Updated June 2026
Shipping from China to Croatia
Sea and air freight from China to Croatia. 35-50 day transit to Rijeka, the gateway for central Europe. FCL, LCL, customs, and door-to-door delivery.
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Shipping from China to Croatia moves cargo by sea freight, air freight, or express courier, with full-container (FCL), shared-container (LCL), and door-to-door (DDP) options. Goods leave ports like Shanghai, Ningbo, and Shenzhen and arrive at Rijeka, Croatia’s main container port and a gateway for central Europe. Sea freight takes about 35 to 50 days and air freight 5 to 10 days. Croatian import VAT of 25 percent and any EU duty apply on arrival, and importers need an EORI number to clear customs.
If you import from China into Croatia, or into central Europe through Croatia, the Port of Rijeka is the route to know. This guide covers what shipping from China to Croatia actually costs, how long each option takes, which ports your cargo moves through, and the Croatian and EU customs rules you need to plan for. As a freight forwarder, we move cargo on this lane every week, so the figures and steps below reflect how shipments really run. You have four main ways to ship: sea freight in a full container (FCL), sea freight in shared container space (LCL), air freight, and express courier. Sea freight is the cheapest for anything large or heavy and takes roughly 35 to 50 days. Air freight costs more but arrives in about 5 to 10 days. Croatia is in the EU, so you need an EORI number to clear customs and should plan for 25 percent import VAT plus any duty. Request a live quote any time and we will price your exact shipment.
Cost of Shipping From China to Croatia
How much you pay depends on the method, the size and weight of your cargo, and the season. The ranges below are indicative and have been especially volatile in 2026, with Red Sea diversions around the Cape of Good Hope lengthening Adriatic sailings and pushing rates up. Treat them as a planning guide, then request a live quote for pricing on your exact shipment, ports, and dates.
- Mode: sea is cheapest, air is faster and dearer, express is fastest and dearest.
- Routing: in 2026, Red Sea diversions around the Cape of Good Hope have added time and cost to Mediterranean and Adriatic services.
- Volume: the more you ship, the lower your cost per unit, especially once you fill a container.
- Inland leg: Rijeka serves central Europe, but the Rijeka to Zagreb rail line is still being upgraded, so inland rail capacity can affect onward delivery.
- Service level: door-to-door (DDP) bundles duty, VAT, and delivery into one price, which costs more than port-to-port but removes the work.
Sea freight, full container (FCL)
| 20ft container (FCL) | $2,500 - $5,500 |
| 40ft container (FCL) | $3,500 - $7,500 |
Sea freight, shared container (LCL)
| Per CBM (cubic meter), shared container | $60 - $130 |
Air freight
| Air freight, per kg (under 100 kg) | $6.50 - $11.00 |
| Air freight, per kg (100 to 500 kg) | $5.00 - $9.00 |
| Air freight, per kg (500 kg and up) | $4.50 - $7.00 |
Express courier
| Express courier, per kg (small parcels) | $8.00 - $18.00 |
Sea freight is priced per container (FCL) or per cubic meter (LCL). Air and express are priced on chargeable weight, the greater of actual weight or volumetric weight, so bulky-but-light cargo costs more than it looks. None of these ranges include Croatian import VAT, EU duty, or the forwarder’s customs clearance fee, which are covered in the customs section below.
Indicative ranges only. Request a live quote for pricing on your exact shipment.
Sea Freight From China to Croatia
Sea freight is the backbone of China to Croatia shipping and the cheapest way to move anything large or heavy. You have two choices. A full container (FCL) means you book a whole 20ft or 40ft box for your cargo alone, which is most cost-effective once you have roughly 15 cubic meters (CBM) or more. Shared container space (LCL) means your goods travel in a container with other importers’ cargo and you pay only for the space you use, which is the better deal for smaller loads. Transit is typically 35 to 50 days port to port to Rijeka, with LCL adding about 7 to 10 days for consolidation and unpacking. Rijeka is Croatia’s main container port and, with the new Rijeka Gateway terminal, an increasingly important entry point for central Europe, including Hungary, Austria, Slovakia, and Serbia. The catch is the inland rail line to Zagreb, which is still being upgraded, so a lot of inland cargo still moves by truck. In 2026, Cape of Good Hope routing has added time to some sailings. A rough rule for choosing: below about 15 CBM, LCL is usually cheaper; above it, a full container wins, and we quote both so you can compare.
