EU Member State · HR
Croatia's 2023 Euro and Schengen Entry: What Actually Changed for Companies Operating In or Through Croatia
The EU's Newest Eurozone Member on the Adriatic
GDP per Capita
€21K
↓ €19K vs EU avg
GDP Growth Rate
+3.8%
↑ 2.7pp vs EU avg
Unemployment Rate
6.1%
↓ 0.3pp vs EU avg
Inflation (HICP)
4.4%
Government Debt
60.9%
↑ 3.9pp vs EU avg
Data year: 2022 · Source: Official statistical authorities · Last updated: 2024
Country Facts
- Capital
- Zagreb
- Official Language(s)
- Croatian
- Currency
- Euro (€) Eurozone
- EU Member Since
- 2013
- Population
- 4.0 million
- Area
- 56,594 km²
- ISO Code
- HR
- NUTS Code
- HR
Economic Overview
1 min readCroatia's GDP per capita of €20,530 places it below the EU average—a gap reflecting its status as a younger member state and former transition economy. Tourism, manufacturing, and services drive production, with agriculture retaining cultural weight. EU structural funds and integration benefits anch
Croatia's GDP per capita of €20,530 places it below the EU average—a gap reflecting its status as a younger member state and former transition economy. Tourism, manufacturing, and services drive production, with agriculture retaining cultural weight. EU structural funds and integration benefits anchor an emerging market still closing the distance to wealthier peers.
Growth accelerated to 3.8% in 2023, outpacing broader EU trends despite regional headwinds. The unemployment rate of 6.1% has tightened toward EU averages. Inflation tells a different story. At 8.4% year-on-year, price pressures remain elevated enough to crimp household purchasing power. Government debt sits at 60.9% of GDP—marginally above the Maastricht threshold but sustainable given current growth rates.
The economy faces competing pressures. Anchoring inflation while sustaining growth is critical as energy vulnerabilities and demographic decline threaten productivity. Euro adoption, planned for 2023, deepens financial integration but demands fiscal discipline. Whether Croatia accelerates convergence or stalls depends largely on two variables: foreign direct investment flows and EU cohesion spending deployment.
Key Economic Indicators
Data sourced from official EU and international statistical authorities. All figures are for the most recent available year.
GDP (Current Prices)
19/26 EUYear: 2025
GDP per Capita
Year: 2025
GDP Growth Rate
Year: 2025
Current Account Balance (% of GDP)
16/27 EUYear: 2023
The difference between a country's imports and exports of goods, services and transfers. A surplus means more is earned abroad than spent.
GDP per Capita (PPS)
Year: 2024
Price Level Index (EU=100)
Year: 2024
VC Investment (€m)
Year: 2023
House Price Index
19/78 EUYear: 2024
FDI Inflows (€bn)
Year: 2022
Croatia's economy pivots on tourism, which generates roughly one-fifth of GDP and generates pronounced seasonal volatility. Per-capita income stands at €20,530, placing the country 24th among 27 EU member states and firmly in the Union's lower-income bracket. Euro adoption in January 2023 signals institutional integration ambitions, though the industrial base tells a different story. Rijeka's shipbuilding and refining sectors, coupled with Zagreb's manufacturing and finance clusters, lack the diversification needed to accelerate convergence.
The 3.8% growth rate outpaces the EU median, driven by tourism recovery and post-Brexit labour repatriation from the United Kingdom. This performance masks a harder reality: meaningful convergence with Western European peers demands a 4-5% trajectory. Productivity gains remain modest, and external demand shocks—particularly from the Mediterranean leisure sector—pose acute vulnerability to the expansion model.
Unemployment at 6.1% marginally exceeds the EU average of 5.8%, though participation rates lag comparable economies. Inflation at 12.69% HICP reflects euro-area transmission effects and domestic wage pressures, compressing purchasing power. Government debt at 60.9% of GDP exceeds the Maastricht threshold yet sits comfortably below the EU median, offering modest fiscal space for structural investment.
Tourism dependency, while profitable, starves manufacturing investment and high-value services development of capital and policy attention. Regional disparities amplify this problem: Zagreb and Dalmatia thrive while inland regions stagnate, undermining cohesion policy effectiveness. Sustained diversification and productivity acceleration represent prerequisites for escaping middle-income status. Without structural reform, Croatia will likely remain anchored in the Union's lower tier for years to come.
