TripPick Montenegro Montenegro

Grand Bay of Kotor & Montenegro 7-Day — Kotor, Perast, Lovćen, Budva & a Dubrovnik Day

Kotor's core + Perast + Lovćen & Njeguši + the Budva Riviera + a slow bay day + a Dubrovnik day trip + a final coast day

Seven days does the Bay of Kotor and its surroundings properly. Days 1-2 cover Kotor's Old Town, the city-walls climb, Perast, and Our Lady of the Rocks. Day 3 heads up to Lovćen and Njeguši; Day 4 explores the Budva Riviera and Sveti Stefan; Day 5 is a slow bay day around Tivat and the villages. Day 6 is a Dubrovnik day trip across the Croatian border (about 2 hours each way). Day 7 is a final, relaxed coast day and departure. Kotor (or nearby Dobrota) makes the walkable base throughout, with buses, boats, and the odd tour for the rest. Book the Dubrovnik day around possible summer border queues.

A full week is enough to actually understand Kotor. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$400

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$870

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,280

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

Search Kotor hotels and flights in one place. Trip.com offers competitive comparison rates.

Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Old Town + St Tryphon Cathedral + city-walls climb

Stari Grad (walled Old Town) - St Tryphon Cathedral - the squares & cats - 1,350-step climb to St John's Fortress

Activities

  1. 09:00 Walled Old Town (Stari Grad) — squares, gates & cats 1h30

    Start early, before the cruise ships dock, to wander the UNESCO-listed Old Town: the Sea Gate, the Square of Arms (Trg od oružja) with its clock tower, and a maze of alleys, Venetian palaces, and the famous community cats.

    Cost: Free TIP: The Old Town is car-free and only a few hundred meters across — perfect for aimless wandering. Mornings are calm before the cruise crowds arrive (typically 10am-5pm). Look for the Cats Museum and cat statues. Wear shoes with grip — the polished stone is slick when wet.
  2. 10:30 St Tryphon Cathedral (Katedrala Svetog Tripuna) 45min

    Kotor's Romanesque cathedral, consecrated in 1166, with twin bell towers, a reliquary chapel, and a quiet interior. The spiritual heart of the Old Town and one of its oldest buildings.

    Cost: ~€3-4 TIP: Cover shoulders and knees inside. The small museum and treasury upstairs are worth a look. A short walk from the main square — you can pair it with the Maritime Museum nearby if you have time.
  3. 12:00 Lunch — Old Town konoba (Scala Santa or Bonaca) 1h30

    Lunch on Montenegrin classics a few streets back from the busy squares. Konoba Scala Santa for black risotto and fish soup, or Konoba Bonaca for traditional plates in a cozy stone room.

    Cost: €12-25 per person TIP: Order the crni rižot (black risotto) — the regional signature. Back-lane konobas are better value than the photo-menu spots by the cruise dock. Fish is priced by the kilo, so confirm before ordering. A good fuel-up before the climb.
  4. 16:30 City-walls climb to St John's Fortress (1,350 steps) 2h30

    The signature Kotor experience: a steep climb of around 1,350 steps and 260m up Mount St John along the old walls, passing the Church of Our Lady of Remedy, to the fortress with its sweeping panorama over the bay and the red-roofed Old Town.

    Cost: ~€15 (in season; free off-season) TIP: Go in late afternoon to avoid the midday heat and the worst crowds, and to catch golden light at the top. Wear sturdy shoes — the steps are uneven and polished. Carry plenty of water; there's little shade. Allow 1.5-2 hours round trip. The half-way church is a good rest stop.
  5. 20:00 Dinner — Old Town, after the ships leave 2h

    Dinner in the now-calm Old Town once the cruise day-trippers have gone — fresh seafood at Konoba Portun near the harbor or Konoba Cesarica for the day's catch, or a Vranac and pršut board at Bokun wine bar.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Evening is when the Old Town is at its best — quiet, lit, and atmospheric. Reserve in summer. Try a glass of Vranac (Montenegrin red) and finish with a rakija. The squares are lovely for an after-dinner stroll.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Bakery or café breakfast

Old Town · €3-7

Burek (filo pastry) or a pastry from a bakery with a coffee on the square.

