How to Book Sea Kayaking in Dubrovnik

Sea kayaking along Dubrovnik’s city walls is one of those experiences that changes your understanding of a place entirely. From street level, Dubrovnik’s fortifications are impressive. From the water, they’re genuinely awe-inspiring — 25-metre walls rising directly from the Adriatic, watchtowers reflected in the sea, and a perspective on the old town that no walking tour, city walls ticket, or cable car ride can replicate.

Colourful kayaks moored by Dubrovnik's rocky coast and ancient city walls on clear turquoise water
The view from water level — Dubrovnik’s walls rise directly from the Adriatic, and paddling alongside them at sunrise is the closest thing to time travel the city offers.

The kayaking routes from Dubrovnik hug the coastline outside the walls, passing sea caves, hidden beaches, and the island of Lokrum before looping back. Most tours include a snorkelling stop where the water is gin-clear and the rocky seabed teems with fish. Some add a sunset wine tasting, turning an athletic adventure into a golden-hour celebration. It’s active, scenic, and surprisingly accessible — no kayaking experience needed.

Kayaks lined up by Dubrovnik's historic Bokar fortress on a sunny day
Kayaks launch from the base of Bokar fortress — within minutes of pushing off, you’re paddling past the same walls that defended the Republic of Ragusa for centuries.

I’ve compared the best sea kayaking tours in Dubrovnik, from quick two-hour morning paddles to sunset tours with wine. Here are the top picks, plus tips on what to expect, what to bring, and why this is genuinely one of the best things you can do in Dubrovnik. For more ideas on spending your time in the city, check our complete guide to Dubrovnik beyond the cruise ship crowds.

Two kayakers exploring the serene coastal waters near Dubrovnik
Tandem kayaks are standard on most tours — no solo paddling experience needed, just a willingness to get slightly wet and moderately sunburned.

Short on time? Here’s what to book:

Best quick paddle: Sea Kayaking & Snorkelling Tour€36. Two hours along the city walls with a snorkelling stop. The most reviewed option and incredible value.

Best half-day: X-Adventure Sea Kayaking Half Day Tour€36. Longer route with cave exploration, cliff jumping, and beach stops. The adventure pick.

Best at sunset: Sunset Sea Kayaking & Wine Tasting€54. Paddle into the sunset with a wine and cheese stop on a hidden beach. The most romantic option.

What to Know Before Booking

Kayakers and yacht by the Dubrovnik coastline on a summer day
The water around Dubrovnik’s walls is sheltered from open-sea swells, making for calm paddling conditions even when the outer Adriatic is choppy.

No experience needed — seriously

Every kayaking tour in Dubrovnik uses stable tandem sit-on-top kayaks that are nearly impossible to capsize. You’ll get a briefing on basic paddling technique (which takes about 5 minutes), and the guide stays close throughout. If you can sit upright and move your arms, you can do this. First-timers routinely say it was the highlight of their Dubrovnik trip.

Morning vs sunset — both are spectacular

Morning tours offer calmer water, cooler temperatures, and better underwater visibility for snorkelling. Sunset tours trade those advantages for golden light on the city walls, a magical colour show on the water, and usually a wine/cheese tasting at a secluded beach. If you can only do one, sunset wins for atmosphere; morning wins for comfort and snorkelling.

You will get wet

Kayaking on the Adriatic means paddle splash, wave spray, and (usually) a deliberate swim at the snorkelling stop. Wear a swimsuit underneath your clothes, bring a dry bag or waterproof case for your phone, and accept that you’ll be damp. Most tours provide a dry bag, but bringing your own guarantees space for all your valuables.

The snorkelling is genuinely good

The water visibility around Dubrovnik is typically 15-25 metres. The rocky coastline provides habitat for sea urchins, octopus, various fish species, and sometimes seahorses. Snorkelling gear is provided on all tours. Even if you’ve snorkelled in tropical water, the clarity and marine life here are impressive for the Mediterranean.

Aerial view of Dubrovnik's historic walls overlooking the Adriatic Sea
This aerial view shows exactly what you’ll be paddling alongside — the wall drops straight into the sea, and from water level the scale is breathtaking.