Unemployment Rate
Year: 2025
Employment Rate (20–64)
21/24 EUYear: 2024
Median Gross Annual Earnings
Year: 2022
Youth Unemployment Rate
Year: 2025
Long-Term Unemployment Rate
12/26 EUYear: 2025
Croatia's unemployment rate of 6.1% sits marginally above the EU average of 5.8%, ranking the country 17th among member states. Yet the employment rate of 70.8% masks deeper labour market slack, trailing the EU benchmark and revealing structural underutilisation that post-pandemic recovery has failed to address. The productivity and participation gaps that plague newer eurozone entrants remain stubbornly intact.
Demographic headwinds tighten the screws. A 0.5 per cent annual population contraction shrinks the working-age labour pool, while Brexit-induced return migration has dried up faster than it arrived—too temporary and insufficient to stem broader emigration. Skills mismatches carve a clear geographic divide: tourism-dependent coastal regions cannot fill vacancies clustered around industrial hubs in Rijeka and Zagreb. Sectoral concentration in lower-value-added tourism and shipbuilding caps wage growth and breeds seasonal employment swings that widen regional inequalities.
Against peer economies Slovenia and Slovakia, Croatia underperforms on unemployment and wage convergence. Eurozone entry has kicked nominal wage growth into higher gear, though this masks persistent structural challenges. Tourism dominates at 20 per cent of GDP—a double-edged asset that cushions recession risk while simultaneously preventing the broad-based labour market tightening necessary for wages to climb across the wider economy. Industrial diversification and green investment in manufacturing hubs will determine whether this structural trap loosens.
Inflation (HICP)
12/27 EUYear: 2023
Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices — the EU's standard measure of price changes across all member states.
Inflation Rate (HICP)
Year: 2025
Government Debt (% of GDP)
13/27 EUYear: 2023
Total government debt as a percentage of GDP. The EU Stability Pact sets a reference target of below 60%.
Personal Income Tax Top Rate
41/54 EUYear: 2022
Croatia's 60.9% debt-to-GDP ratio sits comfortably below the EU average of 64.8%, placing the country 15th among member states. Since joining the eurozone in January 2023, the government has tightened fiscal discipline considerably. Robust nominal GDP growth of 3.8% outpaces debt servicing costs, a dynamic amplified by favourable euro-denominated borrowing conditions. This cushion gives policymakers meaningful room for countercyclical spending if external shocks hit.
At 126.9%, Croatia's inflation runs marginally below the EU average of 129.8%, suggesting price pressures remain relatively contained despite post-pandemic and energy-driven demand shocks. European Central Bank policy transmission has proven effective. Yet elevated inflation continues to squeeze real household incomes and purchasing power. Post-Brexit worker repatriation has eased some labour market tightness, but sticky inflation in services—particularly tourism-dependent sectors—may persist.
The absence of current account data creates blind spots around Croatia's external financial position. Tourism dominance and the recent euro adoption point toward manageable external constraints. The 25% VAT rate and EU fiscal framework compliance position fiscal consolidation favourably. Growth momentum of 3.8% looks durable, underpinned by tourism recovery and industrial activity. Geopolitical risks and weakening external demand deserve close watching.
At-Risk-of-Poverty Rate
1/12 EUYear: 2024
Gini Coefficient
6/12 EUYear: 2024
Tertiary Education Attainment
Year: 2024
ICT Specialists (% of Employment)
21/27 EUYear: 2023
R&D Expenditure (% of GDP)
Year: 2024
Corruption Perceptions Index
45/54 EUYear: 2023
Population
Year: 2025
Life Expectancy at Birth
Year: 2024
Government Debt (% GDP)
13/26 EUYear: 2024
Government Deficit (% GDP)
12/26 EUYear: 2024
Current Account Balance (% GDP)
Year: 2024
Where Croatia Stands in the EU
2022 data · All 27 EU member states
GDP per Capita
Croatia ranks 24th out of 27 EU member states — value: 20.5K €/capita (EU avg: 39.8K€/capita)
Croatia sits at 24th place among EU members with a GDP per capita of €20,530—roughly half the bloc's average. The gap reflects the country's economic structure: tourism dominates the income base while industrial productivity lags behind northern counterparts. Yet recent developments signal momentum. The 3.8% growth rate and eurozone integration are already reshaping the convergence trajectory. As the newest EU member still in transition, Croatia's catch-up potential appears to be accelerating.
Unemployment Rate
Croatia ranks 11th out of 27 EU member states — value: 6.1 % (EU avg: 5.8%)
Government Debt (% of GDP)
Croatia ranks 13th out of 27 EU member states — value: 60.9 % GDP (EU avg: 64.8% GDP)
Doing Business in Croatia
Practical intelligence for founders, investors, and executives entering Croatia.
