brackets, contributions, and who it actually suits.
What no US agreement costs a self-employed American — with worked examples.
Remote-work setups live or die on the details — entity type, social security, the nomad exemption's edges. We'll introduce you to a specialist we've independently vetted for US and Canadian cases.