Kotor Without a Car: Getting Around by Bus, Taxi and Boat

Logistics · Car-Free

Kotor without a car: the complete car-free guide.

You don't need a car in Kotor. Here's where to stay car-free, what you can reach on foot, by bus, by taxi and by boat, what genuinely needs a car (and how to dodge that too), plus a sample 3-day car-free plan.

By the editors of Kotor Compass

Updated May 2026 · Written for travellers weighing up whether to rent — and for everyone who'd rather not deal with the serpentine road and Old Town parking.

Short answer: you do not need a car in Kotor. The Old Town is walled and pedestrianised, the fortress climb starts from inside it, and the bay's headline trips — Perast, Our Lady of the Rocks, the Blue Cave — are reached by boat. Cheap local buses run along the waterfront, taxis are inexpensive for door-to-door hops, and anything that really wants a car (Lovćen, remote beaches, multi-stop day trips) can be replaced with a guided tour or a private driver. In fact, with Old Town parking limited and pricey and the Lovćen road full of hairpins, many people are happier car-free.

The honest trade-off. Car-free saves you parking stress, fuel and the white-knuckle serpentine — but you trade some spontaneity. If your dream trip is chasing quiet Luštica beaches on a whim, rent. If it's Kotor, Perast and a tour or two, skip the car and pocket the savings.

Getting around Kotor without a car: the options

ModeGood forRough costNotes
WalkingOld Town, fortress, Dobrota waterfrontFreeThe Old Town is entirely on foot; Dobrota is a flat seaside stroll north.
Local bus (Blue Line)Along the bay: Dobrota, Muo, Perast, Tivat, Budva~€1.50–€2Frequent in summer; pay the driver; light bags only.
TaxiDoor-to-door, evenings, groups~€5–€25 local hopsCheap and quick; agree the fare or use a metered/app taxi.
Boat tourPerast, Our Lady of the Rocks, Blue CaveFrom ~€20–€40 groupThe best way to see the bay; pre-book in summer.
Guided day tour / private driverLovćen, Budva, DubrovnikVariesReplaces a rental car for the trips that would otherwise need one.

What you can do on foot

More than you'd think. Everything inside the walls — the lanes, St. Tryphon Cathedral, the squares and cafés — is car-free by design. The San Giovanni fortress climb starts from inside the Old Town, so the single best view in Kotor needs nothing but good shoes. North of the walls, the Dobrota waterfront promenade is a long, flat seaside walk past swimming platforms and quiet cafés — an easy way to escape the busiest squares without any transport at all.

Stay somewhere walkable and the car question disappears

An Old Town or Dobrota base puts the fortress, restaurants and bus stops within a stroll. Search with free cancellation so you can compare walkable locations before committing.

By bus and taxi around the bay

The local Blue Line buses run along the waterfront connecting Kotor with Dobrota, Muo, Perast, Tivat and on to Budva for roughly €1.50–€2 a ride. They're frequent in summer; you pay the driver and travel light. Taxis fill the gaps — they're inexpensive for short hops (a few euros within town, up to ~€25 for longer bay runs), ideal in the evening or with a group. Agree the fare first or use a metered/app taxi. Between the two, you can reach every bayside village without ever touching a steering wheel.

By boat tour

This is where being car-free is actually an advantage: the bay's best sights are on the water, not the road. A half- or full-day boat tour takes you to Perast, the island church of Our Lady of the Rocks, and out to the Blue Cave with a swim stop — no car required, and you see the fjord-like bay the way it's meant to be seen. In peak season, book a morning departure ahead of time.

Book a bay boat tour

The headline car-free day out: Perast, Our Lady of the Rocks and the Blue Cave from the water. Group boats are cheap and social; small private boats let you set the pace.

What actually needs a car — and how to skip it

A few things are genuinely easier with your own wheels. The good news is each has a clean car-free workaround:

Needs a car… or a tour

Lovćen & Njeguši

The serpentine mountain road is spectacular but daunting to drive. Take a guided tour or private driver — you get the views and the Njeguši ham stop without the 25+ hairpins.

Needs a car… or a bus

Budva & the coast

Budva is on a regular bus route (~40 min), so a car isn't essential. A car only helps if you want to chain several Riviera beach stops in one day.

Needs a car… or a boat

Quiet Luštica beaches

The most secluded coves are easiest with a car, but many are reachable by boat tour or water taxi — often a nicer arrival anyway.

Needs a car… or a day tour

Dubrovnik & inland

For Dubrovnik, the Tara Canyon or Skadar Lake, a guided day tour handles the long drive and border paperwork for you.

Let a guided tour replace the rental car

Lovćen, Budva and Dubrovnik all run as organised day tours — no hairpins, no parking, no border stress. The simplest way to see the inland and mountain sights car-free.

A sample 3-day car-free Kotor plan

DayPlanHow you get around
Day 1Climb the fortress at dawn, explore the Old Town, dinner in the squares.On foot — everything starts inside the walls.
Day 2Bay boat tour: Perast, Our Lady of the Rocks, Blue Cave and a swim.Boat tour from the Old Town waterfront.
Day 3Guided Lovćen & Njeguši tour, or a Budva day by bus.Day tour / private driver, or local bus.

For a fuller hour-by-hour version of this plan (including where to eat and how to time the crowds), see our Kotor 3-day itinerary.

Best car-free bases in Kotor

Kotor Old Town

Most walkable. Everything on your doorstep and zero transport for daily life. Atmospheric, if a little noisy in peak summer.

Dobrota

Best all-rounder. A flat waterfront walk or short bus into Old Town, quieter nights, swimming platforms on the doorstep.

Perast

Romantic but remote. Lovely and car-free-friendly, but factor in the bus or taxi time into Kotor for sights and nightlife.

Tivat

Best for arrivals. Closest to the airport with frequent buses into Kotor — handy if you're flying car-free in and out.

Pick a walkable room and skip the rental entirely

Old Town and Dobrota are the easiest car-free bases. Reserve early with free cancellation so you can lock a walkable spot and still adjust your dates.

FAQs: visiting Kotor without a car

Do you need a car in Kotor?

No. The Old Town is pedestrianised and most headline sights — the fortress, the lanes, Perast and the bay islands — are reachable on foot, by cheap local bus, by taxi or on a boat tour. A car only helps for self-driving to Lovćen, remote beaches or multi-stop day trips, and even those can be done by tour.

How do you get around Kotor without a car?

Walk the Old Town and fortress, use the Blue Line buses along the bay (~€1.50–€2), take inexpensive taxis door-to-door, and book boat tours for Perast and the Blue Cave. For Lovćen, Budva or Dubrovnik, join a guided day tour or hire a private driver.

Can you do day trips from Kotor without a car?

Yes. Perast is a short bus or taxi ride and the bay islands are reached by boat. Budva and Tivat are on regular bus routes. Lovćen, Njeguši and Dubrovnik are best done as organised tours or with a private driver, which removes the serpentine driving and border paperwork.

Where should I stay in Kotor without a car?

In or right beside the Old Town, or along the walkable Dobrota waterfront — both put the fortress, restaurants and bus stops within easy reach on foot. Perast is car-free-friendly too but more isolated, so allow for bus or taxi time into Kotor.

What requires a car around Kotor?

Self-driving the Lovćen serpentine, reaching quieter Luštica beaches on your own schedule, and chaining multiple inland stops in one day. None are essential — each can be replaced with a guided tour, a private driver or a taxi — but a car adds flexibility if you value it.

Plan the rest of the trip