Company Formation
- Time to incorporate: 1 day
- Minimum capital: No minimum
- Common structure: DOO
Language of Business
- Official language: Croatian
- In practice: English growing, especially in tourism and tech
- English proficiency: Medium
Talent & Workforce
- University graduates: ~25,000 per year
- Key industries: Tourism, Shipbuilding, IT Services
Digital & Infrastructure
- Internet speed rank: 18th in EU
- e-Gov maturity: Medium
EU Funding Access
- Budget position: Net beneficiary
- Key programmes: Cohesion Funds, ESIF, CAP
Work Permits for Non-EU
- EU Blue Card: Yes
- Key visa types: EU Blue Card, Work Permit
- Difficulty: Medium
Business & Tax Environment
Key rates for companies investing or operating in Croatia.
Business Climate Overview
Croatia's eurozone entry in January 2023 unlocked measurable improvements in the business environment, yet institutional quality still trails EU-15 benchmarks. The World Bank placed the country 62nd globally for ease of doing business—matching Portugal's ranking—as regulatory frameworks now align with EU standards. Corruption and bureaucratic delays continue to hamper operations, though successive administrations have bolstered judicial independence and digital services. The 25% VAT rate, among Europe's highest, erodes some labour cost advantages.
Tourism anchors the economy at roughly 20% of GDP, concentrating development along the Adriatic coast. Rijeka dominates shipbuilding and oil refining, while Zagreb concentrates manufacturing and financial services. Austrian and Italian firms have increased foreign direct investment since euro adoption, targeting Mediterranean expansion. Brexit migration has reversed skilled labour outflows that previously constrained growth.
GDP growth hit 3.8% in 2023, driven by fiscal consolidation and euro adoption. Russian supply disruptions threaten energy security, and digital infrastructure gaps remain problematic. EU cohesion fund spending on transport and renewables should sustain expansion in the medium term. Demographic decline, however, presents a structural barrier to convergence with EU living standards.
Corporate Tax Rate
18.0%
Standard headline rate on company profits
Tax rates shown are standard rates only. Reduced rates, exemptions, holding regimes, and special economic zones may apply. Always consult a qualified local tax adviser before making business decisions.
Historical Trends (2018–2022)
Source: Official EU and international statistical authorities. p = provisional e = estimated b = break in series
Croatia's economy grew at roughly 3% annually before the pandemic, sustained by robust tourism revenues and modest industrial output from Rijeka and Zagreb clusters. The 2020 COVID shock delivered a brutal 8.3% contraction as the Adriatic tourism sector—worth approximately one-fifth of GDP—imploded. A sharp rebound followed in 2021, powered by pent-up travel demand and EU recovery funds. January 2023 brought Eurozone adoption, which reinforced investor confidence and anchored macroeconomic expectations during a turbulent period.
The 2022 energy crisis and associated inflation surge proved manageable. Croatia expanded at 7.3% that year, outperforming many peers thanks to tourism resilience and prior labour-force repatriation from post-Brexit UK migration reversal. Growth decelerated to 3.8% in 2023–2024 as economies normalised. Convergence with EU living standards accelerated sharply after monetary union entry, yet structural vulnerabilities remain. Heavy reliance on tourism leaves the economy exposed to external demand shocks. Real recovery momentum depends on whether Croatia can diversify its economic base—a challenge that persists despite recent gains.
| Indicator | Unit | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GDP (Current Prices) | €M | 53.0K | 55.8K | 50.7K | 58.4K | 67.6K |
| GDP per Capita | €/capita | 13.3K | 14.1K | 13.0K | 15.1K | 17.5K |
| GDP Growth Rate | % | 2.9 | 3.1 | -8.3 | 12.6 | 7.3 |
| Unemployment Rate | % | 8.3 | 6.6 | 7.4 | 7.5 | 6.8 |
| Population | persons | 4.0M | 4.0M | 3.9M | 3.9M | 3.9M |
| Government Debt (% of GDP) | % GDP | 72.8 | 70.9 | 86.5 | 78.2 | 68.5 |
| Current Account Balance (% of GDP) | % GDP | 1.0 | 2.1 | -1.9 | 0.3 | -3.5 |
| Employment Rate (20–64) | % | 64.9 | 66.4 | 66.9 | 68.6 | 70.2 |
| At-Risk-of-Poverty Rate | % | 19.3 | 18.3 | 18.3 | 19.2 | 18.0 |
| Median Gross Annual Earnings | €/yr | — | — | — | — | 15.5K |
| Price Level Index (EU=100) | PLI | 70.6 | 71.3 | 70.7 | 69.4 | 72.6 |
| Personal Income Tax Top Rate | % | — | — | — | — | 30.0 |
| House Price Index | HPI | 6.1 | 9.0 | 7.7 | 7.3 | 14.8 |
| FDI Inflows (€bn) | €bn | — | — | — | — | 2.0 |
| Tertiary Education Attainment | % | 25.2 | 25.2 | 25.5 | 25.6b | 26.1 |
Croatia is the EU's newest Eurozone member (joined January 2023) and the bloc's most underestimated tourism economy — a beautiful Adriatic country with competitive tax rates, improving governance, and a location that is transforming from a tourist destination into a credible base for remote-first businesses and digital entrepreneurs.
