The city walls were built to face the sea, and the water is still the best place to judge them. Our coastline charters run the full length of the fortifications — Fort Lovrijenac, the Pile gate bastions, the Old Port entrance and the Banje beach viewpoint — from €730 per boat for a 4-hour charter on Catamaran X, up to 12 guests, with skipper and insurance included.
Why see the walls from a boat?
Because from the landward side you only ever see fragments. The Walls of Dubrovnik run for 1,940 metres, rise to 25 metres, and were thickened to their present form between the 12th and 17th centuries — mostly after 1453, when the fall of Constantinople convinced the Republic of Ragusa to prepare for the worst. The worst never came: the walls were never breached, and the complete circuit has stood on the UNESCO World Heritage list since 1979. From 300 metres offshore you take in the whole composition at once — Minčeta Tower at the top, St John’s Fort at the harbour mouth, and the Adriatic doing the work of a moat.
From a private boat you also set the pace. Ferries and group boats follow a fixed loop; your skipper slows where you want photographs, cuts the engine below the ramparts, and skips anything that doesn’t interest you.
How the cruise works from Gruž
You board at Gruž Harbour, Obala Stjepana Radića 25 — our home berth, 2 km northwest of the Old Town and about 10 minutes by taxi from Pile Gate. The default departure is 10:00, and the skipper meets you on the quay 15 minutes before.
Leaving Gruž bay, you round the Lapad headland and the small church of Danče, and within 15 minutes the first fortress fills the view. From there the route runs east along the full sea face of the walls, pauses off the Old Port, continues to the Banje viewpoint, and — sea allowing — circles Lokrum before turning for home. The full loop is roughly 12 km.
What you’ll see
- Fort Lovrijenac — the freestanding fortress on its 37-metre cliff outside the walls, guarding the western approach. Above its gate: Non bene pro toto libertas venditur auro — freedom is not sold for all the gold in the world.
- The sea walls at close range — the skipper brings you near enough to read the joints in the stone below Buža and the southern ramparts.
- The Old Port entrance — between St John’s Fort and the Porporela breakwater, the same narrow gap galleys used for 500 years. Small boats still thread it daily.
- The Banje viewpoint — the classic angle: walls, port and Lokrum in one frame. This is the photograph you came for.
- Lokrum’s western shore — pines, cliffs and swimmers, 600 metres off the city. If it tempts you, the Lokrum island boat trip gives it a proper visit.
When is the best time of day?
Morning, on balance. At 10:00 the sun is high enough to light the stone but the sea breeze hasn’t built, so the ride is smooth and the Old Port is still quiet. Late afternoon flatters the walls with warmer light; if that is the mood you want, the sunset cruise covers the same coastline at golden hour — the VanDutch 32 (from €1,500) is the pick for it.
Practical notes
- Price: from €730 per boat, not per person, for a 4-hour charter on Catamaran X (up to 12 guests). Full details on the price list.
- Included: licensed skipper (Croatian Maritime Licence), full insurance, safety equipment and pre-departure briefing, Bluetooth sound system.
- Cancellation: free up to 24 hours before departure; weather cancellations are rebooked or fully refunded.
- Wall-walk pairing: many guests walk the ramparts the same day — opening hours are published by the Dubrovnik Tourist Board. Sea first, walls second works best: you’ll know exactly what you’re standing on.
- Season: daily April–October; shoulder months are covered in the Croatian National Tourist Board’s event calendar and are the quietest time on the water.
Dates in mind? Book your Old Town cruise online — Sarah confirms every charter personally, usually within the hour.