Montenegro Herceg Novi to Tivat one way transfer
Enjoy in smooth drive in private transfer from Herceg Novi to Tivat taking you through the beautiful coastline of Boka bay in stile and comfort ...
Wild beauty of the Adriatic with dramatic coastlines, deep canyons, and medieval towns.
Montenegro Enjoy in smooth drive in private transfer from Herceg Novi to Tivat taking you through the beautiful coastline of Boka bay in stile and comfort ...
Montenegro Enjoy in smooth drive and breathtaking views along Boka Bay, perpetuate your experience with photos on panoramic viewpoints of the most beautiful part of the Croatian and Montenegrin coast. A guided…
Montenegro Take the worry out of your departure to Tivat Airport (TIV) and pre-book a private transfer to suit your group size (up to 8 people). Avoid the long lines for taxis at the hotel, and travel in the co…
Montenegro Your transfer from Herceg Novi to Tivat Airport takes approximately 50 minutes, depending on traffic — and we make sure every part of the journey is comfortable and stress-free. We provide private,…
Montenegro Take the worry out of your departure to Dubrovnik Airport (DBV) and pre-book a private transfer to suit your group size (up to 8 people). Avoid the long lines for taxis at the hotel, and travel in th…
Montenegro Take the worry out of your arrival to Dubrovnik and pre-book a private transfer to suit your group size (up to 8 people). Avoid the long lines for taxis on arrival, and travel in the comfort of a Sed…
Montenegro In this tour you will be on opportunity to experience the special spirit of this unique town in short trip. Herceg Novi is the youngest town of the Adriatic, city with interesting geographic position…
Montenegro Take the worry out of your arrival to Tivat Airport (TIV) and pre-book a private transfer to suit your group size (up to 8 people). Avoid the long lines for taxis on arrival, and travel in the comfor…
Montenegro We offer first class taxi Airport transfer from Tivat, full services with professional english speaking driver who give a client a lot off interesting information ...
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Reach 20,000+ travelers a month planning their Albania trip. Keep 75% of every booking — 25% commission vs Viator's and GetYourGuide's 30%, paid in euros to your bank weekly, no listing fee.
Podgorica (TGD) and Tivat (TIV) airports offer easy access from European destinations.
Euro (EUR) is used throughout the country.
June-September for coast and mountains. December-March for winter sports.






Montenegro packs a lot into a small country, and most of what draws people sits around the Bay of Kotor — a deep, winding inlet ringed by mountains that looks like a fjord but is actually a drowned river canyon. Kotor's walled old town is the anchor: a UNESCO-listed medieval maze of stone lanes, with a fortress wall you can climb for the classic bay view (bring water, it's a steep haul). Down the coast is Budva, older than it looks under the resort veneer, plus the much-photographed Sveti Stefan islet, which is a private hotel you view rather than visit. The boat tours are the real reason to come: out of Kotor or Perast you reach Our Lady of the Rocks, a man-made islet with a church, and the Blue Cave near the Luštica peninsula, where the water glows on a clear morning. It's genuinely worth doing. The honest catch is that Kotor is a major cruise port, so in peak summer the old town and the bay fill up fast. Montenegro uses the euro even though it isn't in the EU, so pricing feels familiar. Many tours here run as combined Balkans trips paired with Albania or Croatia.
Decide first whether you want a boat tour or a land day trip — they're different experiences. Bay of Kotor boat tours (Our Lady of the Rocks plus the Blue Cave) are the signature outing and best done in the morning before wind picks up and the cave crowds. Land tours usually string together Kotor old town, Perast, Budva and a Sveti Stefan photo stop. If you're coming from Albania, be realistic about distance: Shkodra to the border is short, but Tirana to Kotor is roughly four-plus hours each way, so a one-day round trip is a very long day — an overnight in Kotor or Budva is far better. Private tours cost more but save you the group's schedule and let you skip the packed midday slots. Check what's actually included: boat entry to the Blue Cave, church donations, and lunch are often extra. The common mistake is underestimating the summer border wait at Sukobin/Muriqan, which can add an hour or more each direction in July and August.
Late May to June and September are the sweet spot: warm water, open boats, and manageable crowds. July and August are hot and busy — this is when cruise ships dock in Kotor and the bay boats run full, so book ahead and go early. Spring brings green mountains but cooler, less reliable swimming and the odd rainy day. From roughly November through March the coast is quiet and atmospheric, but many boat tours and seasonal operators shut down, sea trips get weather-dependent, and some coastal restaurants close. If the Blue Cave or a swim stop matters to you, aim for June through September.
You can, but be honest about the distance. From Shkodra it's a reasonable half-day-plus to reach Kotor. From Tirana it's roughly four-plus hours each way, which makes a same-day round trip exhausting and short on the ground. If you're basing in Tirana, an overnight in Kotor or Budva is much better than trying to see the bay and get back in one day.
The standard route visits Our Lady of the Rocks — a small man-made islet off Perast with a church you can step into — and the Blue Cave near the Luštica peninsula, a sea cave where the water turns bright blue in clear midday light. Some trips add a swim stop or Perast itself. Go in the morning: afternoon wind and cruise-day crowds can make the cave rougher and busier.
It's beautiful but crowded. Kotor is a cruise port, so on ship days the walled old town and the bay boats fill up. It's still worth seeing — just start early, book the boat in advance, and expect company. If you have flexibility, June or September gives you the same scenery with far fewer people.
Montenegro is outside the EU and Schengen but uses the euro, so no currency change if you're coming from the eurozone. Most visitors who can enter Albania or Schengen can cross into Montenegro without a separate visa for short stays, but rules depend on your nationality, so check your own passport. Bring your physical passport for the border crossing — the Sukobin/Muriqan crossing can be slow in peak summer.