Lunch

Konoba Scala Santa or Bonaca

Old Town (Stari Grad) · €12-25

Montenegrin classics and black risotto before the walls climb.

Dinner

Konoba Portun or Bokun wine bar

Old Town · €20-40

Fresh seafood, or a Vranac-and-pršut board after the cruise crowds leave.

Transit:

Everything today is on foot — the Old Town, cathedral, and the city-walls trailhead are all within the walls, a few minutes apart. No transport needed.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $110 Luxury $300
DAY 2

Perast + Our Lady of the Rocks + the bay

Bus or boat to Perast - Our Lady of the Rocks islet church - Perast Baroque palaces - bay swim or cruise

Activities

  1. 09:30 Travel to Perast (bus or bay cruise) 45min

    Head 12 km north along the bay to Perast — by the local Blue Line bus (about €1.50), which drops you on the road above the car-free village, or on an organized bay cruise (€20-50) from Kotor's Old Town pier.

    Cost: Bus €1.50 / cruise €20-50 TIP: The bus is the cheap, easy option; a cruise adds a swim stop and skips the walk down. Perast is tiny and car-free, so you'll walk its single waterfront street. Go in the morning for calmer water and light.
  2. 10:30 Boat to Our Lady of the Rocks (Gospa od Škrpjela) 1h30

    From Perast's waterfront, take a small shuttle boat out to Our Lady of the Rocks — a man-made islet built up over centuries by local sailors dropping stones, topped by a 17th-century church with a museum of votive offerings and a famous embroidered icon.

    Cost: ~€5-10 boat + small church entry TIP: Boats run frequently from the waterfront — just walk up to one. The church museum and the embroidered icon (worked over decades by a local woman) are the highlights. Allow time to photograph the islet from the water; it's the postcard shot of the bay.
  3. 12:30 Lunch in Perast — waterfront konoba 1h30

    Lunch on the Perast waterfront with a bay view. Konoba Otok Bronza for lamb under the bell or Njeguški steak, or Conte Restaurant looking straight out at the islet.

    Cost: €18-45 per person TIP: If you want peka (lamb under the bell), call ahead — it cooks slowly. The waterfront tables carry a view premium. A relaxed, scenic lunch is the right pace for Perast. Confirm fish prices by weight.
  4. 14:30 Perast village + bay swim 2h

    Wander Perast's row of 17th-century Baroque palaces and churches, climb the St Nicholas church bell tower for a view, then swim from the village's small waterfront ladders and platforms in the calm bay.

    Cost: Free (bell tower small fee) TIP: Perast has no real beach but plenty of swim ladders into the deep, clear bay water. The bell tower gives a great view back over the islets. It's a serene, slow-paced spot — a nice contrast to busy Kotor.
  5. 19:30 Return to Kotor + dinner 2h30

    Take the bus or boat back to Kotor (around 45 min) for dinner in the Old Town as it quiets for the evening — grilled fish, mussels in buzara sauce, or a fine-dining bay-view meal at Galion by the marina.

    Cost: €20-50 per person TIP: Check the last bus time from Perast before you settle in for the afternoon. Back in Kotor, Galion is the splurge choice for a marina-view dinner. Reserve a terrace table in summer for the lit-up bay at night.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

Coffee and a pastry on the square before heading to Perast.

Lunch

Konoba Otok Bronza or Conte

Perast · €18-45

Bay-view lunch — lamb under the bell or fresh fish by the islet.

Dinner

Galion or an Old Town konoba

Kotor (marina / Old Town) · €20-50

Marina-view fine dining, or grilled fish and mussels in the calm evening Old Town.

