The Croatian language is a collective name for the standard language of Croats and the group of dialects and idioms that are spoken or that were once spoken by Croats. Croatian is spoken by around 5,540,590 people, mainly Croats in Croatia (3,980,000; census in 2001) and Bosnia and Herzegovina (469,000; in 2004). Furthermore, the Croatian language is spoken in Austria, 19,400 (census in 2001), Hungary, 14,300 (census in 2001), Italy (3,500; Vincent 1987), Montenegro (6,810; in 2006), Serbia, 114,000; in 2006), Slovakia (890, census in 2001), United States of America, 58,400; census in 2000). Croatian is the official language of the Republic of Croatia and one of the three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is also one of the seven official languages of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina (Serbia), and one of the official languages of Montenegro. Local idioms of Croatian are used as an official language in certain municipalities in the Austrian state of Burgenland (Gradišće), and in the Italian province of Molise.
All our translations from Croatian and into Croatian are entrusted to highly educated experts - translators or specialists in a particular field, native speakers with minimum 5 (five) years of experience in the translation of most diverse topics. As a result of these demanding and rigorous criteria in selecting our professional staff, our translators for the Croatian language are highly competent, so our high-quality translations from Croatian and into Croatian meet the highest professional standards.