Air Freight From China to Croatia
Air freight is the option when speed matters. Cargo flies from hubs like Shanghai Pudong, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong to Zagreb, usually arriving in about 5 to 10 days, sometimes via a European hub. It costs several times more than sea freight per unit, so it pays off for urgent restocks, high-value goods, samples, or products small and light enough that the weight cost stays reasonable. Air freight is priced on chargeable weight, the greater of the actual weight and the volumetric weight, so bulky-but-light cargo is charged on its size. Per-kg rates fall as the shipment gets heavier. When speed is not essential, sea freight moves the same goods for far less, and we can quote both side by side.
Express Courier From China to Croatia
Express courier (the service behind DHL, FedEx, and UPS) is the fastest door-to-door option, usually 3 to 7 days into Croatia, and it bundles pickup, the flight, and delivery into one service. It is built for small parcels, samples, and urgent documents rather than pallets of stock. Express is the priciest choice per kilo, but for a small, time-critical shipment it is often the simplest way to move goods from China to Croatia. Above roughly 100 to 150 kg, standard air freight usually becomes cheaper while still being fast. We can compare express against air freight for any shipment where speed is the priority.
Transit Times Compared
| Method | Transit time | Relative cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sea freight, FCL | 35 - 50 days | Lowest per unit | Large or heavy, non-urgent loads |
| Sea freight, LCL | FCL time + 7 - 10 days | Low for small loads | Under about 15 CBM |
| Air freight | 5 - 10 days | High | Urgent or high-value goods |
| Express courier | 3 - 7 days | Highest per kg | Small, fast parcels |
Transit times are port to port. Add a few days for customs clearance and final delivery.
Main Ports and Routes
Most cargo from China leaves through a handful of major ports. On the ocean side, Shanghai, Ningbo-Zhoushan, Shenzhen (including the Yantian terminal), Qingdao, and Guangzhou handle the bulk of Croatia-bound containers. For air freight, the main gateways are Shanghai Pudong, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong. On the Croatian side, Rijeka is the main container port and, with the new Rijeka Gateway terminal, a growing entry point for central Europe via road and rail. Ploče in the south is a secondary port. Rijeka is geographically the shortest Adriatic entry for much of central Europe, though the single-track Rijeka to Zagreb rail line is a known bottleneck until its planned upgrade. Zagreb handles most air cargo. You can browse the specific city-to-city routes we run below and open any one for its own transit times and details.
Main China origin ports
Main destination ports and gateways
Customs, Duties and Taxes in Croatia
Croatia sits inside the EU customs union, so the same EU rules and tariff apply, and once your goods clear customs in Rijeka they move freely across the EU. There is no VAT-free allowance for commercial imports, so plan around 25 percent import VAT and any duty. Rates depend on your exact product, so confirm the duty for your goods’ commodity code in the EU TARIC database before you ship.
- Croatian import VAT is 25 percent, charged on the customs value plus duty plus transport to the EU border. VAT-registered businesses recover it as input tax, and deferment is available for registered importers.
- EU customs duty is set by your product’s commodity code in the TARIC database and charged on the CIF value (goods plus freight and insurance). There is no EU-China free trade agreement, so standard MFN rates apply, and some China-origin goods (certain steel, aluminium, ceramics, and bicycles) carry extra anti-dumping duty.
- You need an EORI number to import into the EU. It is free, valid across all 27 EU countries, and usually issued within a few working days.
- The EUR 22 import VAT exemption ended in 2021, so VAT applies from the first euro. From 1 July 2026 the EUR 150 customs-duty exemption also ends, replaced by a temporary flat duty of EUR 3 per item on consignments up to EUR 150, running until 2028.
- Who pays depends on the Incoterm. Under DDP the seller or forwarder clears and pays duty and VAT; under FOB, CIF, or DAP you are the importer of record. Core documents are the commercial invoice, packing list, and bill of lading or air waybill.
