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Croatia Practical Travel Info

Schengen visa rules by nationality, money, safety, and getting connected.

Croatia is a full EU and Schengen member (joined Schengen in January 2023) and uses the euro (also since January 2023). EU/Schengen citizens travel freely with no time limit; US, UK, Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand passport holders get 90 visa-free days within any rolling 180-day period across the whole Schengen Area. ETIAS pre-travel authorization is targeted for Q4 2026 and is not required yet as of mid-2026. Croatia is very safe overall — petty theft in tourist-heavy coastal towns is the main real risk, not violent crime.

The unglamorous section that actually saves your trip: whether you need a visa (probably not, but it depends entirely on your passport), how the new EU border systems rolling out this year affect you, how to handle euros versus cards, and how to get online the moment you land.

Questions people actually ask

Do I need a visa for Croatia?
It depends on your passport — see our full visa & entry guide. Croatia is a Schengen member, so most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU, Australia, New Zealand) get up to 90 visa-free days within any 180-day period. ETIAS, a new online pre-authorization, is expected late 2026 but isn't required yet.
Is Croatia safe to visit?
Yes, very much so — violent crime against tourists is rare. The main real risk is petty theft (bag-snatching, pickpocketing) in the busiest coastal Old Towns during peak summer crowds, and boat/water-safety basics if you're island-hopping.
What currency does Croatia use?
The euro (€) — Croatia adopted it on January 1, 2023, replacing the kuna. Cards are widely accepted almost everywhere, including most coastal restaurants; a little cash is still handy for small konobas (taverns), markets, and parking.