Cavtat and the Riviera by Yacht

Cavtat and the Riviera by Yacht

Cavtat is the old riviera town 17 km southeast of Dubrovnik — a horseshoe harbour wrapped in palms and pines, with the finest small mausoleum in Croatia on the hill above it. Arriving by private yacht is simply the right way in: the road takes 40 minutes of hairpins, while the sea route takes about an hour of coastline, coves and open water, and delivers you straight onto the prettiest promenade south of the city.

Why go to Cavtat by boat?

Because the town faces the water, and always has. Cavtat stands on the site of Epidaurum, the Greek and later Roman port whose refugees fled north in the 7th century and founded Ragusa — today’s Dubrovnik. The daughter city got the walls and the fame; the mother town kept the slower pulse. Its riva is lined with cafés and moored launches, and behind it two wooded peninsulas, Rat and Sustjepan, curl around the bay with shaded walking paths along the shore.

By private boat you also get the journey itself: the sea face of the city walls at departure, Lokrum to port, then the long green run of the Župa Dubrovačka coast — Srebreno, Mlini, Plat — with the Konavle hills rising behind. It is the classic full-day route, and it earns the hours.

How the day works from Gruž

Departure is 09:00 from Gruž Harbour, Obala Stjepana Radića 25. The full-day charter — from €1,200 per boat on the Fairline Phantom 40, up to 12 guests, skipper and insurance included — gives the day its shape:

  1. 09:00–10:00 — cruise past the Old Town walls and Lokrum, then down the riviera coast.
  2. 10:00–11:00 — first swim at the Plat coves: three sheltered bays of pine, shingle and clear water, out of sight of the road.
  3. 11:30–14:30 — moor in Cavtat. Walk the promenade, climb to the mausoleum, take a long konoba lunch at the waterline (we reserve the table; the meal itself isn’t included).
  4. 14:30–17:00 — return leg with a second swim — Šuplja stina below Plat, or a quiet bay your skipper likes that day — and coffee on the water before Gruž.

The same run also suits a shorter afternoon: see the price list for half-day options if you’d rather trade the second swim for a lie-in.

What you’ll see ashore

When is the best time to go?

May, June and September are ideal: sea warm enough for both swims, harbour uncrowded, light soft on the stone by late afternoon. In July and August the 09:00 start matters — you swim at Plat before the day-boats arrive and reach Cavtat ahead of the lunch rush. The return leg after 15:00 is the prettiest hour of the route, with the sun behind you and the walls ahead. Season notes for the whole coast are on croatia.hr.

Practical notes

Pick a date and book the full-day charter — Sarah confirms availability personally, usually within the hour.

Quick answers

How long is the boat trip to Cavtat?

45–60 minutes each way from Gruž Harbour, depending on sea state and how long you linger at the swim stops. Most guests book a full-day charter, from €1,200 per boat on the Fairline Phantom 40.

What is there to see in Cavtat?

A horseshoe harbour with a palm-lined promenade, the Račić Mausoleum by Ivan Meštrović, the painter Vlaho Bukovac's house and two pine-covered peninsulas with walking paths.

Where do we swim on the way?

The coves at Plat, roughly halfway along the Župa Dubrovačka coast, are the usual stop. Your skipper picks the calmest side on the day.

Is lunch included?

No — restaurant meals aren't included, but we book you a harbourside konoba table in advance and the skipper times the day around it.