Where to Stay
A neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood guide to hotels in the Bay of Kotor — what each area is really like at night, who it suits, and the picks we'd send a friend toward.
If this is your first trip and you're staying 2–4 nights, sleep in Dobrota, a five-to-fifteen-minute walk north of the Old Town along the bay. It's quieter than inside the walls, has the best mid-range hotel value, and you'll still walk to dinner in the Old Town every night.
Couples after atmosphere should pick one night inside the Old Town, two nights in Perast. Photographers and view-chasers stay in Muo, directly across the water from Kotor's fortress walls. Cruise travellers without a car should stick near the Old Town port to maximise the day.
Start your hotel search the smart way
Booking.com has the largest live inventory in Kotor, Dobrota, Perast and Tivat — and free-cancellation rooms make rebooking painless if your plans shift.
Most planning paralysis around Kotor comes from one question: which side of the bay should I sleep on? The matrix below is how we'd answer it for a friend asking by text — no fluff, just the trade-offs.
| Area | Vibe | Walk to Old Town | Night noise | Need a car? | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Old Town | Medieval, cinematic | 0 min — you're in it | High Jun–Sep | No | First-timers, 1–2 nights |
| Dobrota | Quiet waterfront | 5–25 min walk | Low | Helpful, not essential | Most travellers, families |
| Muo / Prčanj | Postcard view | 25–35 min walk | Low | Yes | Photographers, couples |
| Perast | Baroque, romantic | 25 min drive | Low | Helpful | Honeymoons, slow travel |
| Tivat | Marina luxury, modern | 20–30 min drive | Mid | Yes (or transfer) | Luxury, families, post-cruise |
The Bay of Kotor is a long, twisting fjord-like inlet. The five hotel zones are spread across roughly 25 kilometres of coastline. Knowing which side of the water you'll wake up on matters more here than in most destinations.
Editor's note — if you're toggling between Old Town and Dobrota, the best of both worlds is to split nights: one or two inside the walls for the atmosphere, the rest along Dobrota's promenade for sleep and bay views. Free-cancellation rates on Booking.com let you build that split without committing too early.
Sleeping inside the walls is the most cinematic option in Montenegro. Cobbled marble alleys lit by lanterns, cathedral bells, restaurants on every square. It's also the loudest place to sleep in the Bay of Kotor from June to September — bars stay open until 2am and cruise passengers flood the gates by 9.
Best for: First-time visitors, short stays, travellers without a car, anyone who wants the postcard.
Watch out for: Summer night noise, no parking, hauling luggage over cobbles.
Set inside a 17th-century Venetian palace right on the main square — the closest you can sleep to St. Tryphon's cathedral without being a monk. Stone walls, vaulted ceilings, generous breakfast.
A small palazzo on a quieter Old Town lane. Beautifully restored — antique trunks, wrought-iron beds, the kind of place that makes you feel like you're staying inside a story.
Dobrota is a 4-km strip of waterfront village just north of the Old Town. It runs along the bay, has a paved promenade, and the hotels here are generally newer with bay-view balconies. The southern end (closer to Kotor) is walkable — anything past 1.5 km out, you'll want a bus or taxi at night.
Best for: First trips, families, longer stays, calm sleep.
Watch out for: Hotels at the far north end are a 20-minute walk back from dinner.
Themed boutique on the Dobrota waterfront. Each room is decorated by country (Africa, India, Japan, etc.). Direct bay access, small spa, excellent on-site restaurant. The Old Town is a 10-minute taxi or 25-minute walk.
Modern 4-star a short walk from the Old Town's north gate. Pool, private bay dock, family rooms. The pick for parents who want stress-free dinners and a swim before bed.
The villages on the western shore of the bay sit directly across from Kotor — meaning your balcony looks at the fortress walls climbing the mountain. The sunset paints them gold for about twenty minutes a night and it is the photograph you'll go home with. You'll need a car or scooter; the road into town is one lane and follows the water.
Best for: Photographers, couples, return visitors.
Watch out for: Walking into town is a long 25–35 minutes; parking in Kotor is its own sport.
