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Guide · Building Act

Building permits in Croatia

What it is, how to obtain it and what's new in 2026 — a step-by-step process tailored to the type of building.

NN 155/2025 In force from 1 January 2026 For investors and designers

A building permit is the administrative act on the basis of which construction is allowed. Without it, building is unlawful, and a completed structure cannot be connected to infrastructure or obtain an occupancy permit.

An exception are simple structures that may be built without a building permit, as laid down in the Ordinance on Simple and Other Structures and Works (Official Gazette NN 112/17, 34/18, 36/19, 98/19, 31/20, 74/22 and 155/23).

The new Building Act entered into force on 1 January 2026 and significantly changes the procedure — especially for family houses. This guide explains the procedure step by step, tailored to the type of building.

All cited articles (Art.) refer to the Building Act (Official Gazette NN 155/2025).


01Types of buildings under the new Act

The entire procedure depends on which group your building falls into. The Act distinguishes three:

Less complex building

A residential building with no more than two dwellings whose gross (built) floor area does not exceed 400 m², and an agricultural building up to 600 m² Art. 3 pt. 32. This is the typical family house, and the simplest procedure applies to it.

Multi-residential building

A residential building with three or more dwelling units, of which up to 20% of the area may be for commercial use Art. 3 pt. 33.

Other buildings

Everything else for which a building permit is issued.

In case of doubt, or when a building meets several criteria, the more demanding group applies.

→ Detailed procedure: Houses up to 400 m² · Multi-residential and other buildings (coming soon)


02Who takes part in the procedure

Zakon Art. 17 defines five participants in construction:

Investor

The person on whose behalf the building is constructed; submits the permit application.

Designer

A licensed architect or engineer who prepares the design and is responsible for its compliance with regulations Art. 19. When several designers are involved, the lead designer is responsible for their coordination Art. 20.

Design reviewer

A licensed person who reviews the design with regard to mechanical resistance and stability Art. 27.

Supervising engineer

Carries out professional supervision of the construction on behalf of the investor Art. 24.

Contractor

Builds in accordance with the permit Art. 21.

The permit is issued by the administrative authority (of the county or large city) competent for construction, and for buildings of national importance by the Ministry Art. 52–53.


03The procedure — from idea to occupancy permit

The general sequence is the same for all, but the content and obligations differ by group:

  1. Design — conceptual (for less complex buildings) or main (for others).
  2. Special and connection conditions — obtained before submitting the application. For now they are requested through the administrative authority — see the section on the transitional period.
  3. Building permit application — the investor submits it electronically Art. 61.
  4. Building permit — issued by the administrative authority.
  5. Notification of commencement of works — no later than 5 days before starting Art. 89.
  6. Detailed design — mandatory for all except less complex buildings Art. 39 para. 3.
  7. Construction under professional supervision.
  8. Occupancy permit — after the technical inspection Art. 94, 102.
Key differenceFor less complex buildings, the permit is obtained on the basis of the conceptual design, and the main design is submitted only at the notification of commencement of works. For multi-residential and other buildings, the main design is submitted already with the permit application.

04What’s new from 2026

These are the key changes compared to the previous act:

Less documentation for the permit for houses up to 400 m²

For the building permit, only the conceptual design and proof of legal interest are submitted Art. 62. The main design is no longer a condition for the permit; it is submitted at the notification of commencement of works Art. 89 para. 4.

Detailed design mandatory for all except less complex buildings

An important change that raises the level of documentation for multi-residential and other buildings Art. 39 para. 3.

Less extensive supervision for family houses

Professional supervision of less complex buildings is carried out only with respect to mechanical resistance and stability Art. 26 para. 2. The technical inspection of such a building does not check compliance with the basic requirements Art. 94 para. 3.

Digital handling (in transition)

The Act provides that the designer independently obtains the connection conditions and special conditions electronically, via the eDozvola system Art. 47 para. 2. In practice, eDozvola is not yet enabled for this direct route, so during the transitional period the request is submitted through the administrative authority or the Ministry Art. 134. Public-law bodies respond within the prescribed deadlines (e.g. 30 days for special conditions Art. 48; 15 days for the approval of the main design Art. 66).

BIM — not yet mandatory

Although the Act requires designs to be prepared in a BIM environment for all except less complex buildings Art. 30 para. 3, that provision enters into force only on 1 January 2031 for buildings under the Ministry’s competence and on 1 January 2035 for those under the competence of the administrative authorities Art. 162. Until then, BIM is not mandatory.

Special fee for building without a permit

If construction begins before the permit is obtained, a special fee is charged Art. 72 para. 2:

Less complex buildings4.000 €
Multi-residential buildings15.000 €
Other buildings1% of the value of works

05How long a building permit lasts

Two deadlines matter once the permit becomes final:

Deadline to start construction (validity of the permit)

The permit ceases to be valid if the investor does not begin construction within 6 years of becoming final, or 8 years for permits issued by the Ministry. The investor is deemed to have begun construction on the date of the notification of commencement of works Art. 79.

Deadline to complete the building

Counting from the date of the notification of commencement of works, the building must be completed (external appearance and landscaping of the building plot) within Art. 80:

Less complex building

5 years

Other buildings

7 years

Ministry’s competence

10 years

The deadlines do not apply to buildings that are individually protected cultural heritage assets.


06Transitional provisions

For ongoing projects, the following matters:

Procedures before 1 January 2026

Are completed under the old act Art. 129.

Main design under the old act

Remains valid for obtaining the permit if the application is submitted within 12 months of the new act entering into force Art. 130.

Special and connection conditions

Those established under the old act may be used for a further 2 years Art. 142.

Special conditions go through the office for now

Since eDozvola is not yet enabled for obtaining conditions directly, during the transitional period the designer initiates the procedure through the administrative authority or the Ministry Art. 134.

Not sure which group your building falls into?

DoT. d.o.o. prepares design documentation and manages permit procedures under the new Building Act.

Get in touch

Note: this guide is informational and does not replace consulting the applicable regulations. For a specific case, the current text of the Building Act and its accompanying ordinances always applies.