Montenegrin coast hinterland
Lovćen National Park
The mountain above the Bay of Kotor most people do as a half-day from the coast: the 25 hairpins of the old Cetinje road, the Njegoš Mausoleum at 1,657m and the best panorama in Montenegro.
In short
Lovćen National Park at a glance
Lovćen is the black mountain Montenegro is named after, rising straight up behind the Bay of Kotor, and for most UK visitors it's a half-day from a coastal base rather than a destination in itself. The reason to climb it is the Njegoš Mausoleum at 1,657m on Jezerski vrh — a 461-step ascent to a viewing platform with the best panorama in the country, taking in the whole bay, the Adriatic and on a clear day the Albanian and Italian coasts. The drama is as much the road as the view: the old Kotor–Cetinje route stacks 25 numbered hairpin bends up the mountain wall, climbing from sea level to about 900m in roughly 8km. You can drive it yourself, take a day tour from Kotor or Budva, or loop it with Cetinje and the Njeguši ham villages.
Lovćen is the mountain you stare up at from Kotor’s waterfront, and the temptation is to treat it as scenery rather than a plan. It rewards a few hours of effort more than almost anything else on the Montenegrin coast: the road up is the old Cetinje route, 25 numbered hairpin bends stacked against the mountain wall, and the destination is the Njegoš Mausoleum at 1,657m, where 461 steps deliver a viewing terrace that takes in the whole bay, Skadar Lake and the Adriatic in one sweep. It is the best panorama in the country, and on a clear day you can pick out the Italian coast across the water.
What first-timers get wrong is the timing and the driving. People set off late, hit the hairpins behind a tour coach in the afternoon heat, and find the summit sitting in cloud while the beach below is in sun — so go up early, in daylight, and check the mountain isn’t capped before you commit. The other mistake is doing it as a there-and-back: the real trip loops down the gentler inland road through Njeguši, where the ham and cheese come from, into Cetinje, the old royal capital at the mountain’s foot. If the bends make you nervous, that’s also your way out — drive up the new road via Cetinje, or take a tour from Kotor or Budva and let someone else count the hairpins.
Towns & places in Lovćen National Park
The route
Lovćen pairs naturally with Cetinje, the old royal capital at its foot, and the Njeguši villages on the back road — so the best version of the trip is a loop rather than an out-and-back. This is a relaxed full-day skeleton from a Bay of Kotor base with a hire car; drive times are for the mountain roads, which are slow by design. If you only have a morning, do the climb and the mausoleum and skip Cetinje.
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Morning
The serpentine climb from Kotor
Leave Kotor early and take the old Cetinje road — the 25 numbered hairpins climb from sea level to about 900m in roughly 8km, allow 45 minutes to an hour and stop at the marked viewpoints over the bay. It's single-lane in places, so give way uphill and don't attempt it after dark or in low cloud. From the pass it's another ~20 minutes into the park proper.
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Midday
Njegoš Mausoleum at 1,657m
Pay the park fee (~€5) and the mausoleum ticket (~€5), then climb the 461 steps through the tunnel to the tomb of poet-prince Petar II Petrović-Njegoš on Jezerski vrh. The viewing terrace behind it is the payoff — the whole Bay of Kotor below, Skadar Lake inland and the Adriatic out to the horizon. Allow 1–1.5 hours including the steps and the photos.
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Afternoon
Njeguši and Cetinje
Drop down the back of the mountain to Njeguši, the hamlet that gives its name to Montenegro's famous air-dried ham (njeguški pršut) and cheese — stop at a roadside konoba for a board and a rakija. Then continue ~25 minutes to Cetinje, the former royal capital, for its palace museums and monastery before looping back to the coast — the Cetinje–Budva road over the Brajići pass is a gentler descent than retracing the Kotor hairpins.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Kotor & the bay
££ mid-rangeThe standard base for Lovćen: the trailhead of the hairpin road is right above the Old Town, so you can be at the mausoleum within an hour of breakfast. Stay in Dobrota or Muo just outside the walls for parking and quieter nights, then drive up early before the tour coaches.
Best for: First-timers doing Lovćen as a half-day
Cetinje
£ valueThe old royal capital sits at the foot of the mountain on the inland side, so it's the closest town to the park and a much quieter, cheaper base than the coast. A handful of guesthouses and a real Montenegrin town feel, with the palace museums on your doorstep — but you're 40 minutes from the nearest beach.
Best for: Walkers and anyone wanting the park first thing
Budva
££ mid-rangeThe coast's resort and nightlife hub works as a base if you want beach days either side of the mountain — Lovćen is reachable via Cetinje in about an hour. Busy and built-up in summer, and further from the dramatic Kotor-side hairpins, but the most lively option with the widest choice of hotels.
Best for: Beach-first trips adding Lovćen as a day out
Getting around Lovćen National Park
You need a car or a tour — there is no public bus up Lovćen and no Uber or Bolt anywhere in Montenegro. Self-drive is the best experience: a small manual hire car is about €25–40/day in shoulder season (€45–70 in July–August) from the Tivat airport desks, and the mountain itself is the point. Two routes go up from Kotor: the old serpentine road with its 25 numbered hairpins (slow, single-lane in places, daylight only) and the longer but gentler new road via Cetinje. From the coast, allow about an hour up the hairpins from Kotor, or 45 minutes from Cetinje on the inland side. If you'd rather not drive the bends, half- and full-day group or private tours run from Kotor and Budva from roughly €35–60 per person, usually combining the mausoleum with Cetinje and the Njeguši ham stop. Bring cash for the park fee and tickets, and a layer — the summit is 10–15°C cooler than the beach and can sit in cloud when the coast is clear.
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