The Best Sea Kayaking Tours in Dubrovnik

1. Dubrovnik Sea Kayaking & Snorkelling Tour — €36

Dubrovnik sea kayaking and snorkelling tour
At €36 for two hours on the water with snorkelling included, this is one of the best-value active experiences in Dubrovnik.

The most popular kayaking tour in Dubrovnik — and at €36 for a two-hour guided paddle with snorkelling, the value is outstanding. You launch from below the city walls, paddle south along the fortifications, round the corner to the sea caves, stop for snorkelling in crystal-clear water, and paddle back with the old town panorama in front of you the entire way.

The guides are experienced sea kayakers who know every cave entrance, every good snorkelling spot, and every angle that makes for a great photo. Groups are kept small (typically 8-12 kayaks), and the pace is gentle enough for complete beginners while still covering enough distance to feel like an adventure. The snorkelling stop is in a sheltered cove where the rocky seabed drops away clearly — the visibility is remarkable.

Duration: 2 hours | Departure: Dubrovnik coast, multiple morning slots

Check Availability Read our full review

2. X-Adventure Sea Kayaking Half Day Tour — €36

X-Adventure sea kayaking half day tour in Dubrovnik
The half-day option gives you more distance, more caves, and the option to cliff-jump at a secluded spot that most travelers never see.

The extended version for those who want more time on the water. This half-day tour covers a longer route, paddling further along the coast to explore sea caves that the shorter tours don’t reach. The guide takes you into caves accessible only by kayak — dark entrances opening into chambers with light refracting off the water — and includes a cliff-jumping stop for the adventurous.

The pace is still beginner-friendly, just spread over more time. You stop for snorkelling, swimming, and a beach break. The cliff jumping is entirely optional — heights range from 2 to 5 metres, and no one judges you for watching from the water instead. At the same price as the 2-hour tour, the extra time on the water makes this excellent value for anyone who enjoyed the first hour and wished it was longer.

Duration: Half day | Departure: Dubrovnik coast, morning

Check Availability Read our full review

3. Sunset Sea Kayaking & Wine Tasting — €54

Sunset sea kayaking and wine tasting in Dubrovnik
Paddling into a Dubrovnik sunset with a glass of Croatian wine waiting on a hidden beach — this is the kind of evening that makes a holiday.

The sunset option adds romance and wine to the kayaking formula. You paddle out in the late afternoon, following the city walls as the sun drops toward the horizon. The limestone walls shift from white to gold to amber as the light changes — it’s extraordinary to watch from water level. Then you beach the kayaks at a secluded cove for a wine and cheese tasting as the sky turns pink and orange.

The wines are Croatian — typically Plavac Mali (a robust red from the Peljesac peninsula) and Posip (a crisp white from Korcula). The cheese and snacks are local. Sipping wine on a hidden beach as the sun sets over the Adriatic, with the illuminated old town glowing across the water, is exactly the kind of moment that ends up as your phone’s lock screen for the next year. At €54 including the wine tasting, it’s priced for what it delivers.

Duration: 3 hours | Departure: Late afternoon/evening

Check Availability Read our full review

4. Morning Sea Kayaking & Snorkelling Tour — €42

Morning sea kayaking and snorkelling in Dubrovnik
Early morning on the water means calm seas, cool air, and the old town waking up beside you — fishing boats heading out, the first cafe tables being set on terraces.

A dedicated morning option that prioritises the calmest water and best snorkelling conditions. The Adriatic is typically stillest in the early morning before afternoon winds pick up, which means flatter paddling and better underwater visibility for snorkelling. The route follows the city walls and includes cave exploration and a swimming/snorkelling stop.

This tour is particularly good for photographers — the morning light on the walls is soft and even, without the harsh shadows of midday. It’s also ideal for hot summer days when afternoon temperatures make any outdoor activity uncomfortable. Back on dry land by late morning, you have the rest of the day free for the old town, the city walls walk, or a long lunch at one of Dubrovnik’s best restaurants.

