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Dubrovnik City Walls, Croatia
Dubrovnik City Walls

Dalmatia

Dubrovnik City Walls

How to walk Dubrovnik's City Walls: when the ticket window opens, why the 8am slot beats every other, and whether the €40 circuit is worth it before the cruise ships dock.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Dubrovnik, Croatia

Opening hours

Roughly 08:00–19:30 at the height of summer, shortening to about 08:00–17:30 in spring and autumn and 09:00–15:00 in winter; last entry is around an hour before closing. Confirm your date with the Society of Friends of Dubrovnik Antiquities, which runs the walls.

Tickets

€40 (about £34) for an adult from April to October; €15 (about £13) in winter. Children 7–18 are reduced and under-7s free. The same ticket also admits you to Lovrijenac fortress.

Time needed

1.5–2 hours for the full 2km circuit; longer if you stop at the café terraces or climb the Minčeta and Bokar towers.

In short

Visiting Dubrovnik City Walls

The City Walls are the single most-booked attraction in Croatia, and the whole game is timing: be at the Pile-gate entrance for the 8am opening, before the cruise groups land between 9 and 10 and the unshaded ramparts hit 33°C. The €40 high-season ticket also covers Lovrijenac fortress and is worth every euro for the circuit alone. Walk the 2km loop anticlockwise, allow 1.5–2 hours, and treat it as a morning job — not something to slot in after lunch.

How to walk them without melting

The mistake people make is treating the City Walls as an anytime stroll you fit around lunch. They aren’t: the 2km circuit is almost entirely unshaded stone, it climbs and drops constantly between towers, and on a July afternoon with the sun overhead it turns into a sweaty queue behind a cruise group. The fix is simple — be at the Pile-gate entrance for the 8am opening. You get cool air, the low morning light raking across the terracotta roofs, and a clear hour before the ships at Gruž empty their passengers into the lanes around 9 to 10.

Buy your €40 high-season ticket ahead rather than queuing at the Pile booth, which backs up badly by mid-morning in summer — online or through a tour partner costs the same and walks you straight in. Note that the same ticket also covers Lovrijenac fortress just outside the walls, so don’t pay separately for it. Walk the loop anticlockwise from Pile, carry water and a hat, and skip it entirely if heat or steps are a real problem — there’s no shortcut once you’re up on the ramparts.

Do the walls justify the ticket?

Stick to the early-morning slot if you possibly can; failing that, the last 90 minutes before closing is the next-best window, when the day-trippers have shuffled back to their ships and the light softens again. Allow an hour and a half to two hours for the full circuit, more if you climb the Minčeta tower or stop at one of the café terraces wedged into the wall.

This is the one paid sight in Dubrovnik that earns its price outright. The view down onto the rooftops and out to Lokrum is genuinely better than the photographs, and it’s the reason the walls are the most-booked attraction in the country. Do the walls in the morning, then take the Srđ cable car or a Lokrum boat in the afternoon rather than stacking two hot, crowded sights back to back — Dubrovnik rewards a morning push and a slow afternoon.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Dubrovnik city guide.

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Dubrovnik City Walls FAQs

Do you need to book Dubrovnik City Walls tickets in advance?
You can buy on the day at the Pile, Ploče or Maritime Museum entrances, but in July and August the queues at the Pile booth back up badly by mid-morning. Buy online or through a reputable tour partner before you go and walk straight in — it costs the same and saves you standing in full sun.
What is the best time of day to walk the City Walls?
The 8am opening, without question. You get the cooler air, the low morning light on the terracotta roofs, and an hour or so before the cruise groups arrive between 9 and 10. The 2km loop is almost entirely unshaded, so the midday-to-3pm window in summer is the one to avoid.
Are the Dubrovnik City Walls worth it?
Yes — it's the thing you came to Dubrovnik for, and the view down onto the roofs and out to Lokrum justifies the €40 on its own. The caveat is heat and crowds: do it right (early, with water and sun cover) and it's the best hour and a half in the city; do it at midday in August and you'll remember the shuffle more than the view.

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