Cluster of small stone-villa hotels right on the waterfront in Muo with the fortress framed perfectly across the bay. Sister properties offer slightly different price points; Amfora is the polished one.
Perast is a single-row Baroque village on the bay, half an hour from Kotor by car or bus. There are no cars on the main waterfront. Restored 18th-century palazzos serve as small boutique hotels. From your terrace you'll see Our Lady of the Rocks — the famous artificial-islet church — five minutes offshore.
Best for: Couples, slow travel, repeat Montenegro visitors.
Watch out for: Limited dinner options after October; you'll want Kotor or Tivat for nightlife.
5-star inside a meticulously restored Baroque palace. Marble bathrooms, bay-facing terraces, a private beach platform on the water. The view of Our Lady of the Rocks at first light is the reason to book.
A cluster of restored stone houses on the Perast waterfront. Rooms vary — book a sea-view category. The restaurant downstairs serves the kind of grilled fish you fly to Montenegro for.
Tivat is a 20-minute drive from Kotor and home to Porto Montenegro, a superyacht marina with high-end retail, sushi, and the country's two most expensive hotels. It's a different feel — clean, modern, low on Old World charm — but it's right next to the airport (TIV) and a short hop to the Luštica beach peninsula.
Best for: Luxury travellers, families wanting pools and beach, post-cruise nights.
Watch out for: Heritage and atmosphere live in Kotor and Perast, not here.
5-star marina hotel with Venetian-inspired architecture and outstanding pool deck. Walk to dinner, walk to your boat, drive to Kotor in 20.
Pick: One night Old Town (Palazzo Drusko), two nights Perast (Heritage Grand or Conte). Add a boat-tour to Our Lady of the Rocks at sunset.
Pick: Hotel Hippocampus or a Dobrota apartment with a pool. Quiet nights, bay swimming, restaurants close enough that no one has a meltdown.
Pick: Old Town stone apartment for the walk to the fortress trailhead at 6am, or Muo to combine fortress hikes with kayak rentals across the bay.
Pick: Regent Porto Montenegro or Heritage Grand Perast. Pair with a private speedboat charter and a Lovćen helicopter transfer if you're going big.
A car helps if you're staying outside the Old Town
Muo, Perast, Tivat and Luštica all reward having a car — bay drives, beaches, hilltop villages. Book your rental at the airport for the best rates.
Hotel pricing in the Bay of Kotor follows the cruise calendar more than the Mediterranean calendar. Rooms tank in early November and don't recover until April. The best-value windows — May, late September, October — sell out their best-priced rooms first because they're the windows experienced travellers chase.
| Travel month | Best book-by date | Typical mid-range double | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| May | ~10 weeks ahead | €70–€110 | Quietest pretty month — best photography light. |
| June | ~3 months ahead | €100–€160 | Sea warming; cruises ramp. |
| Jul–Aug | By February | €140–€220 | Peak — Old Town hotels go first. |
| September | ~8–10 weeks ahead | €90–€140 | The sweet spot — warm sea, fewer crowds. |
| October | ~4–6 weeks ahead | €60–€100 | Quiet; some restaurants close end of month. |
Lock in a free-cancellation rate now
Booking.com's free-cancellation filter is the single best tool for Kotor planning — you can hold a room for months and rebook if the price drops or your plans shift.
Inside the Old Town is the most atmospheric but loud at night during summer. Dobrota — 5–15 minutes' walk north — gives you bay views, quiet sleep and easy access. We recommend Dobrota for most travellers and the Old Town for one or two nights for the experience.
Perast for romance, Muo for the iconic Kotor fortress view across the bay, or a boutique stone hotel inside the Old Town. All three are atmospheric and quiet outside July–August.
Yes if you want a modern marina (Porto Montenegro), beach access on the Luštica peninsula and easy airport runs. No if you want medieval charm — Tivat is 20–30 minutes from Kotor by car or bus.
Expect €60–€90 per night for a comfortable mid-range double in May, September and October, €110–€180 in peak July–August. Boutique stays inside the walls run €140–€280. Luxury Porto Montenegro hotels start around €350 in summer.
For July–August, book by February. May, June, September and October are still bookable two months out but the best-value rooms go first. Free-cancellation rates let you lock in early without committing.