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Croatian county · HASC HR.KK

Koprivnica-Križevci County

Official 2024–2025 market data, APN transaction benchmarks, salary and affordability — sourced from MPGI/EIZ and DZS.

Avg asking €/m²
€1,931
-25.4% vs Croatia
Apartments for sale
YoY price change
+7.3%
National trends →
Transactions (latest)
220
How is this counted? →
Rental yield
3.5%
Rentals
Live listings in Koprivnica-Križevci

Market history

Data quality notice

Rows tagged Verified · MPGI are extracted directly from the official MPGI/EIZ Pregled tržišta nekretnina RH report (2024 & 2025 editions, Tablica 3.2 for counties & Tablica 3.6 for cities, presented 30.04.2026). Croatia-wide 2025: 88,395 transactions (-21.7%), median apartment €2,587/m² (+11.3%), €7.68B total value, 8.3% of GDP. The City of Zagreb row uses total transactions (13,126) and median apartment price (€2,917/m²); other counties show apartment sales & median €/m² from the same table — fully comparable. Rows tagged Estimate (2022–2023) come from outside the official MPGI series and should not be used for decisions. See the national report for the full sourced view.

PeriodAchieved €/m²Asking €/m² (est.)YoYApt. salesActive listingsSource
2025-10-01€1,931≈ €2,047+7.3%220670Verified · MPGI
2024-10-01€1,800≈ €1,908+7.5%201630Verified · MPGI
2023-10-01€800≈ €848+14.3%420590Estimate
2022-10-01€700≈ €742+3%400530Estimate

Investor snapshot — Koprivnica-Križevci (2025)

Rural / inland market · The numbers an investor needs at a glance.

Verified · MPGI
Apartment transactions (2025)220+9.5% YoY
Active apartment listings190
Stock turnover (sales ÷ listings)1.16· Unusually liquid
Achieved median (MPGI)€1,931/m²+7.3% YoY
Portal asking (est.)€2,047/m²
Asked vs achieved premium6.0%· estimated
Source: MPGI/EIZ 2025 (T3.2 verified)
Stock turnover
1.16
sales ÷ active listings · Koprivnica-Križevci
Unusually liquid
Verified · MPGI
VerySlowNormalUnusually

Rare for a rural county. Likely a state-aid programme or commuter migration pulling in buyers.

Sales/yr
220
Listings
190
Months to clear
10.4
Rural / inland market thresholds: 0.4 unusually liquid · 0.2 normal rural turnover · 0.1 slow rural market · 0 very thin market. Rural and inland counties have small absolute transaction counts and large legacy inventory. Different scale entirely from urban or coastal markets. Reference: EU rural averages run 0.10–0.25; lower is normal, not alarming..
Asked vs achieved · Koprivnica-Križevci
Achieved verified · asking estimated
Portal asking (est.)
2,047/m²
What sellers list at
MPGI achieved (closed)
1,931/m²
What buyers actually pay
Asking premium: 6.0%above achieved
On a 70 m² apartment in Koprivnica-Križevci:
Listed at:143,290
Typical close:135,170
Negotiation headroom:8,120

Asking estimated as 6% above MPGI achieved median (typical 4–8% spread per MPGI/EIZ 2025 commentary). Verify with last 3 closed comparables.

What the data actually means

Interpreting transactions, listings, asked vs achieved prices, and the Koprivnica-Križevci market structure (Rural / inland market).

Demand signal · Rural / inland market
Unusually liquid
Rare for a rural county. Likely a state-aid programme or commuter migration pulling in buyers.
Sales / listings: 1.16 · Months to clear: 10.4
Apartment sales YoY
+9.5%
Croatia overall: -21.6% · Koprivnica-Križevci is outperforming the national trend.
Asked vs achieved
1,931 asked
≈ €1,815 closed (median est.)
Portal asking prices are typically 4–8% above MPGI-recorded closing prices.
Is Koprivnica-Križevci overvalued? Reading sales vs listings

Koprivnica-Križevci closed 220 apartment sales in 2025 against 190 active apartment listings — a ratio of 1.16. That's 10.4 months to clear current stock at the current sales pace.

Compared with the rural / inland market benchmark of ≥0.4 for a tight market,Koprivnica-Križevci's 1.16 reads as "unusually liquid". Rare for a rural county. Likely a state-aid programme or commuter migration pulling in buyers.

Rural and inland counties have small absolute transaction counts and large legacy inventory; EU rural averages run 0.10–0.25, so a low ratio is normal, not alarming. Direct contact with owners often beats portal browsing.

Important: stock turnover ≠ valuation. Overvaluation is better diagnosed by affordability (price-to-income, price-to-rent) — see the affordability section below.

Why fewer transactions doesn't mean less demand — the lock-in effect

National sales fell -21.6% in 2025, but that doesn't mean fewer people want to buy. Most owners do not treat property as a tradable asset — they live in it, rent it out, or hold it for the next generation.

Anyone who bought in 2018–2022 is sitting on 40–80% paper gains. Selling means triggering capital decisions, finding a replacement home in the same hot market, and (often) trading a sub-3% legacy mortgage for a 4–5% new one. Most simply don't list. The result is a shrinking float of available stock — the same pattern seen in the US ("rate lock") and Germany ("Bestandsmieten").

So: fewer transactions + flat or rising prices = supply contraction, not demand collapse.

Asked price vs finalised price — what the gap tells you

Two different numbers circulate in Croatian property reporting:

  • Asking price (Njuškalo, Nekretnine.hr): what sellers hope to get. Typically 4–8% above achieved.
  • Achieved / closed price (MPGI/EIZ from Land Registry sales): what was actually paid and registered.

Our €/m² figures from MPGI are achieved medians. Portal asking prices you see while browsing will look higher. Always ask agents for the last 3 closed comparable sales. The gap widens in slowing markets (more negotiation room) and narrows in hot ones.

Where else did transactions rise in 2025?

Despite the national -21.6% drop, a handful of counties bucked the trend:

  • City of Zagreb — apartment sales held near 2024 levels (≈7,600), the largest active urban market.
  • Krapina-Zagorje (+11%) and Karlovac (+17%) — Zagreb commuter spillover as buyers priced out of the capital move outward.
  • Vukovar-Srijem and Bjelovar-Bilogora — coming off very low bases, double-digit growth from cheap entry prices and state-aid programmes.

The pattern is clear: Zagreb metro and its commuter ring stay liquid; the coast cooled from record 2022–2023 highs but prices kept rising on shrinking supply.

APN benchmark prices (25 municipalities)

Official transaction-based benchmarks used by APN (Croatian Real Estate Agency) — derived from registered Land Registry sales.

Municipality€/m²Year
Koprivnica1,790.762026
Đurđevac1,345.462026
Križevci1,312.452026
Đelekovec1,272.122026
Drnje1,272.122026
Ferdinandovac1,272.122026
Gola1,272.122026
Gornja Rijeka1,272.122026
Hlebine1,272.122026
Kalinovac1,272.122026
Kalnik1,272.122026
Kloštar Podravski1,272.122026
Koprivnički Bregi1,272.122026
Koprivnički Ivanec1,272.122026
Legrad1,272.122026
Molve1,272.122026
Novigrad Podravski1,272.122026
Novo Virje1,272.122026
Peteranec1,272.122026
Podravske Sesvete1,272.122026
Rasinja1,272.122026
Sokolovac1,272.122026
Sveti Ivan Žabno1,272.122026
Sveti Petar Orehovec1,272.122026
Virje1,272.122026

Salary context (DZS)

Avg net €
€1,090
Median net €
€990
Avg gross €
€1,740
Period
2025-09-01

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