Taxi fares in Croatia are heading for a government squeeze, and drivers are gearing up to shut their apps off in protest.
Price caps on the table
Price caps on the table
- The Transport Ministry plans floor and ceiling rates per kilometre.
- Tomislav Mihotić said limits should balance drivers and riders.
- Officials referenced a 1,500 euro two-kilometre horror ride.
- The working group gathers users and taxi reps together.
- Croatian taxi drivers are warning about a Monday app blackout.
- Miro Jelić argued that current fares barely cover fuel.
- Ivo Šišević claimed platform commissions wreck profitability.
- Platforms allegedly dictate prices through demand-based algorithms.
- A Zagreb Main Station to Trešnjevka ride varies by app.
- One platform lists 5.39 euros for the trip.
- Another advertises 3.50 euros with a promo.
- Rough math suggests one euro per kilometre.
- New windshield cards become mandatory in June 2026.
- Renata Jandrašek said QR codes verify driver legitimacy.
- Only 3,200 of 40,000 drivers have applied.
- Low uptake might double as protest fuel.