Transit:

Local Blue Line bus to Perast (~€1.50, ~30-45 min) or a bay cruise (€20-50). In Perast, everything is on foot plus the short shuttle boat to the islet.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $120 Luxury $310
DAY 3

Day trip — Lovćen & Njeguši, or Budva & Sveti Stefan

Lovćen National Park - Njeguši village (pršut & cheese) - Njegoš Mausoleum, OR Budva old town + Sveti Stefan view

Activities

  1. 09:00 Up to Lovćen National Park (switchback drive) 1h30

    Drive or take a tour up the dramatic switchback road behind Kotor (the old Kotor-Cetinje serpentine, with 25+ hairpins) into Lovćen National Park — mountain scenery and viewpoints back down over the entire Bay of Kotor.

    Cost: Tour €30-60 / car + park entry TIP: The switchback road is spectacular but slow and narrow — a guided tour spares you the driving and the hairpins. Stop at the serpentine viewpoint for the classic bay panorama. Alternatively, swap this whole day for Budva and Sveti Stefan to the south (see below).
  2. 11:00 Njeguši village — pršut & cheese tasting 1h30

    Stop in Njeguši, the mountain village famous as the source of Montenegro's air-dried pršut (prosciutto) and cheese, and the ancestral home of the Petrović-Njegoš dynasty. Taste a platter of the local cured meat and cheese where it's made.

    Cost: €8-15 (tasting platter) TIP: This is the place to try njeguški pršut and sir at the source — most stops do a tasting platter. The mountain air-curing is what makes the pršut distinctive. A great, simple lunch with a glass of local wine.
  3. 13:30 Njegoš Mausoleum (Lovćen, 1,657m) 2h

    Climb the 461 steps to the Njegoš Mausoleum atop Mount Lovćen at 1,657m — the resting place of the poet-prince-bishop Petar II Petrović-Njegoš, with one of the widest panoramas in Montenegro.

    Cost: ~€5 entry TIP: The 461-step climb to the mausoleum is short but steep at altitude — take it slowly. The summit view stretches across Montenegro on a clear day. It's cooler up here than on the coast, so bring a layer even in summer.
  4. 16:30 Cetinje (optional) or return to the coast 2h

    Optionally drop down to Cetinje, Montenegro's historic royal capital, for its old palaces and monastery, before winding back down to Kotor — or head straight back for a final evening on the bay.

    Cost: Free-€10 (sights) TIP: Cetinje is a quiet, history-rich stop if you have time and energy. Most tours include or skip it depending on the route. Either way, aim to be back in Kotor for a relaxed last dinner.
  5. 20:00 Farewell dinner in Kotor 2h

    A final dinner in the Old Town — a hearty mixed grill at BBQ Tanjga, fresh seafood at an Old Town konoba, or a marina-view meal at Galion, with a last glass of Vranac.

    Cost: €15-50 per person TIP: BBQ Tanjga is the cheap, hearty send-off; Galion the splurge. After dinner, one more wander through the lit, quiet Old Town is the perfect close. Reserve in summer.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

Coffee and a pastry before the mountain trip.

Lunch

Njeguši pršut & cheese tasting

Njeguši (Lovćen) · €8-15

Air-dried pršut and cheese at the source, with local wine.

Dinner

BBQ Tanjga or Galion

Kotor · €15-50

A hearty Balkan grill, or a final marina-view seafood dinner.

Transit:

Lovćen/Njeguši is easiest by guided tour (€30-60) or rental car up the switchback road (~1 hour). Alternatively, Budva is 25 min south by bus (~€4) and Sveti Stefan about 40 min.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $60 Mid $130 Luxury $330
DAY 4

Budva Riviera — Budva old town, beaches & Sveti Stefan

Bus to Budva - Budva walled old town - Mogren beach - Sveti Stefan island view - return to Kotor

Activities

  1. 09:30 Travel to Budva + walled old town 2h

    Take the bus 25 minutes south to Budva (around €4) and explore its compact walled old town — narrow lanes, the citadel, and small churches on a peninsula jutting into the open Adriatic.

