Croatia Commercial Property Required Disclosures

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Review the mandatory disclosures, energy certificates, and physical state declarations required for leasing commercial property 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.

Unlike the highly regulated residential sphere, commercial leasing in Croatia is characterized by an "as-is" corporate environment. However, specific building regulations and general contract laws still mandate clear disclosures before a lease is 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.

The Energy Performance Certificate (Energetski Certifikat)

The single most consequential state-mandated disclosure in Croatian real estate is the Energy Performance Certificate, dictated by the Building Act (Zakon o gradnji).

  • Advertising: Any commercial media advertisement (online listings, printed ads) must display the precise energy class of the commercial building.
  • Contract Signature: The landlord is legally obligated to show or provide a copy of a valid Energy Performance Certificate to the prospective tenant before signing the lease abstract or main contract.

State inspectors heavily penalize commercial landlords who fail to acquire or display this certificate correctly.

Minimum Technical Criteria (Minimalni tehnički uvjeti - MTU)

For specific businesses—such as restaurants, retail shops, and hospitality venues—the commercial unit must satisfy specialized "Minimum Technical Criteria" (MTU) mandated by local and state health and safety boards.

While it is ultimately the tenant's responsibility to secure MTU licenses to operate their specific business, the landlord must disclose the zoning reality of the property.

If a landlord leases an office space to a tenant implicitly knowing the tenant intends to run a heavy-industrial bakery, but fails to disclose that the building lacks the structural zoning required to pass MTU inspections for that specific usage, the contract could be voided under the legal theory of mistake, leaving the landlord liable for damages.

Encumbrances and the Land Registry

Commercial landlords must provide clear proof of unencumbered ownership through the Croatian Land Registry (Zemljišne knjige).

The landlord must disclose any active liens, mortgages, unresolved restitution claims, or third-party ownership disputes attached to the specific property lot. Given that commercial tenants invest heavily in costly fit-outs, proving clear, secure title and lack of legal friction is a standard step securely facilitated during the due diligence phrase.

Due Diligence and the Property State

In Croatian commercial real estate, corporate tenants conduct intense on-site due diligence. It is the landlord’s obligation under the Zakon o obveznim odnosima (Obligations Act) to negotiate in good faith, which demands the prompt disclosure of latent structural defects that are not immediately visible—such as a failing central HVAC system or black mold inside the drywall.

However, beyond fundamental structural transparency, commercial properties are generally handed over "as-is" or in "shell and core" condition, with the explicit disclosure of limitations on alterations prominently defined in the contract.

Landager simplifies commercial disclosures by verifying that critical documents, like MTU certifications and up-to-date Energy Certificates, are cataloged with the rest of your leasing documentation.

Back to Croatia Commercial Real Estate Laws Overview.

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