Duration: Half day | Departure: Early morning

Check Availability Read our full review

5. Sunset Sea Kayaking & Snorkelling Tour — €48

Sunset sea kayaking and snorkelling in Dubrovnik
The sunset paddle without the wine stop — pure kayaking and snorkelling timed for golden hour, at a slightly lower price than the wine-tasting version.

A sunset kayaking tour that focuses on the paddling and snorkelling rather than the wine tasting. You get the same spectacular golden-hour light on the city walls and the same route along the fortifications, but the time that would be spent on wine and cheese is instead used for a longer paddle and extended snorkelling stop.

This option suits active travellers who want the sunset atmosphere without the alcohol, or anyone who prefers to spend more time kayaking and less time sitting on a beach. The snorkelling at sunset is actually stunning — the angled light penetrates the water at a lower angle, illuminating the seabed with warm tones. At €48, it sits between the basic tour and the wine-tasting version.

Duration: 3 hours | Departure: Late afternoon

Check Availability Read our full review

Red rooftops and medieval walls of Dubrovnik from above
From the water, you look up at the walls. From the walls, you look down at the kayakers. The two perspectives complete each other — ideally, do both on the same day.

Seeing Dubrovnik the Way the Republic’s Navy Did

Dubrovnik fortress on a cliff overlooking the Adriatic Sea under clear skies
Fort Lovrijenac from the water — this standalone fortress was built on its sea cliff specifically to defend the harbour entrance. From a kayak, you understand exactly why it was placed here.

When you paddle along Dubrovnik’s walls, you’re following the same water that the Republic of Ragusa’s navy patrolled for over four centuries. The republic’s galley fleet launched from the old harbour, passed the fortresses of Bokar and Lovrijenac, and headed out into the Adriatic to protect trade routes stretching from the eastern Mediterranean to Spain.

The walls you see from water level were designed with naval defence as a primary consideration. The sea-facing sections are the thickest (up to 6 metres wide in places), and every tower is positioned to provide overlapping fields of fire against approaching ships. The Bokar fortress — which you’ll paddle directly beneath — was specifically designed as a maritime defence platform, angled to direct cannon fire across the harbour approach.

From your kayak, you can also spot the city’s old lazarettos (quarantine buildings) on the eastern approach. Built in 1627, these were where incoming sailors and merchants were held for 30-40 days before being allowed into the city — one of the world’s earliest organised public health measures. The word “quarantine” itself comes from the Italian quarantina (forty days), and Dubrovnik’s system was among the first to implement it systematically.

Dubrovnik old town walls, fortress, and harbour from the sea
The harbour approach as Ragusan galley captains would have seen it — fortress walls on both sides, cannon positions overhead, and a narrow entrance that could be chained shut in times of war.
Dubrovnik harbour with boats and old town in background
The old harbour is visible from most kayaking routes — in the evening, the lights from waterfront restaurants reflect off the water as you paddle back.

Lokrum Island from the water

Many kayaking routes pass close to Lokrum, the lush forested island just 600 metres off Dubrovnik’s coast. According to legend, Richard the Lionheart was shipwrecked here in 1192, and the island later served as a Benedictine monastery, a Habsburg summer residence, and a Game of Thrones filming location (for the city of Qarth). From the kayak, you can see the monastery tower rising above the pine trees, and on calm days the water between Dubrovnik and Lokrum is so clear that the seabed is visible from the surface.

Some half-day tours include a Lokrum stop for swimming or exploring. The island has peacocks wandering the gardens (introduced by the Habsburgs), a Dead Sea saltwater lake in the interior, and botanical gardens with plants from around the world. It’s one of Dubrovnik’s best escapes from the old town crowds, and seeing it from the kayak — dark pine forests against turquoise water — is one of the most photogenic moments of the paddle.

What to Bring

Croatian Adriatic coastline near Dubrovnik with clear water
The coastline south of the old town is all rocky coves and sea caves — perfect kayaking territory with calm, sheltered water.

Swimsuit (worn underneath): You’ll be getting wet. Wear your swimsuit under light clothing that can get splashed.

