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Grisia and the old town lanes, Croatia
Grisia and the old town lanes

Istria

Grisia and the old town lanes

The stepped Grisia street climbs to the church through galleries and washing lines: free to wander, best early or at golden hour.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Rovinj, Croatia

Opening hours

Open access (always open). The street is public; the galleries and shops along it keep their own hours, typically late morning to evening in season.

Tickets

Free โ€” no ticket needed; an open, public street you can walk any time.

Time needed

30-60 minutes to climb slowly to the church, longer if you browse the galleries.

In short

Visiting Grisia and the old town lanes

Grisia is the stepped cobbled street that climbs through Rovinj's old town to St Euphemia's church, lined with art galleries, studios and washing strung between the houses. It's free to wander any time, and the trick is to do it slowly, either early in the morning or at golden hour, before the day-trip boats from Pula and Porec fill the lanes.

A free wander up to the church

Grisia is the spine of Rovinjโ€™s old town: a steep, cobbled, stepped street that climbs from near the harbour up to St Euphemiaโ€™s church at the top. It costs nothing, and itโ€™s the most rewarding hour you can spend here on a budget. What makes it more than just a pretty lane is what lines it โ€” art galleries and artistsโ€™ studios spill out of the ground floors, paintings hang on the stone walls, and laundry is strung on lines between the houses overhead. Itโ€™s lived-in and worked-in, not staged, and the polished, slightly slippery cobbles tell you how many feet have come this way.

Branch off the main climb whenever a side alley tempts you. The grid of little lanes around Grisia all eventually lead up or down, so you canโ€™t really get lost, and the quieter offshoots are where the best small moments are.

Doing it at the right hour

Timing is the whole game. Rovinj fills up in the middle of the day when day-trip boats from Pula and Porec dock and funnel everyone into the same narrow steps. Walk Grisia early in the morning, before about 10am, and youโ€™ll have the lanes nearly to yourself with soft light on the stone; come back at golden hour before sunset and the warm light makes the climb glow. Both beat the midday crush.

Wear shoes with grip โ€” the cobbles are smooth and steep โ€” and donโ€™t rush. The point isnโ€™t to reach the top quickly but to potter, look up at the washing lines and into the studio doorways, and let the town reveal itself. When you do reach the church piazza, the bell-tower climb is right there if you want to pay a few euros for the view; otherwise just enjoy the high vantage over the rooftops for free before heading back down.

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

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Grisia and the old town lanes FAQs

Is there a charge to walk up Grisia?
No. Grisia and the surrounding old town lanes are free public streets you can wander whenever you like. You only spend money if you buy something in one of the galleries or studios that line the climb, or pay to enter the church tower at the top.
When is the best time to walk the old town?
Early morning before about 10am, or the golden hour before sunset, both work well. That's when the light is best for photos and the lanes are quietest, before the day-trip boats from Pula and Porec arrive and the narrow steps get busy.
Where does Grisia lead?
It climbs steadily through the old town to the piazza in front of St Euphemia's church and its bell tower at the highest point. From there you can climb the tower for the view, then drop back down a different lane to the harbour.