    Cost: Bus ~€4 + citadel small fee TIP: Budva's old town is smaller than Kotor's but pretty, on the open sea rather than the enclosed bay. Climb the citadel for a view. Buses run frequently from Kotor's bus station. Budva is busier and more resort-y than Kotor.
  2. 12:00 Mogren Beach + lunch 2h30

    Walk the coastal path to Mogren Beach, Budva's best-known pebble beach below the cliffs, for a swim in the open Adriatic, then lunch at a beachside or old-town konoba.

    Cost: €12-25 lunch + lounger rental TIP: Mogren is a short, scenic cliff walk from the old town. The open-sea water here is clearer and a touch cooler than the enclosed bay at Kotor. Loungers cost extra; arrive early in peak summer for space.
  3. 15:30 Sveti Stefan — the iconic island view 1h30

    Continue south (about 15 min) to Sveti Stefan, the postcard island-resort peninsula of terracotta-roofed stone houses linked to the shore by a causeway. The resort itself is private, but the roadside mirador and nearby beaches give the classic view.

    Cost: Free (viewpoint) / beach lounger extra TIP: The island is a private luxury resort, so you view it from the mainland mirador or the adjacent public beaches rather than walking onto it. The view from above is the famous shot. Combine with a swim at the nearby beach.
  4. 18:00 Return to Kotor + dinner 2h30

    Bus back to Kotor (about 25-40 min) for dinner in the Old Town — fresh seafood, a Vranac, and a last evening wander through the lit alleys.

    Cost: €20-40 per person TIP: Check the last Budva-Kotor bus time before settling in at the beach. Back in Kotor, the evening Old Town is calm and atmospheric. Reserve dinner in summer.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

Coffee and a pastry before the Budva trip.

Lunch

Budva beach or old-town konoba

Budva · €12-25

Grilled fish or a light lunch by the open-sea beach.

Dinner

Kotor Old Town konoba

Kotor · €20-40

Fresh seafood and Vranac in the quiet evening Old Town.

Transit:

Kotor ↔ Budva by frequent bus (~€4, 25-40 min). Budva → Sveti Stefan a short local bus or taxi (~15 min). Walking within Budva's old town.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $120 Luxury $320
DAY 5

Slow bay day — Tivat marina, bay villages & departure

Porto Montenegro (Tivat) - Prčanj or Muo bay villages - final Old Town wander - TIV departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 Porto Montenegro, Tivat (optional) 2h

    A short hop to Tivat to see Porto Montenegro, the upscale superyacht marina with waterfront cafés, shops, and the Maritime Heritage Collection — a modern contrast to Kotor's medieval Old Town.

    Cost: Bus/taxi + coffee/lunch TIP: Tivat is about 20-30 minutes around the bay and also where the airport (TIV) is — handy if you're flying out today. Porto Montenegro is glossy and modern; a coffee by the yachts is the experience. Skip if you prefer a slower village morning.
  2. 12:00 Bay villages — Prčanj or Muo 1h30

    Stroll a quieter bay village across or along the water from Kotor — Prčanj with its grand church, or Muo with classic views back to Kotor's Old Town and fortress on the mountainside.

    Cost: Bus/taxi + lunch TIP: These villages give the postcard view of Kotor framed by the mountains. A relaxed waterfront lunch here is cheaper and calmer than the Old Town. Reachable by local bus, taxi, or a pleasant walk along the bay.
  3. 14:30 Final Old Town wander + last lunch/coffee 1h30

    Back in Kotor for a final unhurried loop of the Old Town — a last coffee on the Square of Arms, the cats, the cathedral, and any corner missed earlier, plus cake at Forza.