Economic Character
Croatia is a small, upper-middle-income EU economy of 4.0 million people with GDP per capita approximately 79% of the EU average — comparable to Portugal and significantly above Bulgaria or Romania. Its economic structure is distinctive: tourism represents approximately 20–25% of GDP — one of the EU's highest concentrations — making it simultaneously Croatia's greatest economic asset and its most significant structural vulnerability.
The country's EU accession (2013), Schengen entry (2023), and eurozone entry (January 2023) represent a sequence of institutional milestones that have materially improved the operating environment for businesses. The euro adoption eliminated currency risk, simplified cross-border transactions, and reduced borrowing costs — practical improvements for businesses and consumers alike.
Zagreb is the economic, political, and cultural centre, accounting for approximately 35% of national GDP. Split and Dubrovnik are economically significant through tourism but have limited diversified business infrastructure. The gap between Zagreb's economic development and the rest of the country is large.
Croatia faces structural economic challenges: emigration to Germany, Austria, and Ireland has accelerated since EU accession (an estimated 300,000–400,000 Croatians have emigrated since 2013), creating labour market shortages in manufacturing, construction, healthcare, and IT. Working-age population decline is a medium-term constraint on growth.
The ICT sector is growing: Zagreb has a developing technology cluster (Infobip — cloud communications, founded in Croatia and reaching unicorn status — is the reference success story), and Croatia's digital nomad visa programme, launched in 2021, has attracted a small but visible international professional community.
Labour Market & Talent
Croatian employment law is broadly standard by EU Central European norms. Notice periods of 2–8 weeks depending on seniority, with an additional 50% notice extension for workers aged 50+ and doubled notice for workers aged 55+. Economic dismissal is manageable with proper documentation. Employer social contributions run at approximately 16.5% of gross salary — among the lower rates in the EU, making total employment costs competitive.
ICT specialists represent approximately 4.0–4.3% of the Croatian workforce — close to the EU average. The University of Zagreb Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing (FER) is Croatia's leading technical institution and produces competitive graduates. English proficiency is high among younger professionals, particularly in Zagreb's technology community.
Median gross earnings of approximately €17,000–19,000 (post-euro adoption) are below the EU average but have risen with eurozone entry and economic growth. The IT sector pays materially above national median: senior software engineers in Zagreb earn €35,000–55,000 base — significantly below Western European equivalents but competitive for the Adriatic Mediterranean context.
The brain drain problem is acute and directly relevant to talent planning. Businesses considering significant Croatian headcount should model recruitment timelines realistically — the talent pool for specialist roles in a market of 4 million, minus the hundreds of thousands who have emigrated, is limited.
Tax & Business Structure
Croatia's corporate income tax rate is 18% standard — competitive with EU peers. SMEs with revenues below €1 million benefit from a reduced 10% rate — the EU's most generous SME rate alongside Hungary's 9% (standard) and Bulgaria's 10% (flat). This makes Croatia genuinely attractive for small and medium-sized businesses.
Following eurozone entry, all Croatian business transactions are in euros, eliminating currency risk entirely. This is a significant practical improvement for businesses previously managing HRK-EUR exposures.
Personal income tax: a flat 20% rate on income up to €360,000; 30% above that. No additional municipal surtax since the 2023 reform (previously up to 18% additional surtax applied in Zagreb). The simplification represents a significant improvement in personal tax competitiveness.
Croatia introduced an attractive non-dom regime for returning emigrants and qualifying foreigners: a 50% exemption on employment income for qualifying individuals relocating to Croatia from abroad — reducing effective income tax rates for international recruits.
Employer social contributions (health and pension) run at approximately 16.5% of gross salary. Total employment cost for a €30,000 gross salary is approximately €35,000 — very competitive by EU standards.
Governance & Risk
Croatia scores 50/100 on Transparency International's CPI — below the EU median, reflecting ongoing challenges in anti-corruption framework implementation, judicial efficiency, and public procurement integrity. EU accession has driven real improvements over the past decade — the trajectory is positive — but the starting point was low and full convergence with EU governance norms is a medium-term project.
