How to come in Croatia
Entry Requirements 
Croatia is a member state of the European Community since 1 July 2013 but has not yet joined the Schengen area. For tourist stays months 3 months, EU nationals, even minors, must possess a passport or a national identity card valid covering the entire journey. 
 No vaccinations are required. 
 Pets can enter the country provided they are identified by a microchip, have a valid passport and vaccinations up to date. 
 Nationals of other countries may need a visa, they must contact their embassy
BY PLANE:
  Croatia has seven international airports: Zagreb, Split, Dubrovnik, Zadar, Pula, Rijeka, Osijek 
- The flights are operated by airlines including lowcost airlines also in summer. 
- Croatia Airlines Croatian national carrier, operates flights from most European countries with Zagreb daily, corresponding to major Croatian airports. 
  Other direct flights Paris Dubrovnik 4 flights per week 
  Paris Split 3 flights per week 
  Lyon Split 1 flight per week 
- Air France: 
  Zagreb with 1 daily flight 
- Ryanair operates flights from April to November with: 
- Zadar, base of the company since 2013, which is connected to 19 cities including Paris / Beauvais, Marseille, Brussels / Charleroi, Baden Baden ... 
- Pula 
- Rijeka 
- Easy Jet liaises with: 
- Split 
- Dubrovnik 
  from Paris, Lyon, Basel, Geneva ... 
Rental cars are available from all airports. 
Shuttle buses operate between the airport and the city center
BY CAR :
The documents required to enter and travel in Croatia: driver's license, the vehicle registration and vehicle insurance international green card. 
 Travel by road through Slovenia: attention, Slovenian vignette is mandatory 
 The purchase and display thumbnail to drive on motorways and expressways (including the device Ljubljana) is mandatory in Slovenia. The sticker is either weekly (15 €) or monthly (30 €) or for a yearly cost of € 95. The sticker can be purchased at motorway service stations. Anyone traveling without a valid vignette is systematically punished by a fine varying from 300 to 800 € and the Croatian authorities can confiscate all documents offenders (national identity card, passport, vehicle's registration, driver's license) until such time as the fine is paid. 
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