BTC $67,644.00 (+1.04%)
ETH $1,963.41 (+1.31%)
XRP $1.42 (+1.00%)
BNB $626.02 (+3.67%)
SOL $84.63 (+3.58%)
TRX $0.28 (+0.42%)
DOGE $0.10 (+2.42%)
BCH $560.22 (+0.32%)
ADA $0.28 (+3.68%)
LEO $8.69 (+0.19%)
HYPE $29.96 (+4.42%)
LINK $8.87 (+4.55%)
CC $0.16 (+2.25%)
XMR $327.81 (-1.82%)
XLM $0.16 (+1.51%)
RAIN $0.01 (-2.06%)
HBAR $0.10 (+2.71%)
ZEC $257.44 (-1.48%)
LTC $54.93 (+4.58%)
AVAX $9.12 (+2.96%)

Croatia vs North Macedonia

Crypto regulation comparison

Croatia

Croatia

North Macedonia

North Macedonia

Legal
Legal

Cryptocurrency is legal in Croatia and regulated under the EU's MiCA framework since Croatia joined the eurozone in January 2023. Crypto capital gains are taxed at 10-12% depending on the holding period. HANFA oversees crypto service providers.

North Macedonia has no dedicated cryptocurrency legislation. Crypto is not prohibited and operates in a regulatory gray area. The general flat 10% income tax rate may apply to crypto profits. The government is working toward EU MiCA alignment and plans to license crypto exchanges by 2025-2026.

Tax Type Capital gains
Tax Type Income
Tax Rate 12%
Tax Rate 10%
Exchanges Yes Yes
Exchanges Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Mining Yes Yes
Regulator HANFA (Croatian Financial Services Supervisory Agency)
Regulator National Bank of the Republic of North Macedonia
Stablecoin Rules Regulated under EU MiCA framework
Stablecoin Rules No specific stablecoin regulation
Key Points
  • Capital gains on crypto taxed at 12% flat rate
  • Gains on crypto held over 2 years are tax-exempt
  • HANFA regulates VASPs under Croatian and EU law
  • MiCA framework fully applicable from 30 December 2024
  • Croatia joined the eurozone in January 2023, aligning financial regulation with EU standards
Key Points
  • No dedicated cryptocurrency legislation
  • Central bank has acknowledged crypto without banning it
  • General flat 10% personal income tax rate may apply to crypto profits
  • Government working toward licensing crypto exchanges by 2025-2026
  • Working toward EU candidacy and alignment with MiCA regulation