Armed Forces of Croatia
| Armed Forces of Croatia | |
|---|---|
| Oružane Snage Republike Hrvatske (Croatian) | |
Emblem of the Croatian Armed Forces | |
| Founded | 20 April 1991 |
| Service branches | Croatian Army Croatian Navy Croatian Air Force |
| Website | www |
| Leadership | |
| Commander-in-Chief | Zoran Milanović |
| Ministry of Defence | Ivan Anušić |
| Chief of the General Staff | Tihomir Kundid |
| Personnel | |
| Military age | 18 – 30 |
| Conscription | Yes |
| Active personnel | 14,325 (2025) |
| Reserve personnel | 20,100 (2025) |
| Deployed personnel | Kosovo – 520 Hungary – 205 Lithuania – 195 Poland – 161 Iraq – 26 India / Pakistan – 20 Western Sahara – 12 |
| Expenditure | |
| Budget | €1.931 billion (2025) |
| Percent of GDP | 2.08% (2026) |
| Industry | |
| Domestic suppliers | Đuro Đaković (vehicles) Brodosplit (naval vessels) HS Produkt (small arms) DOK-ING (robotics) Šestan-Busch (gear) Orqa (drones) |
| Foreign suppliers | |
| Related articles | |
| History | |
| Ranks | Croatian military ranks |
The Armed Forces of the Republic of Croatia (Croatian: Oružane snage Republike Hrvatske – OSRH) are the national military forces of Croatia. The Croatian military consists of three service branches: the Croatian Army, the Croatian Navy and the Croatian Air Force. The OSRH is headed by the President of Croatia as commander-in-chief while defense policy is overseen by the Government of Croatia. The military supports the foreign policy of Croatia and international security initiatives. It is the sole military wing of the Croatian security and intelligence system.
Since the Croatian War of Independence (1991-1995), the Armed Forces have played a key role in protecting territorial integrity. The military's first foreign deployment was to the War in Afghanistan, in 2003, later joining the military alliance NATO in 2009. Croatia maintains a close security and foreign intelligence relationship with NATO and the United States. The military has been deployed to various United Nations (UN)-led and NATO-led missions around the world. Since joining the European Union (EU) in 2013, it became a part of the EU defense forces.
The Armed Forces have seen significant militarization and modernization since the early 2020s due to regional geopolitical risk. Its deep integration within Europe and the U.S. has led to modern defense pacts and a robust defense industrial base. The Croatian military is among the most technologically-advanced in Southeast Europe. Croatia has had military conscription since 2025, previously enacted from 1991 to 2008. The Armed Forces are spread across continental Croatia and capital city Zagreb, with the Navy largely based in Split.