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Croatian county · HASC HR.ZD

Zadar County County

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

Avg asking €/m²
€2,598
+0.4% vs Croatia
Apartments for sale
YoY price change
+13.4%
National trends →
Transactions (latest)
1,535
How is this counted? →
Rental yield
6.5%
Rentals
Live listings in Zadar County

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€2,598≈ €2,754+13.4%1,53511,304Verified · MPGI
2024-10-01€2,290≈ €2,427+9.1%1,81010,400Verified · MPGI
2023-10-01€2,750≈ €2,915+10%3,0009,600Estimate
2022-10-01€2,500≈ €2,650+8%2,8008,700Estimate

Investor snapshot — Zadar County (2025)

Coastal tourism market · The numbers an investor needs at a glance.

Verified · MPGI
Apartment transactions (2025)1,535-15.2% YoY
Active apartment listings6,849
Stock turnover (sales ÷ listings)0.22· Active tourist market
Achieved median (MPGI)€2,598/m²+13.4% YoY
Portal asking (est.)€2,754/m²
Asked vs achieved premium6.0%· estimated
Source: MPGI/EIZ 2025 (T3.2 verified)
Stock turnover
0.22
sales ÷ active listings · Zadar County
Active tourist market
Verified · MPGI
OversuppliedInventory-heavyActiveHot

Healthy turnover for a coastal county. Premium locations move fast; secondary villages negotiate harder.

Sales/yr
1,535
Listings
6,849
Months to clear
53.5
Coastal tourism market thresholds: 0.3 hot coastal market · 0.15 active tourist market · 0.08 inventory-heavy · 0 oversupplied. Coastal counties carry vast year-round inventory (second homes, half-finished villas) that doesn't reflect actual buyer demand. Lower thresholds than capitals. Reference: Mallorca ≈ 0.20 · Greek islands ≈ 0.15 · Algarve ≈ 0.18.
Asked vs achieved · Zadar County
Achieved verified · asking estimated
Portal asking (est.)
2,754/m²
What sellers list at
MPGI achieved (closed)
2,598/m²
What buyers actually pay
Asking premium: 6.0%above achieved
On a 70 m² apartment in Zadar County:
Listed at:192,780
Typical close:181,860
Negotiation headroom:10,920

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 Zadar County market structure (Coastal tourism market).

Demand signal · Coastal tourism market
Active tourist market
Healthy turnover for a coastal county. Premium locations move fast; secondary villages negotiate harder.
Sales / listings: 0.22 · Months to clear: 53.5
Apartment sales YoY
-15.2%
Croatia overall: -21.6% · Zadar County is outperforming the national trend.
Asked vs achieved
2,598 asked
≈ €2,442 closed (median est.)
Portal asking prices are typically 4–8% above MPGI-recorded closing prices.
Is Zadar County overvalued? Reading sales vs listings

Zadar County closed 1,535 apartment sales in 2025 against 6,849 active apartment listings — a ratio of 0.22. That's 53.5 months to clear current stock at the current sales pace.

Compared with the coastal tourism market benchmark of ≥0.3 for a tight market,Zadar County's 0.22 reads as "active tourist market". Healthy turnover for a coastal county. Premium locations move fast; secondary villages negotiate harder.

Coastal counties carry massive year-round inventory — half-finished villas, second-home holdouts at testing prices, units that have sat for years. Real demand concentrates on the top 10–20% of the stock, so a 0.22 ratio doesn't mean overvaluation; it means the headline listing pool is bloated. Compare with Mallorca ≈ 0.20, Greek islands ≈ 0.15, Algarve ≈ 0.18.

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 (30 municipalities)

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

Municipality€/m²Year
Zadar2,610.932026
Nin2,570.782026
Pag2,4092026
Poličnik2,408.52026
Posedarje2,408.52026
Povljana2,408.52026
Privlaka2,408.52026
Ražanac2,408.52026
Sali2,408.52026
Starigrad2,408.52026
Sukošan2,408.52026
Sveti Filip i Jakov2,408.52026
Škabrnja2,408.52026
Tkon2,408.52026
Vir2,408.52026
Vrsi2,408.52026
Zemunik Donji2,408.52026
Žman2,408.52026
Bibinje2,408.52026
Biograd na Moru2,408.52026
Gračac2,408.52026
Jasenice2,408.52026
Kali2,408.52026
Lišane Ostrovičke2,408.52026
Murter2,408.52026
Novigrad2,408.52026
Obrovac2,408.52026
Pakoštane2,408.52026
Polača2,408.52026
Benkovac1,492.772026

Cities in Zadar County — affordability

Click any city for full details, listings and burden breakdown.

Salary context (DZS)

Avg net €
€1,210
Median net €
€1,100
Avg gross €
€1,810
Period
2025-09-01

Current listings in Zadar County

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