    Cost: €5-15 TIP: Keep it light on a departure day. The Square of Arms café ritual is the right note to end on. Pick up njeguški pršut or a bottle of Vranac as a souvenir if you have room.
  4. 16:30 Departure (Tivat TIV or onward) 1h30

    Head to Tivat Airport (TIV), about 15-20 minutes by taxi (~€15-20), or continue onward — Dubrovnik is about 2 hours north across the border, Podgorica (TGD) about 1.5-2 hours.

    Cost: Taxi ~€15-20 to TIV TIP: Agree the taxi fare before setting off. TIV is small, so allow about 2 hours before a flight. If continuing to Dubrovnik, build in time for possible summer border queues.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

A relaxed final breakfast on the square.

Lunch

Bay village or Porto Montenegro

Prčanj / Muo / Tivat · €12-25

Waterfront lunch with a view back to Kotor, or a marina café in Tivat.

Dinner

In-flight or en route

TIV / onward · €8-15

A light bite before departure or on the road to Dubrovnik.

Transit:

Tivat/Porto Montenegro ~20-30 min by bus or taxi (TIV airport is here). Bay villages by local bus, taxi, or a bay-front walk. Taxi to TIV ~€15-20.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $110 Luxury $300
DAY 6

Dubrovnik day trip (Croatia)

Cross the border to Dubrovnik - city walls walk - Old Town - return to Kotor

Activities

  1. 08:00 Kotor → Dubrovnik (border crossing) 2h30

    Travel about 2 hours north to Dubrovnik, crossing the Montenegro-Croatia border. By guided day tour, rental car, or bus — the route hugs the bay and the coast before reaching the walled city.

    Cost: Tour €40-70 / bus or car varies TIP: Leave early to beat the worst border queues, which can be long in peak summer. A guided tour handles the logistics; a rental car gives flexibility but needs the right insurance for crossing into Croatia. Remember Croatia is in the EU/Schengen — bring your passport.
  2. 10:30 Dubrovnik city walls walk 2h

    Walk Dubrovnik's famous medieval city walls — about 2 km of ramparts encircling the Old Town high above the Adriatic, with views over the terracotta roofs and out to sea (the Game of Thrones King's Landing).

    Cost: ~€35 walls ticket TIP: The walls are the headline experience — go before the midday heat and the biggest cruise crowds. Wear good shoes and bring water; there's little shade. It's pricier than Kotor's climb, so budget for it.
  3. 13:00 Dubrovnik Old Town + lunch 2h30

    Explore the marble Stradun main street, the cathedral, Onofrio's Fountain, and the lanes of the walled Old Town, with lunch at a konoba a few streets off the Stradun.

    Cost: €18-35 per person TIP: Dubrovnik is pricier than Kotor — eat off the main Stradun for better value. The Old Town is compact and walkable. Cable car up Mount Srđ (extra) gives a great overview if you have time.
  4. 17:00 Return to Kotor 2h30

    Head back across the border to Kotor (about 2 hours), arriving in the evening for a relaxed dinner on the bay.

    Cost: Included in tour / car / bus TIP: Build in border-queue time again on the way back. Back in Kotor, the calm evening Old Town is a gentle contrast to busy Dubrovnik. A late, easy dinner suits the long day.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

Coffee and a pastry before the early Dubrovnik start.

Lunch

Dubrovnik Old Town konoba

Dubrovnik (Croatia) · €18-35

Dalmatian seafood off the Stradun (pricier than Kotor).

Dinner

Kotor Old Town konoba

Kotor · €20-40

A relaxed bay dinner back in the calm evening Old Town.

Transit:

Kotor ↔ Dubrovnik about 2 hours each way with a border crossing. A guided day tour (€40-70) is easiest; bus and rental car also work but plan around summer border queues. Bring your passport (Croatia is EU/Schengen).

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $80 Mid $160 Luxury $420
DAY 7

Final coast day + departure

A missed bay sight or a beach morning - last Old Town coffee - TIV departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 A final bay sight or a quiet beach morning 2h

    Catch anything missed — the Maritime Museum in the Old Town, the Lady of the Rocks if you skipped it, or a slow morning swim from a bay village beach near Kotor.

