Croatia Commercial Tenant Eviction Rules

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Understand the legal grounds, required notice periods, and specialized enforcement procedures for evicting commercial tenants in Croatia.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Evicting a commercial tenant (otkaz ugovora o zakupu) in Croatia requires strict adherence to the Zakon o zakupu i kupoprodaji poslovnoga prostora. The effectiveness and speed of a commercial eviction depend almost entirely on how the initial lease agreement was drafted and formalized.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Croatia for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Grounds for Termination

Generally, a landlord has legal grounds to terminate a commercial lease if:

  1. Non-Payment: The tenant is more than 15 days late paying the rent or associated charges after receiving a formal written warning from the landlord.
  2. Improper Use: The tenant uses the premises for purposes other than those specified in the agreement, or makes structural alterations without explicit written consent.
  3. Property Damage: The tenant intentionally or negligently causes significant damage to the premises.

For indefinite-term leases, the lease can generally be terminated by either party without stating a specific cause, provided the mandatory statutory notice period is respected (unless the contract specifies otherwise). However, the law prohibits terminating an indefinite lease during the first year of the term.

Statutory Notice Periods

If the commercial lease does not explicitly specify a notice period:

  • The default statutory notice period for termination is 30 days under the Zakon o zakupu.
  • All termination notices must be issued formalized in writing and delivered safely (e.g., registered mail, courier, or notarial delivery).

The Crucial Role of Solemnization

In standard commercial disputes, if a tenant refuses to vacate the premises after the termination notice expires, the landlord must file a lawsuit. Croatian civil courts are notoriously congested, and litigating an eviction can take years, during which the landlord loses revenue.

Solemnization (Solemnizirani ugovor) is the definitive solution to this problem.

If the commercial lease was solemnized (certified by a Public Notary as an enforceable document with an enforcement clause / ovršna klauzula):

  1. The landlord bypasses the preliminary municipal trial phase.
  2. The landlord can present the solemnized document to the court to initiate immediate enforcement proceedings (ovršni postupak).
  3. Court executioners can physically remove the tenant from the property and change the locks within a drastically shorter timeline (months instead of years).

Self-Help Evictions

So-called "self-help" evictions—meaning the landlord unilaterally changing the locks, shutting off municipal utilities, or physically blocking the tenant from entering the property without a court order—are categorically illegal under Croatian civil law.

A landlord engaging in these practices can be sued by the tenant for "disturbance of possession" (smetanje posjeda), which the courts adjudicate via rapid, accelerated hearings. If the tenant wins, the court will order the landlord to immediately restore access to the tenant and pay damages, regardless of whether the tenant owed rent.

Managing these timelines requires sophisticated document management. Landager helps Croatian landlords safely archive solemnized leases and dispatch formalized written warnings to tenants instantly when a payment deadline is missed.

Back to Croatia Commercial Real Estate Laws Overview.

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