Maintenance Responsibilities in Croatia
What Croatian landlords and tenants must fix: a breakdown of repair obligations under the Law on Housing Tenancy.
הבהרה משפטית
תוכן זה מיועד למטרות מידע וחינוך כללי בלבד. הוא אינו מהווה ייעוץ משפטי ואין להסתמך עליו ככזה. החוקים משתנים לעיתים קרובות - תמיד יש לאמת את התקנות העדכניות ולהתייעץ עם עורך דין מורשה בתחום השיפוט שלך לקבלת ייעוץ ספציפי למצבך. Landager היא פלטפורמת ניהול נכסים, לא משרד עורכי דין.המידע אומת לאחרונה: April 2026.
Defining 'Minor' vs 'Major' Repairs
The Zakon o najmu stanova splits maintenance into two distinct categories. Understanding where the line is drawn helps avoid legal disputes and ensures the property stays in good condition.
Landlord's Duties (Capital Maintenance)
The landlord must maintain the property in a tenantable state. This includes the building structure, external windows, internal plumbing systems, and electrical wiring. If the roof leaks or the central heating fails in the middle of a Zagreb winter, the landlord must arrange and pay for repairs immediately.
Tenant's Duties (Daily Upkeep)
The tenant is responsible for minor repairs caused by their daily use of the space. This typically includes cleaning, replacing filters in the AC unit, fixing minor clogs in sinks, and maintaining any garden or balcony areas. If a tenant guest breaks a window, the tenant is liable for the cost of replacement, regardless of the structure rule.
Maintaining residential property in Croatia involves distinct obligations split between the landlord and the tenant. Under the Zakon o najmu stanova, landlords are held to a strict standard regarding the condition of the apartment, ensuring it is handed over in a habitable state.
Landlord's Maintenance Obligations In Croatia, the landlord is legally obligated to: - Hand over the apartment to the tenant in a condition fit for habitation. - Maintain the apartment in a habitable condition throughout the entire duration of the lease.
- Cover the costs of major repairs and structural maintenance affecting the basic functioning of the unit (e.g., roof repairs, major plumbing overhauls, heating system failures, electrical faults).
- Contribute strictly to the building's reserve fund (pričuva), unless explicitly transferred to the tenant via the lease agreement.
The Handover Protocol (Zapisnik o Primopredaji)
Because of the strict requirements to maintain a "habitable" state, both parties are heavily encouraged to sign a detailed handover protocol upon moving in. This protocol documents the condition of the walls, floors, appliances, and any existing damage, protecting the landlord from liability for issues caused later by the tenant.
Tenant's Maintenance Obligations While the landlord handles major repairs, Croatian tenants also bear distinct responsibilities:
- Routine Cleaning & Care: The tenant must use the apartment efficiently, maintaining everyday cleanliness according to standard domestic practices and the building's House Rules.
- Minor Repairs: The tenant is responsible for minor, everyday repairs tied to normal usage (sitni popravci). This includes replacing lightbulbs, minor pipe unclogging, or replacing a broken showerhead.
- Reporting Issues: A tenant must immediately notify the landlord of any significant defects or necessary major repairs. If a tenant fails to report a leaking pipe and it ruins the floors, the tenant becomes liable for the expanded damage due to their negligence.
Repair and Deduct Rights
Under the Obligations Act (Zakon o obveznim odnosima), if the apartment requires an urgent, necessary repair (such as a burst pipe or a broken boiler in mid-winter), the tenant must urgently notify the landlord.
If the landlord fails to act or responds unreasonably slowly:
- The tenant has the right to perform the repairs at their own initial expense.
- The tenant is then legally entitled to reimbursement for those specific, documented costs.
- While the law generally prohibits tenants from unilaterally withholding rent, tenants might negotiate to offset these documented repair costs against the following month's rent.
Normal Wear and Tear (Redovito Trošenje)
Upon moving out, tenants are expected to return the property in its original condition, allowing for "normal wear and tear." This means a landlord cannot demand that a tenant pay for repainting walls merely because the paint has faded over a three-year tenancy. Tenant liability is strictly reserved for damages caused by negligence, deliberate destruction, or unauthorized alterations to the property.
Landager simplifies the coordination of maintenance tasks by allowing tenants to submit requests digitally, directly linking communications and receipts to the specific lease profile.
How Landager Helps
Landager tracks lease terms, automated rent reminders, and document expiration - making it easy to stay compliant with Croatia regulations.
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