Perast
Monténégro · Best time to visit: May-Oct.
Choose your pace
Begin in the heart of Perast on the main square (Trg Sv. Nikole) — the bell tower entrance is on the south side of the church. The climb up the 55-meter stone spiral staircase is short but tight; at the top, both islands lie spread out below you in the cobalt bay and the low morning light hits the church domes at exactly the right angle for that one perfect photo. The church itself remains unfinished after 300 years — a melancholic monument to Perast's faded wealth.
Tip: Buy the €3 tower ticket at the small window inside the church (cash only) and arrive at 09:00 sharp — you'll share the platform with the bell-ringer and no one else. By 10:30 the first Kotor day-trip boats arrive and the narrow staircase becomes a one-way bottleneck where strangers press past each other for ten awkward minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Descend the bell tower and walk 80 m east along the Riva to the boat dock — independent water-taxi captains stand at the railing calling out 'islands, islands.' Five minutes across the bay you step onto the only man-made island in the Adriatic, built stone by stone by sailors fulfilling vows over 200 years. Inside the blue-domed church, hundreds of silver votive plaques cover the walls and a 17th-century painted ceiling depicts the storms the sailors prayed to survive. Don't miss the embroidered icon — one local woman worked it for 25 years using strands of her own hair.
Tip: Skip the 'tour group' boats that linger only 20 minutes — pay €5 to an independent captain at the western end of the Riva and he'll wait as long as you want, then circle past St. George Island (the monks' island, closed to visitors) on the way back for the picture-perfect symmetrical-islands shot from the water.
Open in Google Maps →Step off the boat and walk 120 m east along the Riva — Pirates is the casual stone-terrace spot beside the dock where the boat captains themselves eat between tours. Order the Adriatic seafood pasta (€12) — fresh mussels, shrimp and squid in white wine and garlic — or the Capricciosa pizza (€9) with local prosciutto and olives. It's hot, generous, and on the table in 15 minutes flat, perfect before the long afternoon on foot.
Tip: Order at the inside counter rather than waving down a terrace waiter — service is twice as fast. Pair with a 0.5L jug of house white Krstač for €5: it's the indigenous Montenegrin grape that doesn't export, so you won't taste it again once you leave the country.
Open in Google Maps →From Pirates, walk west the full kilometer of the stone Riva — you'll pass sixteen Baroque palaces, each built by a Perast captain returning rich from a Venetian voyage. Look for the Bujović Palace (now the town museum, exterior only today), the Zmajević family palace with its octagonal tower, and the Smekja Palace — the largest, two stories of warm Korčula limestone facing the bay. Keep going past the last palace onto the coastal path toward Strp village; for another kilometer the bay opens wider, the tour groups vanish, and the view back at Perast from the water is the postcard the locals keep on their own walls.
Tip: The best photograph of Perast with both islands perfectly aligned in frame is NOT taken from the village itself — it's from 800 m along the Strp coastal path, just past the small roadside chapel of St. Elijah. Walk the extra distance; 95% of visitors don't, which is exactly why the shot is yours alone.
Open in Google Maps →Return along the coastal path to the western end of the Riva and turn inland — behind the last row of houses, the old stone-paved path called Put Sv. Križa begins to climb sharply. It's a steep 45-minute ascent through olive groves and abandoned stone cottages to the ruined Venetian watchtower of the Holy Cross, where Perast captains once stood watch for Ottoman ships. The whole Bay of Kotor unfolds 270 meters below — both islands, the entire S-curve of the inner bay — and from 17:30 in summer the sun slants gold across the water until Perast itself begins to glow with its evening lamps. Stay until 18:30, then descend.
Tip: Wear real shoes, never sandals — the stones are polished slick by 400 years of feet and one slip on the descent ends the trip. Bring a full 1-liter water bottle; there's no fountain on the path. Start your descent before the last light fully fades — the trail has no lighting and finding the correct turn back into the village in the dark is genuinely tricky.
Open in Google Maps →Descend the path back to the waterfront and walk one minute east — Conte's stone terrace sits directly at the foot of the church square, tables almost touching the water with Our Lady of the Rocks lit up like a lantern 200 m offshore. Order the buzara of Bay of Kotor mussels (€18) — local mussels in white wine, garlic, and parsley, served in the pan with bread to soak the broth — and the black cuttlefish risotto (€16), inky-rich and the single dish Perast is most famous for. Pair with a glass of crisp Vranac from neighboring Crmnica.
Tip: Reserve a waterfront table at least 24 hours ahead by calling +382 32 373 722 — the inland tables are pleasant but the entire point is the bay view. Pitfall warning: ignore the 'fresh fish by weight' chalkboards posted at many Riva restaurants — they quote per-100g and the final bill routinely arrives 3-4× higher than you expected. Conte's printed prices are honest; stick to what's on the menu and you'll walk away well-fed and unburned.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Perast?
Most travelers enjoy Perast in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Perast?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Perast?
A practical starting point is about €120 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Perast?
A good first shortlist for Perast includes Bell Tower of St. Nicholas Church, Hike to Sveti Križ Fortress Viewpoint.