Croatia passport cover

Foto de Passaporte Croatia

Dimensões oficiais para documentos de Croatia. Crie fotos prontas para impressão a 300 DPI — grátis, privado, sem cadastro.

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Dimensões de Foto de Croatia por Tipo de Documento

35×45

Passport

Tamanho35 × 45 mm
Pixels (300 DPI)413 × 531 px
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35×45

ID Card

Tamanho35 × 45 mm
Pixels (300 DPI)413 × 531 px
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35×45

Visa

Tamanho35 × 45 mm
Pixels (300 DPI)413 × 531 px
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Requisitos de Foto de Passaporte de Croatia

Fundo

Light grey background. Sem padrões, texturas ou sombras.

Posição do Rosto

Neutral expression, mouth closed. Ambos os olhos abertos, olhando diretamente para a câmera.

Iluminação

Iluminação natural e uniforme. Sem sombras fortes no rosto ou fundo.

Coberturas de Cabeça

Sem chapéus, tiaras ou coberturas de cabeça, exceto por razões religiosas.

Óculos

Not allowed for biometric documents

Qualidade de Impressão

Imprima a 300 DPI em papel fotográfico fosco ou brilhante. Sem pixelização ou artefatos de compressão.

Período de Validade da Foto

Para documentos de Croatia: Must be taken within the last 6 months. Usar uma foto antiga é uma das razões mais comuns de rejeição de pedido de passaporte.

Razões Comuns de Rejeição de Fotos de Croatia

Evite estes erros comuns ao preparar sua foto de passaporte de Croatia:

  • Glasses worn
  • Background not grey
  • Smile or expression

Last verified: 2026-04-09Official source

Croatia Passport Photo -- MUP Biometric Standards Since EU Accession

Croatia's Ministarstvo unutarnjih poslova (MUP -- Ministry of the Interior) manages passport issuance through its policijske uprave (police administrations) across the country's 21 counties. Since Croatia joined the European Union in July 2013 and the Schengen Area in January 2023, its biometric passport photo requirements have been fully harmonized with EU Regulation 2252/2004. The Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs coordinates consular passport services for Croatians abroad. The MUP's automated biometric capture system, deployed at every policijska uprava, runs a real-time compliance check against submitted photos -- and roughly one in four photos submitted at smaller offices outside Zagreb fails on the first attempt due to background color or head positioning errors.

The authoritative photo specification is published by MUP at mup.gov.hr. The same standards govern Croatian osobna iskaznica (national ID card) photos and Croatian visa application photos for third-country nationals.

Technical Specifications

Dimensions:

  • 35 x 45 mm (413 x 531 pixels at 300 DPI)
  • Head height from chin to crown: 32-36 mm
  • Face width: approximately 20-25 mm
  • Eyes positioned in the upper third of the frame

Background -- the grey requirement:

  • Light grey background -- not white, not medium grey
  • Croatia is among the few EU member states that requires grey rather than white. This trips up applicants who assume white backgrounds are standard across Europe.
  • The grey must be uniform with no gradient, texture, or shadow
  • Approximately RGB 200-210, 200-210, 200-210 -- a neutral light grey without warm or cool cast

Expression and pose:

  • Neutral expression, mouth closed, no visible teeth
  • Both eyes open, looking directly at the camera
  • Face perfectly frontal with no tilt, turn, or rotation
  • Full face visible from hairline to chin and ear to ear

Print quality:

  • Matte photo paper only -- MUP rejects glossy prints because the biometric scanner reads reflections as artifacts
  • 300 DPI minimum
  • Color photo in natural tones -- no filters, no color correction beyond exposure adjustment

Croatia-Specific Rules

Glasses ban: MUP has prohibited all glasses in biometric document photos since Croatia adopted EU biometric passport standards. No prescription frames, no clear lenses, no transition lenses. This applies to passports, osobna iskaznica, and Croatian driving licences issued after 2015.

