AdriaCroatia: Tourist tax now cheaper and digitally affordable

Andreas Fritsch

 · 06.08.2020

Adria: Croatia: Tourist tax now cheaper and digitally affordablePhoto: Adriatic Croatia International Club
Croatia: Tourist tax now cheaper and digitally affordable
The fee can now be paid via a new website, eliminating the need to go to the harbour office. The fee has been reduced by 20 per cent for 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic

The brand new Nautika E-Visitor website of the Croatian authorities is now online and saves skippers from having to go to the harbour office with possible waiting times and queues and should therefore be very welcome in Corona times. What's more, the Croatian government has decided to reduce tariffs by 20 per cent this year.

  Screenshot of the new websitePhoto: Kroatische Tourismuszentrale Screenshot of the new website

The fee can be paid either per person and day or per boat according to boat length and holiday duration. The former version is probably more favourable for shorter stays and smaller crews. Payment is made by credit card and confirmation is then sent to the customer by e-mail. Crews who have chartered usually pay the tourist tax via their charter company at check-in.

Andreas Fritsch

Andreas Fritsch

Editor Travel

Andreas Fritsch was born in Buxtehude in 1968 and has been sailing since childhood, first in a dinghy and later on his own keelboats on the Elbe and later the Baltic Sea. After studying political science, German and history in Münster, he began working as a journalist and joined the YACHT editorial team in 1997. Since 2001, he has focussed on travel and charter and has travelled to almost all areas of the world and regularly charters in the Mediterranean, with Greece being his favourite area. He has written two cruising guides for the Mediterranean (Charter Guide Ionian Sea and Turkish Coast). In addition to travelling, he is a fan of the Open 60 and Maxi-Tri scene and regularly writes about these topics in YACHT. He has been sailing a classic GRP Grinde on the Baltic Sea for several years.

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