
Employment in Croatia at a glance
Capital
Zagreb
Language
Croatian
Remote workers
77,490
Currency
€ Euro (EUR)
Working hours
40 hours per week
Public holidays
13 days per year
Minimum monthly salary
€840
Tax year
Jan 1 - Dec 31
Date format
DD/MM/YYYY
Misclassification penalties
€2,654.14 per misclassified employee plus the possibility of having the business premises, devices, and equipment for work sealed by the labour inspector.
Fun fact
The number of Croatians living in their home country is close to the number of expatriates — 4.2 million.
Taxes in Croatia
Employer contributions
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Employer tax: 16.5% + €5 - €527
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Social security: 16.5%
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Chamber of Commerce contributions: €5 - €527
Employee contributions
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Employee tax: 40% - 50% + municipal tax levied as surtax to the income tax
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Social security: 20% capped at EUR 970 monthly and EUR 12,095 annually
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Municipal tax: 10% - 18% depending on the city of residence, levied as a surtax to the income tax liability.
Income tax
Gross income: Up to €50,399
Tax rate: 20%
Gross income: Over €50,399
Tax rate: 30%
Looking for a quick cost estimate?
Use our calculator to understand what are all the employment costs you have to consider in Croatia.
Employer of Record in Chile
What is an EOR?
An Employer of Record acts as the legal employer in a country where the company isn’t registered as an employer. However, in Croatia, the employment model requires a temp agency license. The temp agency takes care of all Croatia compliance aspects of employment, including payroll, taxes, statutory benefits, employment contracts and more.
EOR responsibilities
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Ensuring their employment is compliant with local employment laws
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Processing local payroll
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Filing employment related taxes and returns
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Issuing payslips to the employee
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Distributing salary payments
How it works
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Company
Maintains a direct relationship with the employee, allocates them work tasks, and manages their performance.
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Boundless
Takes care of payroll, taxes, benefits, ensuring the employee and the company are compliant with all legal regulations.
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Employee
Signs an employment agreement with Boundless and fulfils all of their obligations as a worker for the company.
Benefits in Croatia
Statutory benefits in Croatia
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Pension
The Croatian pension system is divided into three pillars. For the first two pillars, contributions are mandatory by employees. Employers’ contributions are optional and fall under the third pillar of the system.
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Health insurance
Croatia provides basic mandatory health insurance to all of its residents, funded through social security contributions by employers.
Common non-mandatory benefits in Croatia
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Meal
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Public transportation allowance
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Supplementary pension
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Supplementary health insurance
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Life insurance
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Cash bonus
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Flexible working hours
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Wellness
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Stock options
Rights & protections in Croatia
Written employment contract
Training
Union membership
Work flexibility
Whistleblower protection
Protection from discrimination
Protection from harassment
Data protection
Pregnancy rights
Leave in Croatia
Paid time off
20 days + public holidays
Sick leave
18 months. First 42 days are paid by the employer, the rest by Croatian Health Insurance Fund (“Hrvatski zavod za zdravstveno osiguranje or HZZO”) at a rate between 70% and 100%. The rate could be determined by a collective or employment agreement
Maternity leave
98 days + extra time until the child turns 6 months
Paternity leave
15 days
Parental leave
4 months per child per parent for the first two children, increased to 15 months per child for subsequent children or twins
Employment conditions in Croatia
Probation
Probationary periods can last a maximum of six months, with a notice period of at least seven days during the probationary period.
Intellectual property
Employees must inform their employers about their inventions at work or related to work. If the creation is connected to the employer’s economic activity, the employee must notify the employer of the invention. They can make a written offer to the employer to assign the invention rights to them. The employer must respond to the employee’s request within one month.
Payments in Croatia
Payment frequency
Salaries are paid on a monthly basis.
Payday
Salaries must be paid no later than the 15th of the following month.
End of employment in Croatia
Permanent employment contract termination requires a justified reason, except in situations of gross employee misconduct.
Employers must present employees with a written notice of dismissal, explaining the reasons for the employment termination, and respect the appropriate notice, which varies from two weeks to three months, depending on the length of service.
Upon termination, employers must de-register employees with the Tax and Insurance Authorities and pay employees any salaries and severance that are due and for unused holidays.
Severance pay varies based on the duration of employment and requires at least two years of service. For every year of work, employees are entitled to a minimum of 1/3 of their average monthly salary in the last three months before termination, capped at six months of salary.
FAQs
While there are generally four ways of employing people across borders, not all are legal or sensible. Here is an overview of each way to employ a worker in Croatia, outlining the potential cons.
HQ country employment & payroll
While the person is in Croatia, they are employed and payrolled directly by the company’s HQ entity.
Cons: This may appear attractive, but it generally isn’t legal in the long term. HQ payroll won’t be possible if the person is not a tax resident in the HQ country.
Independent contractor agreements
People are locally registered as sole traders or limited liability company owners in Croatia and invoice for their work. There is no direct employment relationship.
Cons: In Croatia, this is not a compliant or legal way to engage full-time workers who work solely for your company. There will be challenges in attracting and retaining talent.
Direct local employer setup
The company sets up as a fully-compliant local employer. This often involves setting up a local entity and local tax registration.
Cons: Expensive, time-consuming, high-level of complexity. Unknowns around how obligations and costs will evolve over time. There will be a need to stay on top of changes in regulations.
Partnering with an Employer of Record Croatia (temp agency license holder)
Employment is handled by a platform that specialises in employing people on behalf of customer companies. The temp agency helps to hire and pay employees.
Cons: The ongoing costs may be higher than direct employment. Some education is needed to inform employees about how the employment relationship will work.
Setting up a local company in Croatia is relatively straightforward. However, the difficult part comes after the initial setup when payroll needs to be calculated and run every month, taxes filed, benefits extended, change of rules and regulations followed.
While many employers practice employing remote workers as independent contractors, it’s a bad practice. If an individual is giving their full and undivided attention to your company in Croatia, treating them as an independent contractor is a likely breach of Croatian employment laws and of those in your country.
Your company could be liable for fines for owed holiday pay, sick pay, social welfare payments, paternity benefits, maternity benefits, or other legal measures. Since the individuals you are working with do not receive the benefit of local employment laws and protections that are often afforded to people working full-time hours.
Read more on why hiring remote people as independent contractors is a bad idea.
When you hire employees in Croatia, you have certain obligations as an employer. HR compliance is about ensuring your policies and procedures respect all applicable laws and regulations regarding employment and work practices. Complying with local employment law in Croatia is fundamental for the correct running of your business – not only because these laws are in place to protect employees and guarantee their rights are safeguarded, but to minimise your risk of liabilities as an employer. Being compliant means respecting and following all local labour laws, sick leave and illness benefits, annual leave, minimum wage, tax credits, working hours regulations.
As with every other country, there are certain costs associated with employing a worker in Croatia that come on top of the gross salary you are offering. A Croation employer must contribute to social security, which covers work accident insurance, pension, family and maternity benefits. They also have to make contributions to the Chamber of Commerce. To view the exact percentages and amounts given the salary you are planning to offer, you can use our handy calculator tool.
While possible in many other countries, an employer of record model is not possible. However, an organisation holding a temp agency license can employ on behalf of another company in Croatia as far as the government, tax, and employment authorities are concerned. We are responsible for:
- informing you about any pre-employment requirements
- ensuring their employment is compliant with Croatian employment law
- informing you about the length of the maternity leave, paternity leave, public holidays, illness benefits, medical benefits
- providing a locally compliant employment contract
- processing local payroll
- filing employment-related tax returns
- issuing payslips to the employee
- distributing salary payments
- payments to the local tax authorities
Customers that work with a temp agency in Croatia are responsible for:
- sourcing and recruiting their own workers
- managing the employee’s day-to-day work load
- contributing to the personal / professional development of the employee through their work
- following any guidance we give on employment and HR best practices or legal obligations in Croatia, such as the employment contract, public holidays, annual leave, sick leave, maternity and paternity benefits, probationary periods, overtime pay, statutory redundancy payments, liability insurance and many others
- ensuring that payroll bills relating to their team are paid to Boundless before the cut-off point in each pay cycle
Boundless as the legal employer files all pertinent taxes and social contributions as they relate to the compliant employment of an individual in Croatia.
We carefully choose employment lawyers or advisories to partner with in each country we operate in, including Croatia. They ensure the Croatian employment contracts, and any other relevant documents required for new employees comply with the local jurisdiction. We have thorough discussions on specific norms such as payroll services, social protection, data protection, notice period or work-from-home regulations. Whenever a potentially sensitive issue arises in Croatia, our internal team contacts the relevant firm to ensure all steps are taken to resolve it promptly.
The company remains responsible and informs employees of the day-to-day management of the people and teams that are employed through Boundless, including any disciplinary or performance issues.
Boundless ensures compliance with Crioatian-specific procedures, practices and labour laws while employing people and teams on behalf of the company.
Any new employee that is locally employed through a temp agency gets full employment rights and benefits as specified in Croatian employment law. They get a locally compliant employment contract, statutory maternity leave, annual leave, illness benefits, any relevant tax credit, and many more.
In Croatia, both employers and employees have to pay taxes. For employers, these include social security, which covers work accident insurance, pension, family and maternity benefits. They also have to make contributions to the Chamber of Commerce. For employees, these are social security contributions, as well as municipal and income taxes. To get a clear overview of both employee and employer taxes, use our salary breakdown calculator.
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