Hair and ear rules: Both ears do not need to be fully visible in Croatian passport photos -- this differs from countries like South Korea. However, hair must not fall across the face or obscure either eye. Fringes (bangs) covering the forehead to the eyebrow line are acceptable as long as the eyebrows and eyes remain fully visible.

Head coverings: Permitted only for religious reasons. The face must remain fully visible from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead. The covering must not cast shadows. A signed statement declaring religious grounds is required.

Recency: Photos must be taken within the last 6 months. MUP clerks compare the submitted photo with the live biometric image captured at the policijska uprava counter.

Children's passports: Croatian children receive passports valid for 5 years (adults get 10). The photo rules for children under 12 are identical to adult rules, but MUP clerks exercise flexibility on expression for very young children.

Digital retouching: MUP's biometric scanning system includes retouching detection. Skin smoothing, facial reshaping, colour filters, and AI portrait enhancement are all flagged. The system compares the photo against biometric data from previous documents, so any artificial modification of facial geometry is detectable. Submit photos without any post-processing beyond basic exposure correction.

Where to Get Passport Photos in Croatia

Fotograf studios: Professional photography studios throughout Croatian cities and towns offer passport photo services. In Zagreb, studios along Ilica, near Trg bana Jelacica, and around the various policijska uprava buildings charge 30-60 HRK (approximately 4-8 EUR since Croatia adopted the euro in January 2023). When requesting your photo, ask specifically for "fotografija za biometrijsku putovnicu" to ensure the photographer uses the correct light grey background rather than white.

Photo booths (fotoautomat): Automated photo booths in shopping centres, post offices, and near government buildings offer passport-compliant photos for 25-40 HRK (3-5 EUR). Look for booths labeled "biometrijska fotografija." Not all booths default to the grey background setting -- select the "osobna iskaznica / putovnica" option specifically. Booths in City Center One Zagreb, Arena Centar, and Westgate are generally well-calibrated.

Optika and drogerija chains: Some DM Drogerie Markt locations and Muller stores in larger Croatian cities have photo printing kiosks. These work if you already have a compliant digital photo, but they do not take the photo for you. Print cost: 5-15 HRK (0.70-2 EUR) per sheet.

Coastal and tourist towns: In Split, Dubrovnik, Zadar, and Rijeka, photo studios near the local policijska uprava charge similar rates to Zagreb -- 30-60 HRK (4-8 EUR). During peak tourist season (June-September), expect slightly longer waits.

DIY approach: If preparing your photo at home, the grey background is the critical detail. A plain light grey poster board (available at papirnica stationery shops for 10-15 HRK / 1.50-2 EUR) works well. Avoid using a white sheet or wall, as MUP will reject white backgrounds. Use our tool to check that the grey shade falls within the acceptable range before printing on matte paper.

Baby and Child Photos

Croatia's MUP applies the following rules for minors:

  • Infants under 1 year: Lay the baby on a light grey cloth or sheet and photograph from above. The grey background rule still applies -- a white sheet will be rejected. Both eyes should ideally be open, but MUP reviewers accept partially closed eyes for newborns.
  • Children aged 1-5: The child must be the sole subject. No parent hands, arms, or faces. Neutral expression preferred but not strictly enforced for toddlers. A slight open mouth is tolerated.
  • Children aged 6-11: Full adult specifications apply except that MUP clerks are slightly more lenient on head positioning for younger children.
  • Children 12 and older: Must meet every adult requirement without exception.
  • Both parents must consent to a child's passport application. Only the child appears in the photo.

ePassport and Automated Border Control

Since joining the Schengen Area in January 2023, Croatian ePassport holders can use automated border control (ABC) gates at airports throughout the Schengen zone. The biometric chip in the Croatian passport stores the facial image, and ABC gates compare a live camera capture against this stored photo. A passport photo that does not meet strict ICAO biometric standards -- particularly regarding neutral expression, head positioning, and absence of accessories -- can cause ABC gate failures, forcing travellers into manual processing lines.