Waterproof phone case: Essential. The views from the kayak demand photos, and paddle spray will kill an unprotected phone. A floating waterproof case is ideal.

Sunscreen (reef-safe if possible): The reflection off the water doubles your UV exposure. Apply generously before launching and reapply at the snorkelling stop.

Water bottle: Paddling is physical, and summer heat amplifies dehydration. Most tours don’t provide water. A litre minimum, ideally in a reusable bottle that clips to the kayak.

Hat and sunglasses with a strap: You’ll want both, and you’ll want them secured. Losing your sunglasses in the Adriatic on the first stroke is a rookie mistake that happens multiple times per tour.

Dubrovnik old town red rooftops and Adriatic Sea
The old town from the southeast — this is roughly the angle you see from the kayak as you paddle back from the snorkelling cove toward the launch point.
Dubrovnik port with boats and old town architecture
Post-kayak, the Dubrovnik waterfront is the perfect place to dry off — grab a table at one of the harbour restaurants and relive the paddle over a cold beer.

When to Go

Best months: May through October. Sea temperatures range from 18 degrees in May to 25 degrees in August. The warmest, calmest conditions are June through September.

Morning vs sunset: Morning tours (8-10 AM) have calmer water and better snorkelling visibility. Sunset tours (5-7 PM depending on season) have spectacular light but sometimes choppier conditions from afternoon winds.

Avoid windy days: The bura (north) and jugo (south) winds can make kayaking uncomfortable or cause cancellations. Tours typically run in winds up to about 15-20 km/h. Check the forecast and book on calm days if possible. Most operators offer free rebooking if conditions cancel your tour.

Book sunset tours early. The sunset kayak + wine tours sell out fastest, especially in July and August. Book at least 3-5 days ahead for your preferred date.

Rooftop view of Dubrovnik Old Town with green hills behind
Dubrovnik is surrounded by green hills to the north and the Adriatic to the south — the kayaking route follows the sea-facing walls, the most dramatic section of the fortifications.
Narrow stone pathway between old buildings near city walls
The narrow lanes leading down to the kayak launch point are part of the adventure — steep stone steps between medieval houses, ending at a rocky shore where your kayak waits.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to know how to kayak?

No. The sit-on-top tandem kayaks are extremely stable and easy to paddle. A 5-minute briefing covers everything you need. Complete beginners routinely do these tours and enjoy them enormously. If you can paddle a canoe, you’ll be comfortable immediately.

Can children do the kayaking tours?

Most tours accept children aged 5-6 and up. Children paddle in tandem with an adult. The calm waters around Dubrovnik’s walls are sheltered and safe. Check the specific tour’s age policy before booking.

What if I fall in?

The kayaks are very stable and falling in is rare. If it happens, the water is warm (in summer), the life jacket keeps you afloat, and the guide helps you back in. It’s the Adriatic, not white-water rapids — the worst that happens is you get wet, which you were going to do anyway at the snorkelling stop.

Can I bring my camera?

Yes, but protect it. A waterproof case or dry bag is essential. GoPros and waterproof action cameras are ideal. Regular cameras and DSLRs should stay in a sealed dry bag between photo opportunities. The guide will hold the group at photogenic spots to give you time for shots.

How fit do I need to be?

Moderately. Paddling for 2-3 hours uses your arms and core. It’s more tiring than walking but less than hiking. Anyone with reasonable fitness and no serious shoulder or back issues will be fine. The pace is set by the group, and guides adjust for ability.

Kayaking gives you Dubrovnik from a perspective most visitors miss entirely. Back on dry land, an old town walking tour fills in the history you saw from the water, while walking the city walls gives you the aerial view that completes the picture. For a full day on the Adriatic, the Elaphiti Islands cruise takes you further out for island-hopping and fish lunches. And if Dubrovnik’s heat sends you looking for shade, a day trip to Mostar crosses into Bosnia for Ottoman bridges and river-valley cool. For planning your perfect Dubrovnik itinerary, our complete guide to Dubrovnik has you covered.