Starting a Business · Croatia
Starting a Business - Croatia
Croatia permits 100% foreign ownership of companies under the same conditions as domestic investors, with no mandatory local partner for any nationality. The dominant incorporation vehicle is the d.o.o. (LLC) requiring EUR 2,500 minimum share capital, registerable through the HITRO.HR one-stop shop with commercial court registration possible within 24 hours of complete filing; total elapsed time is typically 2–4 weeks. A Foreign Investment Screening Act entered into force in November 2025 requiring Ministry of Finance approval for non-EU acquisitions of 10%+ in sensitive-sector companies, but this does not affect routine business formation.
Croatia imposes no foreign-ownership caps: EU and non-EU nationals alike may hold 100% of a Croatian company on the same legal footing as domestic investors, with no requirement for a Croatian co-founder, resident director, or local partner.
The standard form is the d.o.o. (LLC) requiring EUR 2,500 minimum share capital (individual shares min EUR 10). A simplified j.d.o.o. (max 5 members, 1 director) can be formed with as little as EUR 1.00 total capital. A joint-stock company (d.d.) requires EUR 25,000 minimum.
Core steps: (1) obtain Croatian OIB tax number for each founder/director; (2) draft and notarise the founding act before a Croatian public notary; (3) deposit share capital and obtain bank confirmation; (4) submit via HITRO.HR one-stop shop to the Commercial Court. If documentation is complete, court registration issues within 24 hours; full process typically 2–4 weeks.
EU/EEA nationals holding a Croatian digital ID (e-Citizens) may register a d.o.o. or j.d.o.o. fully online via the e-Osnivanje system. Non-EU nationals must complete formation in person through a licensed Croatian notary and file via HITRO.HR; remote power-of-attorney arrangements with a local lawyer are also available.
Every founder and director—regardless of nationality—must hold a Croatian Personal Identification Number (OIB) before incorporation. Non-residents obtain one free of charge at any Croatian Tax Administration office (Porezna uprava) on presentation of a passport; remote application via power-of-attorney is also accepted.
The Foreign Investment Screening Act (OG 136/25, in force 13 November 2025) requires non-EU investors acquiring 10% or more of voting rights or control in Croatian companies in sensitive sectors (energy, transport, finance, healthcare, media, digital infrastructure) to obtain prior Ministry of Finance approval. General new-company formation by foreigners is not subject to screening.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →