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Retirement visas

Retiring to Croatia: the visa routes

Non-EU nationals can apply for temporary residence on the grounds of financial self-sufficiency — showing modest but stable income or savings, health insurance and accommodation — renewed annually.

A few things to line up early:

Visa rules change often — treat this as a starting point and confirm the latest official requirements before you plan.

Remember: buying a home and gaining the right to live there are usually separate steps. See how ownership works in Croatia, and what it costs to live there in our cost-of-retiring guide.

Tax as a resident of Croatia

Croatia taxes residents on worldwide income, but under most double-tax treaties a foreign pension is taxed only in your country of residence; pension income also gets a personal allowance and a 50% reduction, so effective rates are modest. Confirm your treaty position.

Healthcare and everyday life in Croatia

Croatia's public health fund (HZZO) is open to resident retirees for roughly EUR 90-100 a month, with an inexpensive top-up policy (dopunsko) covering most co-payments; UK state pensioners can instead use an S1 form. Private clinics are available for faster access. Croatia is very safe and easy-going; they drive on the right, English is widely spoken along the coast and by younger people, and daily life is comfortable for British retirees.

Where retirees settle

Istria (Pula, Rovinj, Porec) for a gentle, Italian-flavoured peninsula close to Western Europe; the Dalmatian coast around Split and Zadar for island-hopping and sun; and Dubrovnik for beauty at a premium.

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Everything on Croatia

Cost of retiring in CroatiaCan a foreigner buy property in Croatia?

Retirement visas in other countries