To maximize ABC compatibility, ensure your passport photo has a perfectly neutral expression (no microexpressions), both eyes evenly open, and no accessories that alter the face outline. The grey background used in Croatian photos provides particularly good contrast for the chip scanning process, which is one reason MUP has retained this requirement despite most EU peers using white.

Common Rejection Reasons

MUP biometric system data and clerk reports indicate these top rejection causes:

  1. White background instead of grey -- the most frequent Croatian-specific error, particularly among applicants who obtain photos abroad or use generic passport photo tools that default to white
  2. Glasses worn -- the ban has been in effect for years but continues to catch applicants, especially elderly persons accustomed to older document standards
  3. Glossy photo paper -- matte is mandatory; glossy paper causes scanner read errors
  4. Head too small or too large -- the 32-36mm chin-to-crown range is enforced by the automated system with very little tolerance
  5. Expression not neutral -- even a slight smile or raised eyebrow is flagged by the biometric software
  6. Shadow on the background -- overhead lighting in home photos creates a dark zone behind the head that contrasts with the required uniform grey

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why does Croatia require a grey background when most EU countries use white? A: Croatia's MUP adopted the grey background to provide better contrast with both light-skinned and dark-haired applicants and to reduce overexposure issues that white backgrounds create during biometric scanning. This is compliant with EU regulations, which specify "light-colored" rather than strictly white.

Q: Are Croatian passport photos priced in kuna or euros? A: Since January 1, 2023, Croatia's official currency is the euro. Some studios still display prices in kuna for reference, but all transactions are processed in EUR. Expect to pay 4-8 EUR for a standard set of passport photos.

Q: Can I use a Croatian passport photo for a Schengen visa application? A: Yes. Since Croatia joined Schengen in 2023, its passport photo specifications are fully compliant with Schengen visa photo requirements. The grey background is accepted for Schengen visa applications.

Q: I have a fringe (bangs) -- do I need to pin it back? A: Not necessarily. As long as both eyebrows and both eyes are fully visible, a fringe resting above the eyebrows is acceptable. If the fringe falls to or below the eyebrow line, pin it back.

Q: How long does a Croatian passport take to process? A: Standard processing at a policijska uprava takes 30 business days. Expedited processing (available in Zagreb) takes 2-5 business days at a higher fee. Photo compliance issues can add delays beyond these timelines.

Q: Can I take my passport photo with my phone and print it at a kiosk? A: Yes, but you must use a light grey background -- not white. Most phone-based passport photo tools default to white, which MUP will reject. If using a home setup, hang a light grey fabric or poster board behind you.

Q: How much does a Croatian passport cost? A: Adult biometric passports cost approximately 47 EUR (standard processing, 30 business days). Expedited processing (2-5 business days) costs approximately 70 EUR. Children's passports have reduced fees. Photo costs (4-8 EUR) are paid separately to the photographer or booth.

Perguntas Frequentes

Qual é o tamanho de uma foto de passaporte de Croatia?
O tamanho padrão da foto de passaporte de Croatia é 35×45mm. A 300 DPI, são 413×531 pixels.
Posso tirar minha própria foto de passaporte de Croatia em casa?
Sim. Use um fundo branco ou claro, olhe diretamente para a câmera, garanta iluminação uniforme sem sombras e recorte nas dimensões corretas com nosso criador de fotos de passaporte gratuito.
Quais são os requisitos de fundo para uma foto de passaporte de Croatia?
As fotos de passaporte de Croatia exigem: Light grey background. O fundo não deve ter padrões, sombras ou outras pessoas visíveis.
Como imprimo minha foto de passaporte de Croatia?
Após criar sua foto com nossa ferramenta, baixe o arquivo pronto para impressão a 300 DPI. Imprima em papel fotográfico fosco ou brilhante usando uma impressora doméstica ou em um quiosque de fotos.

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