Lokrum Island tickets & tours | Price comparison

Lokrum Island

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Lokrum Island, just off Dubrovnik Old Town, feels like the city's quiet counterspell: pine shade, monastery ruins, peacocks on the paths, the saltwater “Dead Sea,” locally Mrtvo more, and the climb to Fort Royal all fit into one lush stop. It is small enough for a half day, but rich enough to slow you down.

If you want the cleanest first format, start with a simple island-entry or guided morning-walk option, because it gets you onto Lokrum without turning the day into a boat-hopping puzzle.
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Entry tickets and morning walks

Best if you want Lokrum itself to be the main event: this smaller bucket centers on straightforward island entry and morning-walk formats instead of wider cave-and-beach loops.
Dubrovnik: Lokrum Scenic Walk - Ferry and Entrance Included
5.0(15)
 
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Guided Lokrum tours

Choose these if you want local context or a livelier ride: the current mix covers escorted island outings and skipper-led sea routes that still keep Lokrum in focus.
Dubrovnik Jet Ski Tour from Cavtat: Old City & Lokrum Island
 
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Cavtat/Mlini: Lokrum, Betina Cave, & St. Jacob’s Beach Tour
5.0(5)
 
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Lokrum & Blue Cave - (Lokrum Ticket Included)
5.0(1)
 
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Cruises and water tours

Best if your ideal Lokrum day also means swimming: these boat formats usually pair the island with Betina Cave, St. Jacob's Beach, or other water-first stops.
Dubrovnik Boat Tour: Lokrum Island, Betina Cave & St.Jacobs Beach
3.9(28)
 
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6 tips for visiting the Lokrum Island

1
Leave from the Old Port early
If your priority is a calmer first loop through the monastery zone and the shaded paths, catch an early boat from Dubrovnik's Old City Port. Lokrum gets busier once swimmers, guided groups, and half-day cave boats start overlapping in late morning. That early start buys you quieter photos and easier orientation.
2
Choose island time or cave time
If you want monastery ruins, the Botanical Garden, and the climb to Fort Royal, pick a simple island-first format. If your real goal is swimming and sea action, choose the cave-and-beach boat version instead. Making that decision before you board keeps the day honest, and much less rushed.
3
Pack for rocks, not sand
If you plan to swim in the coves or around Mrtvo more, pack water shoes and a towel you do not mind putting on stone. Lokrum is about bathing spots, platforms, and rocky edges rather than soft sand. That small adjustment saves your feet and makes the second swim feel like a reward, not a wobble.
4
Watch the last boat back
You need to leave on the final return boat, and bad weather can interrupt sailings earlier. Check the return schedule before a second swim or the longer walk up to Fort Royal. That way you do not end paradise with a panicked sprint downhill.
5
Respect the peacocks and the paths
If the peacocks steal the show, enjoy them from a little distance and stay on the marked paths. Lokrum is a protected reserve, so feeding wild animals, leaving the visitor routes, or improvising your own shortcuts is exactly the wrong kind of adventure. The island feels better when you move with it, not against it.
6
Pair Lokrum with one Dubrovnik classic
If you still want one major city highlight, pair Lokrum with Dubrovnik Old Town, Dubrovnik City Walls, or Fort Lovrijenac, but not all three at once. The island works best as a green counterweight to stone, heat, and queues. That balance gives you a better Dubrovnik day overall.

How to plan a Lokrum day from Dubrovnik

Lokrum looks easy from the walls, but the best visit starts with one clear decision: island-first half day, swimming-heavy afternoon, or a wider boat loop that treats the island as just one chapter.

Start from the Old City Port, not from overplanning

Best for first-timers: walk down through Dubrovnik Old Town and board from the Old City Port instead of turning Lokrum into a transport project. The crossing is short, and that quick shift from limestone lanes to pine shade is part of the pleasure. You should feel the island arrive suddenly, not as the final task in a logistics spreadsheet.

Pick the right version of Lokrum before you board

Choose a simple island visit if the monastery, the Botanical Garden, and the viewpoint at Fort Royal are the emotional core of the day. Choose a cave-and-swim cruise if you really want sea time, ladders into the water, and a looser Adriatic mood. Trying to force both versions into one outing usually leaves you with the shallowest part of each.

Use early or late sailings for a softer island mood

The most compressed stretch is usually late morning into early afternoon, when city walkers, swimmers, and paid boat tours can all converge on the same small island. Earlier boats give you quieter monastery courtyards and easier photos; later ones give you warmer light and a more languid swimming mood. Midday works only if you accept that Lokrum will feel more social than secret.

Keep one eye on the return, even in paradise

The island rewards drifting, but not forgetting. If you swim twice, wander into the Botanical Garden, and then climb toward Fort Royal, the day can quietly outrun the return boat. Check that schedule before you commit to the long loop, so the last memory is a view over Dubrovnik, not a panicked glance at the dock.

Why Lokrum feels so different from Dubrovnik

Lokrum is not just a swim stop. It is a protected reserve of 72 ha (178 acres) where monastery stone, Habsburg gardens, sea caves, and peacocks all live inside one very short boat ride.