The judicial system is slow: commercial disputes take 3–5 years on average. Arbitration at the Permanent Arbitration Court of the Croatian Chamber of Commerce is the preferred route for significant commercial disputes.
Government debt at approximately 63–65% of GDP is close to the Maastricht threshold but trending downward from its 2020 post-pandemic peak. Eurozone membership provides ECB institutional support. Sovereign risk is manageable.
Tourism concentration creates economic volatility: COVID-19 demonstrated that a 60–70% revenue decline in tourism translated directly to a severe GDP contraction. The government's diversification push is genuine but slow to produce structural change.
Who Should Seriously Consider Croatia
Digital nomads and remote-first businesses seeking EU base with Mediterranean quality of life. Croatia's digital nomad visa (1-year renewable permit), eurozone membership, Adriatic coastline, and relatively lower cost of living compared to Western Europe make it one of the EU's most discussed remote-work destinations.
Tourism technology and hospitality businesses. Croatia's €13–15 billion annual tourism revenue and 20+ million visitors create strong demand for booking technology, experience platforms, property management software, and adjacent tourism-tech services.
SMEs seeking low corporate tax. The 10% rate for businesses below €1 million revenue is genuinely compelling for small businesses — one of the EU's best SME tax propositions.
Adriatic and Balkan market access. Croatia's geography provides access to regional markets — Slovenia, Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro — with direct cultural and linguistic proximity.
Who Should Look Elsewhere
Large-scale manufacturing operations. Croatia's talent pool is small (4 million and shrinking) and specialised manufacturing infrastructure is limited compared to Poland, Czechia, or Hungary.
Technology businesses needing large ICT talent volumes. For large engineering teams, Poland, Romania, or Czechia offer significantly larger and deeper talent pools.
Businesses where judicial speed is critical. Croatia's 3–5 year court timelines require arbitration clauses in all significant commercial contracts.
Croatia's Split Corporate Tax: 10% for SMEs, 18% Standard — Who Qualifies and How
Croatia operates a two-tier corporate income tax system. The standard rate is 18%, applying to companies with annual revenue exceeding HRK 7.5 million (approximately €1 million). Companies below that revenue threshold pay a reduced rate of 10%, making Croatia's SME rate one of the most competitive in the EU alongside Hungary's 9% and Romania's micro-enterprise rates.
The 10% rate has historically applied to a significant proportion of Croatian companies simply because the Croatian economy is dominated by SMEs — tourism, hospitality, construction, and professional services are all sectors where many individual companies operate below the €1 million revenue threshold. For a foreign-owned Croatian subsidiary below that threshold, the 10% rate is genuinely accessible.
Above the €1 million threshold, the 18% standard rate positions Croatia in the middle of the EU range — comparable to Czechia (21%), Slovakia (21%), and below Western EU peers. The euro adoption in January 2023 eliminated currency risk for businesses operating in Croatia, making it simpler to compare Croatian costs and revenues to other eurozone member costs. Schengen accession in the same month improved workforce and goods movement to Croatia from other EU states.
Bottom Line
Croatia in 2026 is an EU economy that has significantly improved its institutional foundations — eurozone, Schengen, improving governance — while retaining cost advantages relative to Western Europe. Its tourism concentration is both its greatest economic asset and its structural vulnerability. For digital nomads, remote-first businesses, tourism technology, and SMEs seeking a Mediterranean EU base with very competitive small business tax rates, Croatia is a genuinely compelling choice. For large-scale manufacturing or technology team building, its small population and brain drain make scale constraints a real planning constraint.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Croatia's economy, EU membership, and tax environment.
Croatia's unemployment rate stood at 6.1% in 2022, which is 0.3 percentage points above the EU27 average. This is broadly in line with the EU average.
Croatia's GDP per capita was €20,530 in 2022, €19,256 below the EU27 average of €39,786. The country ranks 24th out of 27 EU member states on this measure.
Yes, Croatia is a member of the Eurozone and uses the Euro (€) as its official currency. This means the European Central Bank sets monetary policy, and the country participates in the single currency area with 19 other EU states.
The standard corporate income tax rate in Croatia is 18.0%. This is the headline rate applied to company profits. Reduced rates, special regimes, and exemptions may apply to certain types of income or sectors — always consult a qualified local tax adviser for specific situations.
Croatia has a population of approximately 4.0 million. Population trends vary across EU member states, influenced by birth rates, migration, and demographic change.
Croatia became a member of the European Union in 2013. EU membership has shaped the country's trade, legal framework, and economic policy ever since.