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Croatia·Visa & entry

Croatia visa requirements and entry rules

Standard visa-free allowance, e-visa or visa-on-arrival options, mandatory pre-arrival cards, customs notes, and the practical entry mechanics. The country safety guide's Getting In chapter covers the per-nationality detail.

Safe Trip Score
87Very low risk
Visa & entry is a reference surface, not a single sub-score
Headline
Schengen visa-free 90 days within any 180-day rolling window

Pre-arrival card

ETIAS (from October 2026)

Official portal

https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/visa-policy_en

Specifics

  • EU, EEA, Swiss, UK, U.S., Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, Japanese passport-holders enter visa-free.
  • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required for non-EU visa-exempt visitors. Valid 3 years.
  • The Entry/Exit System (EES) replaces passport stamps with biometric records at first entry.
  • Stays beyond 90 days require a long-stay national visa from the destination's consulate.
  • Joined Schengen and adopted Euro on 1 January 2023.

By passport nationality

Headline rule for the nine most-trafficked passport groups. Always confirm on Croatia’s immigration portal before booking; visa policy changes frequently.

  • US passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required (€7, valid 3 years).
    • EU citizens enter without restriction (no day-counting against the 90/180 rule).
  • UK passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required (€7, valid 3 years).
    • EU citizens enter without restriction (no day-counting against the 90/180 rule).
  • EU passport
    Visa-free
    No day limit
    • EU/EEA freedom of movement; no day limit.
    • National ID card sufficient for most intra-EU travel.
  • CA passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required (€7, valid 3 years).
    • EU citizens enter without restriction (no day-counting against the 90/180 rule).
  • AU passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required (€7, valid 3 years).
    • EU citizens enter without restriction (no day-counting against the 90/180 rule).
  • IN passport
    Consular visa required
    Up to 90 days · €90
    Pre-arrival: Schengen visa via destination consulate
    • Schengen visa required; processing 15-30 working days.
    • Apply at the consulate of the country where you'll spend the most time.
    • Valid across the entire Schengen Area for the dates issued.
  • BR passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required.
  • JP passport
    Visa-free
    Up to 90 days
    Pre-arrival: ETIAS (from October 2026)
    • Up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling window across the entire Schengen Area.
    • From October 2026, ETIAS authorisation required (€7, valid 3 years).
    • EU citizens enter without restriction (no day-counting against the 90/180 rule).
  • CN passport
    Consular visa required
    Up to 90 days · €90
    Pre-arrival: Schengen visa via destination consulate
    • Schengen visa required; processing 15-45 working days.
    • Some Schengen countries offer streamlined application for repeat visitors.

Practical guidance

For most short-stay tourists

The headline rule for Croatia is schengen visa-free 90 days within any 180-day rolling window. US passport-holders specifically get visa-free for up to 90 days, with ETIAS (from October 2026) required pre-arrival. See the by-passport block above for your specific nationality.

Pre-arrival documentation

Croatia requires ETIAS (from October 2026) before boarding. Airlines check this at the gate; without it you will be denied boarding even if your visa is in order. Allow at least 72 hours for processing in case the portal queues, longer if you are travelling on a national holiday in Croatia.

When to apply

For visa-required nationalities, apply at least 4 to 6 weeks before departure. Visa-on-arrival and e-Visa systems process in 1 to 7 days typically but can stall around major holidays or political events; do not book non-refundable travel against a pending application. Croatia’s official portal is home-affairs.ec.europa.eu; only apply through that portal or through your nearest Croatia embassy or consulate. Third-party visa services charge for what the government provides at cost.

Common rejection reasons

Passport with under 6 months validity from intended exit date. Fewer than two blank visa pages. No confirmed onward or return ticket. Travel insurance not naming Croatia explicitly (Schengen-style coverage minimums apply for many European destinations). Prior visa overstays anywhere, especially in neighbouring countries. Most rejections cite one of these five rather than a substantive concern about the traveller.

Related for Croatia

More on Croatia

Read the Croatia visa and entry requirements chapter →

Croatia is one of the safer destinations in Europe by general crime measures and one of the most-grown tourism economies of the past decade. The country joined the Schengen Area and adopted the Euro on January 1, 2023, simplifying entry and payment logistics for most visitors. The structural risks are concentrated and addressable: over-tourism management at Dubrovnik (visitor caps now in place), the seismic exposure that produced the 2020 Petrinja earthquake (M6.4, the strongest Croatian earthquake in 140 years) and recurring smaller events, the residual Yugoslav-era landmine remnants in specific inland former-conflict zones marked clearly with signage, the Bora wind on the Adriatic coast that closes ferries, summer wildfire risk during heat waves, and the standard tourist-zone pickpocket baseline. This guide unpacks the entry mechanics, the Dalmatian Coast logistics, the over-tourism reality at Dubrovnik, the seismic context, and the practical contacts for a Croatian itinerary.

Frequently asked about Croatia

Do I need a visa to travel to Croatia?

The headline rule is: Schengen visa-free 90 days within any 180-day rolling window. Specific allowance depends on your passport nationality; the by-passport block on this page covers the 9 most-trafficked passports (US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, India, Brazil, Japan, China). Always confirm on Croatia's official immigration portal before booking, visa policy changes frequently.

How long can I stay in Croatia on a tourist visa?

Schengen visa-free 90 days within any 180-day rolling window. ETIAS (from October 2026) is required pre-arrival. For per-passport specifics see the block above. Overstaying carries fines and re-entry bans across most jurisdictions.

Can I extend my visa once I'm in Croatia?

Most countries allow a one-time extension via the local immigration office for an additional 30 to 90 days, processed within 7 to 14 working days. Croatia's policy varies; the safety guide's Getting In chapter covers it where applicable. Apply at least 2 weeks before your existing visa expires.