    Cost: €3-10 (sight) or free swim TIP: Keep it relaxed on a departure day. The Maritime Museum is a good rainy-day or low-energy option. Or just enjoy a final swim and coffee by the bay.
  2. 12:00 Last Old Town lunch + souvenirs 1h30

    A final lunch in the Old Town and a stroll for souvenirs — njeguški pršut, a bottle of Vranac, local olive oil, or cat-themed mementos from the Old Town shops.

    Cost: €12-25 + shopping TIP: Vacuum-packed pršut and a bottle of Vranac travel well. The Old Town has plenty of small shops. A relaxed last meal on the square is the right finish.
  3. 14:30 Coffee on the Square of Arms 1h

    One last slow coffee on Kotor's main square, watching the Old Town's rhythm and its famous cats, before heading to the airport.

    Cost: €2-4 TIP: The slow-coffee ritual is the most local way to end a Kotor trip. The square is liveliest in the early afternoon. Leave enough buffer to reach Tivat for your flight.
  4. 16:30 Departure (Tivat TIV or onward) 1h30

    Head to Tivat Airport (TIV), about 15-20 minutes by taxi (~€15-20), or continue onward to Podgorica (TGD, ~1.5-2h) or Dubrovnik (~2h across the border).

    Cost: Taxi ~€15-20 to TIV TIP: Agree the taxi fare first. TIV is small — allow about 2 hours before a flight. For an onward border crossing, build in time for possible summer queues.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast in Kotor

Old Town · €3-7

A final relaxed breakfast on the bay.

Lunch

Old Town konoba

Kotor · €12-25

A last plate of Montenegrin classics on the square.

Dinner

In-flight or en route

TIV / onward · €8-15

A light bite before departure or on the road.

Transit:

On foot in the Old Town; taxi to Tivat (TIV) ~15-20 min (~€15-20). Onward to Podgorica ~1.5-2h or Dubrovnik ~2h across the border.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $110 Luxury $300

Book Kotor Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Kotor 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long around Kotor?
No — seven days lets you do the whole Bay of Kotor (Old Town, walls, Perast, Lovćen, Njeguši), the Budva Riviera and Sveti Stefan, a slow bay day, and a Dubrovnik day trip across the border, all from one base, without rushing. If you only want Montenegro's coast highlights, five days works; seven adds Dubrovnik and a relaxed final day, and suits travelers combining Montenegro with neighboring Croatia.
Is the Dubrovnik day trip worth it from Kotor?
Yes if you haven't seen Dubrovnik — it's about 2 hours away across the Croatian border, and its famous medieval city walls and Old Town (the Game of Thrones King's Landing) are a worthy day out. Bear in mind Croatia is in the EU/Schengen, so you cross a real border (passport needed) and summer queues can be long, plus Dubrovnik is noticeably pricier than Kotor. A guided tour handles the logistics most easily.
Do I need a car for the 7-day trip?
Not strictly — buses cover Perast, Budva, Tivat, and the coast cheaply, the Perast islet is a boat, and Lovćen and Dubrovnik are easiest by guided tour. A rental car for a day or two adds flexibility for the mountain switchbacks (Lovćen/Njeguši) and the Dubrovnik run, but parking near Kotor's Old Town is scarce and the bay road is narrow and busy. Many travelers stay car-free and use buses plus a couple of tours.
What's the best base for a week here?
Kotor's Old Town for atmosphere and walkability, or quieter Dobrota just along the bay for more space, bay views, and often lower prices — both put Perast, Lovćen, Budva, Tivat, and the Dubrovnik road within easy reach. Staying put and day-tripping out avoids repacking and lets you enjoy the Old Town crowd-free in the evenings. Only split your stay if you specifically want a night on the open-sea Budva Riviera.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
📅 Published: 🔄 Last updated: