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Split

Dalmatia

Split

Split lives inside Diocletian's Palace and ferries to the islands leave from a port on its doorstep, so plan a Dalmatian week around boats out and lanes in.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights, plus island time

Airport

Split Airport (SPU), ~24km west near Trogir

Airport to centre

Shuttle bus ~30-40 min; Promet bus 37 cheaper but slower

Best base

Inside the palace or Veli Varos; Bacvice for the beach

In short

Split at a glance

Split works best as a 2- or 3-night base for central Dalmatia rather than a week-long city break: sleep inside or just outside Diocletian's Palace, walk the Old Town and Marjan, then use the ferry port on the Riva for day or overnight trips to Hvar and Brac. The palace itself is a living quarter of the city, not a roped-off ruin, which is the whole point of coming.

The short version

  • Stay inside Diocletian's Palace or in Veli Varos for the easiest first trip; Bacvice if you want the nearest beach and nightlife.
  • The ferry port, bus station and train station all sit together on the Riva, so island day trips start a five-minute walk from the Old Town.
  • Book Krilo and Jadrolinija catamarans to Hvar ahead in July and August: foot-passenger fast boats sell out and you cannot just turn up.
  • Take the airport shuttle or Promet bus 37 into town rather than a taxi; both end at the central bus station beside the port.
  • Two or three nights is enough for the palace, Marjan and one island; build the rest of the week around the ferries, not Split itself.

Split is unusual because its Old Town is literally Diocletianโ€™s Palace: the fourth-century walls, vaulted cellars and the emperorโ€™s mausoleum (now the cathedral) are stitched into a living quarter of bars, flats and shops. You donโ€™t queue to enter a ruin here โ€” you wander into it for free, then pay only for the cathedral, the bell tower and the cellars. That changes how you plan: the headline sight is also your route to dinner, so the real skill is timing your wanders around the cruise-ship crowds that pour off the Riva by mid-morning in summer.

The other thing that defines Split is the port on its doorstep. The ferry terminal, intercity bus station and train station sit together at the eastern end of the waterfront, a five-minute walk from the palace, which makes the city the natural hub for central Dalmatia. Most UK travellers get the balance wrong by trying to fill four or five nights in Split itself; two or three is plenty for the palace, Marjan Hill and the beaches, after which the city earns its keep as a launchpad for Hvar, Brac and beyond.

Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay inside or just outside the walls, the catamaran times and fares to the islands, how to get in from the airport near Trogir, and a realistic budget in euros โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Split trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Split

Cathedral of St Domnius bell tower

The Romanesque bell tower of St Domnius Cathedral rises out of Diocletian's Palace and gives the best view over Split's old-town roofs and harbour. The climb is a steep, narrow, partly open stairwell, so it is not for the nervous or the wobbly-kneed. It is usually included in a combined cathedral ticket from about โ‚ฌ10; go early before the cruise crowds and the heat.

About 45 minutes tโ€ฆ From about โ‚ฌ10,

Diocletian's Palace

Most of Diocletian's Palace is free โ€” it's not a fenced ruin but the lived-in heart of Split's Old Town, open day and night, so you can wander the Peristyle, the gates and the alleys without a ticket. Pay only for the corners that earn it: the underground Substructures (the Cellars, ~โ‚ฌ8), the Cathedral of St Domnius and its bell-tower climb. Walk it before 09:00 or after the day-trippers and cruise crowds thin in the evening, and allow 2โ€“3 hours.

2โ€“3 hours โ‚ฌ8

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Inside Diocletian's Palace / Old Town

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Sleeping within the Roman walls puts you in the heart of the action with everything on foot, but expect stone stairs, no lifts, church bells and bar noise late into the night. Best for atmosphere over sleep.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, atmosphere

Browse hotels Old Town core

Veli Varos

ยฃ value

The oldest residential quarter, just behind the western end of the Riva below Marjan. Crumbly stone houses with green shutters, a genuine local feel and quieter nights, all a five-minute walk from the palace.

Best for: Value, couples, quieter evenings

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk to palace

Bacvice

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The nearest beach to the Old Town with a shallow sandy bay and a lively summer bar scene. Handy for the ferry, bus and train station too, but it gets loud at night and is busy in peak season.

Best for: Beach-first stays, nightlife, transport access

Browse hotels 15-20 min walk to palace

Bol / Manus (east of the centre)

ยฃ value

Residential streets just east of the bus station with bigger apartments and better parking if you arrive by car. Less charm than the Old Town, but useful value for families and longer stays.

Best for: Families, car arrivals, longer stays

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to palace

Airport to city centre

Split airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Airport shuttle bus to the bus station ~30-40 min about โ‚ฌ8-โ‚ฌ10 single Departs about 20 min after flights land; every 30 min in summer
Promet city bus 37 to Split bus station ~50 min about โ‚ฌ3 (around โ‚ฌ1.50 in the Promet app) Cheapest, but a slower stopping service from the main road
Taxi or pre-booked transfer ~25-30 min usually โ‚ฌ35-โ‚ฌ45 Worth it for late flights or with luggage
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: sea warm enough to swim, comfortable temperatures for climbing the bell tower and Marjan, and fewer cruise-day crowds than July and August.

July and August are hot, packed with cruise arrivals and the priciest time for ferries and rooms; book island catamarans and accommodation well ahead. Winter is quiet and cheap but most island services drop to a couple of sailings a day and the beach season is over.

What it costs

UK return flights to Split (SPU) run roughly ยฃ50-ยฃ140 outside the school holidays when booked ahead with Jet2 or easyJet; direct from Manchester or Gatwick is about 2h 55m. Peak July and August weekends and late bookings push fares well above that.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Split break for one person is roughly โ‚ฌ450-โ‚ฌ650 before flights: โ‚ฌ240-โ‚ฌ390 accommodation, โ‚ฌ90-โ‚ฌ130 food and drink, around โ‚ฌ30 for the palace cathedral and a museum, and โ‚ฌ40-โ‚ฌ60 for one return island catamaran to Hvar or Bol.

The fastest way to make Split feel pricey is eating on the Riva and drinking in the cruise-crowd lanes of the palace. A konoba a few streets inland or a daily gablec lunch menu at โ‚ฌ10-โ‚ฌ13 is far better value.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Croatia

See the full Croatia guide

Split FAQs

How many days do you need in Split?
Two or three nights covers Split itself: a day for Diocletian's Palace and the cathedral tower, a morning on Marjan, and time for the Riva. Most UK travellers then use Split as a base, adding island days to Hvar or Brac rather than staying longer in the city.
How do you get from Split to Hvar or Brac?
Fast catamarans run from the ferry port on the Riva: Krilo and Jadrolinija reach Hvar Town in about 55 minutes to an hour, and Bol on Brac in a similar time. The Jadrolinija car ferry to Supetar on Brac takes about 50 minutes. Book foot-passenger catamarans ahead in July and August.
Do you need a car in Split?
No, not for the city or the islands. Central Split is walkable and the islands are easier and cheaper as a foot passenger on the catamarans. Hire a car only if you plan to drive the wider Dalmatian coast, and expect parking near the palace to be tight and costly.

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