A green reserve right beside the city walls

About 90% of Lokrum is covered by forest vegetation, which is why the island feels so startlingly cool and shaded after the glare of Dubrovnik City Walls. It is protected both as a nature reserve and as part of the wider historic setting of Dubrovnik. In practice, that means the island reads less like a beach add-on and more like the city's green breathing space.

The monastery gives Lokrum its long memory

The monastery complex was first mentioned in 1023 AD, and Benedictine life shaped the island for centuries through gardens, farming, and stone building. What you see today is layered: Romanesque-Gothic remains, later Gothic-Renaissance rebuilding, and the memory of the 1667 earthquake that reshaped the complex. That depth is why Lokrum feels older than a simple day-trip island has any right to feel.

Fort Royal is the island's best reality check

The French began Fort Royal in 1806 on a hill that rises to about 97 m (318 ft), and the viewpoint still explains the whole place in one sweep. From up there, Lokrum stops looking like a leafy mystery and starts making geographic sense against the walls, the harbor, and the open Adriatic. If you only climb once on the island, climb for that moment.

Gardens, the Dead Sea, and peacocks keep the island playful

The only island botanical garden in Croatia spreads across about 3.3 ha (8.2 acres), the collapsed sea cave called Mrtvo more turns swimming into a novelty, and the peacocks introduced in the mid-19th century make the paths feel slightly theatrical. This mix is why Lokrum never settles into one mood for long. It can feel monastic, tropical, and faintly eccentric within the same half hour.

Which Lokrum format fits you

The main bookable formats are few but clear: one simple island-entry product, a broader guided bucket, and a smaller water-tour bucket where swimming matters as much as the island itself.

Choose entry and a morning walk for the cleanest island-first visit

Best for visitors who want Lokrum itself, not a floating sampler platter of the coast. The current entry-led option is the cleanest way to give the monastery zone, the gardens, and one swim enough room in the day. Choose this if your priority is depth over variety and a calmer start from Dubrovnik. Book now.

Go guided when context or ride energy matters

Choose this if you want someone else to shape the route, explain the island's story, or turn the transfer into part of the fun. The current guided bucket includes both more classic escorted outings and livelier speedboat-style experiences. It is a good compromise when simple entry feels too bare, but a swim-heavy cruise feels too diffuse. Book now.

Pick a water tour when swimming is the point

Great when your emotional center is the Adriatic itself. These cruises usually bundle Lokrum with Betina Cave, coves, and beach stops, so they work best for hot afternoons, small groups of friends, or travelers who want the city walls from the water as much as they want the island paths. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Lokrum worth it if I already have only one day in Dubrovnik?

Yes, if you want your day to breathe. Lokrum is the quickest way to swap city stone for pine shade and swimming without leaving the orbit of Dubrovnik Old Town altogether.
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How much time should I plan for Lokrum?

3 to 4 hours is a good first benchmark for the monastery area, a swim, and one viewpoint. Give it 5 to 6 hours if you also want the climb to Fort Royal, the Botanical Garden, and a slower beach rhythm.
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Is Lokrum better independently or on a tour?

Independent visiting is the cleanest choice if you mainly want the island itself. Choose a guided or boat-tour format when you want someone else to handle the route shape, or when Betina Cave and swimming stops matter as much as Lokrum.
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Can I swim on Lokrum?

Yes. Swimming is one of the main reasons to go, especially around the coves and the saltwater “Dead Sea” / Mrtvo more, but expect rocky entries rather than long sandy beaches.
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Does Lokrum have classic beaches?

Not really. Think bathing coves, stone platforms, ladders, and rocky edges rather than a classic sand-beach setup. That is part of the island's charm, but it changes what you should pack.
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Do I need to worry about the last boat from Lokrum?

Yes. You are expected to leave on the final return boat, and staying after the last official sailing is not allowed. If the weather looks uncertain, build in even more margin.
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What should I pair with Lokrum nearby?

The strongest nearby pairings are Dubrovnik Old Town, Dubrovnik City Walls, and Fort Lovrijenac. Choose one, not all of them, if you want the island to feel restorative rather than squeezed between checkpoints.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Lokrum runs on a seasonal, weather-sensitive schedule rather than simple year-round hours. Winter visiting was limited to weekends through March 31, 2026, and spring operations shift again once the main season restarts.
Check the latest sailing notice before you leave, because boats can stop in bad weather.

address

Lokrum Island
off Dubrovnik Old Town
main public departure: Old City Port
20000 Dubrovnik
Croatia

tickets

For an independent visit, buy island entry before departure and compare it with the current sailing schedule. Paid options split mainly between simple island entry, one morning-walk format with boat and entry included, and broader boat tours that add Betina Cave or swimming stops.
Use the newest price list and sailing notice when you compare costs.

how to get there

The standard public route is the boat from Dubrovnik's Old City Port, right below the walls of Dubrovnik Old Town. Treat Lokrum as a short harbor hop, not as a car stop to overengineer.
Guided cruises on this page make more sense when you want the island bundled with Betina Cave, St. Jacob's Beach, or a skipper-led sea route.
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