- Because Rijeka is a gateway for the region, importers often clear in Croatia and move goods onward across the EU, or in transit to non-EU neighbours like Bosnia and Serbia. We can set up the right clearance for your destination.
- Wood pallets and crates must meet the ISPM-15 heat-treatment standard and carry the stamp, or EU border inspection can reject them.
Door-to-Door and DDP Shipping to Croatia
Door-to-door, often sold as DDP (Delivered Duty Paid), means we handle the whole journey: pickup at your supplier in China, export clearance, the sea or air leg, Croatian and EU customs including duty and import VAT, and final delivery to your address. You get one price and one point of contact, and you never deal with the port or the paperwork yourself. It is the simplest option for importers who do not have their own customs setup. The alternative, FOB, CIF, or DAP, leaves some of the clearance, duty, or delivery for you to arrange as the importer of record. For most Croatian importers, DDP is worth it for the time and risk it removes, though VAT-registered businesses sometimes prefer to be the importer of record to recover the import VAT cleanly.
How to Ship From China to Croatia, Step by Step
- 1Tell us what you are shipping: the goods, their weight and volume (CBM), the supplier’s city in China, and your delivery address in Croatia or central Europe.
- 2We quote your options (sea FCL, sea LCL, air, or express) with indicative costs and transit times, and you pick one.
- 3Make sure you have an EORI number; we can guide you if you do not have one yet.
- 4We arrange pickup from your supplier and handle export clearance in China.
- 5Your cargo sails to Rijeka, then moves inland by truck or rail to your destination.
- 6We file the EU customs declaration, handle duty and import VAT, and clear your shipment, then deliver to your door. With DDP, duty, VAT, and delivery are already handled.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to ship from China to Croatia?
As an indicative guide, sea freight runs roughly $2,500 to $5,500 for a 20ft container, LCL is about $60 to $130 per cubic meter, and air freight is around $4.50 to $11 per kg depending on weight. Import VAT and duty are extra. Request a live quote for your exact cargo.
How long does shipping from China to Croatia take?
Sea freight takes about 35 to 50 days port to port to Rijeka, plus a few days for customs and inland delivery. Air freight is about 5 to 10 days and express courier is 3 to 7 days. In 2026, Red Sea diversions have added time to some sailings.
Should I route central European cargo through Rijeka?
Rijeka is geographically the shortest Adriatic entry for much of central Europe, and the new Rijeka Gateway terminal added capacity. The catch is the single-track Rijeka to Zagreb rail line, a known bottleneck until its planned upgrade, so a lot of inland cargo still moves by truck. For many shipments it is faster than routing via North Sea ports.
What is the cheapest way to ship from China to Croatia?
Sea freight is the cheapest per unit. A shared container (LCL) is cheapest for small loads under about 15 CBM, while a full container (FCL) becomes cheaper once you have enough volume to fill it. Air and express cost more but save time.
Do I need an EORI number to import from China to Croatia?
Yes. Any business importing into the EU needs an EORI number, a one-time and free registration valid across all 27 EU countries. Your forwarder or broker needs it to clear your goods.
How much duty and VAT will I pay importing from China to Croatia?
Duty is set by your product’s commodity code in the EU TARIC tariff and charged on the CIF value, with many goods at low single-digit rates and some higher. On top of that, 25 percent Croatian import VAT applies, which VAT-registered businesses can recover.
Can I ship onward to Bosnia or Serbia through Croatia?
Yes. Rijeka is commonly used as a gateway for the wider region, and goods can move in customs transit to non-EU neighbours such as Bosnia and Serbia. We can set up the right clearance or transit procedure for your final destination.
What documents do I need to import from China to Croatia?
You need an EORI number, a commercial invoice, a packing list, and a bill of lading or air waybill, plus a certificate of origin where relevant and product certificates for regulated goods. Wood packaging must be ISPM-15 compliant.
Ship From China to Croatia Today
Request a free, no-obligation live quote for shipping from China to Croatia. We will help you choose the cheapest or fastest option for your cargo.
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