How to come in Croatia

Entry Requirements 

Croatia is a member state of the European Community since 1 July 2013 but has not yet joined the Schengen area. For tourist stays months 3 months, EU nationals, even minors, must possess a passport or a national identity card valid covering the entire journey.
No vaccinations are required.
Pets can enter the country provided they are identified by a microchip, have a valid passport and vaccinations up to date.
Nationals of other countries may need a visa, they must contact their embassy

BY PLANE:

  Croatia has seven international airports: Zagreb, Split, Dubrovnik, Zadar, Pula, Rijeka, Osijek
- The flights are operated by airlines including lowcost airlines also in summer.

- Croatia Airlines Croatian national carrier, operates flights from most European countries with Zagreb daily, corresponding to major Croatian airports.

  Other direct flights Paris Dubrovnik 4 flights per week
  Paris Split 3 flights per week
  Lyon Split 1 flight per week

- Air France:
  Zagreb with 1 daily flight

- Ryanair operates flights from April to November with:
- Zadar, base of the company since 2013, which is connected to 19 cities including Paris / Beauvais, Marseille, Brussels / Charleroi, Baden Baden ...
- Pula
- Rijeka

- Easy Jet liaises with:
- Split
- Dubrovnik
  from Paris, Lyon, Basel, Geneva ...

Rental cars are available from all airports.
Shuttle buses operate between the airport and the city center

BY CAR :

The documents required to enter and travel in Croatia: driver's license, the vehicle registration and vehicle insurance international green card.

Travel by road through Slovenia: attention, Slovenian vignette is mandatory

The purchase and display thumbnail to drive on motorways and expressways (including the device Ljubljana) is mandatory in Slovenia. The sticker is either weekly (15 €) or monthly (30 €) or for a yearly cost of € 95. The sticker can be purchased at motorway service stations. Anyone traveling without a valid vignette is systematically punished by a fine varying from 300 to 800 € and the Croatian authorities can confiscate all documents offenders (national identity card, passport, vehicle's registration, driver's license) until such time as the fine is paid. 

See our Photo Gallery Photos of Croatia