Guide to Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law in Croatia
An overview of the legal framework for commercial real estate in Croatia, comparing business and residential regulations.
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.Information last verified: May 2026.
The Business Rental in Croatia
Navigating the commercial sector requires a shift in mindset from residential management. In Croatia, the law assumes that two businesses are sophisticated parties on equal footing, leading to fewer built-in protections for the tenant.
Core Legal Framework
The Act on Lease and Sale of Business Premises (Zakon o zakupu i kupoprodaji poslovnoga prostora, Narodne novine No. 125/11, 64/15, 112/18, 123/24) deals specifically with the lease of offices, shops, warehouses, and industrial spaces.
It focuses on the validity of the contract and the procedure for termination. One key difference is that a commercial lease can be terminated if the tenant fails to pay the due rent within 15 days from the date of receiving a written warning from the landlord, which is much faster than the residential process.
Strategic Location Factors
Whether you are managing units in the Jankomir industrial zone in Zagreb or a retail storefront on Marmontova in Split, the location dictates the lease structure.
Prime retail often uses Turnover Rent (a base rent plus a % of sales), a concept virtually unknown in the residential world but legally valid and common in Croatian shopping centers like Arena Centar or City Center One.
Commercial leasing in Croatia operates with significantly more freedom of contract (sloboda ugovaranja) than the heavily regulated residential sector. Governed primarily by the Act on Lease and Sale of Business Premises (Zakon o zakupu i kupoprodaji poslovnoga prostora), landlords and corporate tenants have immense flexibility in structuring their agreements.
Key Croatian Commercial Laws at a Glance
Commercial Lease Agreements (Ugovor o zakupu)
A commercial lease agreement must be concluded in written form. Agreements not in writing are considered null and void (Article 23). In an environment characterized by broad freedom of contract, the precise wording of your lease agreement dictates the success of your property investment.
Unlike residential leases where state laws override unfair clauses, commercial tenants and landlords are considered equals in the eyes of the law. If an eviction clause, a rent escalation clause, or a maintenance breakdown is absent from the contract, default interpretations under the Obligations Act apply, which may not favor the landlord.
For more details, see our Commercial Lease Requirements guide.
The Power of Solemnization
Perhaps the most critical step a commercial landlord can take in Croatia is having their written lease formally solemnized (solemnizacija) by a Public Notary.
- This transforms the contract into an enforceable act (ovršna isprava) under the Enforcement Act (Ovršni zakon).
- If a tenant defaults on rent or refuses to vacate, a solemnized lease allows the landlord to freeze the tenant's corporate bank accounts or initiate rapid execution proceedings (ovrha), completely bypassing the lengthy, multi-year civil litigation process often required to enforce standard private contracts.
Key Clauses in Commercial Leasing
1. Rent and Indexation (Zakupnina i Indeksacija)
Croatian landlords typically incorporate indexation clauses into commercial leases. Because there is no statutory cap on commercial rent increases, linking the yearly rent to the official inflation rate published by the Croatian Bureau of Statistics (DZS) is standard practice. Read more on Rent Increases.
2. Maintenance Strategies (Održavanje)
While the landlord is by default responsible for major structural upkeep under the Act on Lease and Sale of Business Premises, commercial leases frequently transfer far more responsibility to the tenant than residential leases do. "Triple Net" (NNN) style leases-where the tenant bears property taxes, insurance, and almost all operational maintenance costs-are common in prime commercial and industrial real estate in Croatia. Read more on Maintenance Obligations.
3. Eviction Protocols (Iseljenje)
The typical statutory notice period for terminating a commercial lease without explicitly defined cause is 30 days. However, a lease concluded for an indefinite period cannot be terminated by notice before the expiry of one year from its conclusion, unless otherwise agreed. For non-payment, the landlord may terminate the agreement if the tenant fails to pay within 15 days of receiving a written warning. Evictions, if contested, still flow through the court system, reinforcing the absolute necessity of notarized, solemnized documents. Read more on the Eviction Process.
Modernizing Commercial Portfolios
Drafting contracts and keeping track of indexation renewals is the cornerstone of managing commercial property in Croatia. Landager automates your leasing portfolio by securely archiving solemnized contracts, executing automatic rent renewals, and tracking scheduled, inflation-linked rent hikes effortlessly.
Explore more Croatian commercial compliance topics:
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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