Split
City Guide

Split

Croacia · Best time to visit: May-Oct.

Guide coming in Español, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €90.00/day
Best season May-Oct
Language English
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Zagreb
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

One Day Inside a Roman Emperor's Palace — Greatest Hits from Sphinx to Sunset

08:00

Peristyle of Diocletian's Palace

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €5

Enter through the Silver Gate on the east side — step over 1,700-year-old limestone slabs worn glass-smooth and suddenly you are standing in a Roman emperor's private courtyard. At 08:00 the Peristyle is nearly empty and the morning sun hits the Egyptian black granite sphinx (one of thirteen Diocletian shipped from Luxor) at exactly the angle that separates it from the marble columns in a photo. By 10:00 three cruise ships have emptied into this square and every column has a selfie stick in front of it — this hour is non-negotiable.

Tip: Sit on the red stone steps below the cathedral and order a coffee from Luxor Café, which opens at 08:00. The waiters place red cushions directly on the ancient imperial steps — 5 EUR for an espresso sipped on a Roman altar is the best deal in Split, and it buys you front-row seats before the crowds flood in.

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09:15

Cathedral of Saint Domnius Bell Tower

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €7

Twenty metres from your café cushion — the tower entrance is the small door to the right of the cathedral. The climb is 183 narrow steel steps that zigzag through open stonework; your feet are sometimes visible through the grid, so this is not the move for anyone with vertigo. Do it at 09:15 before the sun turns harsh and before the 10:30 bell-tower queue forms — from the top the entire terracotta-roofed palace looks like a single living chessboard, with Marjan's pine ridge to the west and the islands of Brač and Šolta floating on the Adriatic.

Tip: Buy the tower-only ticket (7 EUR), not the combined one — the cathedral interior is tiny and backs up into a 40-minute queue by 10:30, and you don't need it. On the upper stairs only two people fit abreast; step aside for climbers coming down at the landings, otherwise the whole column seizes up.

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10:30

Golden Gate and Grgur Ninski Statue

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Exit the bell tower and walk north through the palace along Dioklecijanova — the Roman cardo maximus, now lined with lace-seller stalls and medieval archways tucked into 4th-century walls. The Golden Gate spits you out into a small park where Ivan Meštrović's giant bronze bishop, Grgur Ninski, stands with one enormous toe rubbed mirror-gold by a century of hands. Rub it — every local from Split will tell you it grants one wish, and on a layover day you'll want at least one.

Tip: The photo angle that makes the bishop look truly monumental is from ground level, three metres in front, shooting up so his robe fills the frame with the stone Golden Gate behind. Don't stand next to him — it flattens the scale and gives you a tourist snapshot. While you're here, the tiny Church of St. Martin is built into the north palace wall above the gate: free entry, almost always empty, and it's a 1,500-year-old chapel inside the old Roman guard corridor.

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12:15

Kantun Paulina

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €12

Walk back south through the palace and exit via Narodni Trg (People's Square) — five minutes past the medieval town hall. Kantun Paulina is a hole-in-the-wall grill with no indoor seating, just a counter, a smoking grill and a queue of local workers on lunch break. Order the ćevapi — ten grilled minced-meat logs in a warm somun flatbread with raw onion and ajvar — and eat it standing on the marble pavement of the square; this is the taste of Dalmatia in the hand.

Tip: Arrive at 12:15 exactly, before the 13:00 local lunch rush doubles the queue. Ask for 'ćevapi u somunu, velika' (10 pieces, large) — the small version is a tease and you'll regret it by 14:00. Pair with a Karlovačko beer from the neighbouring kiosk (3 EUR). Cash only — ATMs are two blocks away on the Riva.

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14:00

Riva Promenade and Marjan Vidilica Viewpoint

Park
Duration: 3h Estimated cost: €6

Walk 200 metres south from Paulina and the full Adriatic hits you at once — palm trees, white marble pavement, the masts of the ferry terminal: this is the Riva. Follow the waterfront west past the fishermen's harbour of Matejuška for fifteen minutes, then begin climbing the Marjan stairs at Varoš — 314 stone steps through pine forest and old Dalmatian stone houses. The first viewpoint, Vidilica, opens up at the top: the entire palace spread beneath you, terracotta roofs against a cobalt Adriatic, Brač and Hvar on the horizon. Time it for 16:00–17:30 when the light goes soft and gold, and the palace walls begin to glow amber.

Tip: Order a glass of local Plavac Mali red at Café Vidilica (6 EUR) and take the west-facing low stone wall — it is the sunset seat of Split, and everyone who knows knows. Do NOT continue up to the Telegrin cross unless you have 90 extra minutes; Vidilica gives you 90% of the view for 20% of the climb. The staircase has zero shade — bring a full water bottle and do not attempt it in flip-flops (the stones are polished slick).

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19:30

Konoba Matejuška

Food
Duration: 1h30min Estimated cost: €50

Walk back down the Marjan stairs the way you came — ten minutes, easier on the knees than the climb up — then cut into the fishermen's lane behind the harbour. Konoba Matejuška has four tiny tables inside and a handful more in the stone alley, and it is where Split eats fish. Order the whole grilled catch of the day (usually sea bass or gilt-head bream, 25–30 EUR by weight), a black cuttlefish risotto to start (18 EUR), and a carafe of house Pošip white from Korčula (15 EUR). The fish comes head-on, dressed with nothing but Dalmatian olive oil, lemon and fleur de sel — this is what Croatia actually tastes like when nobody is performing for tourists.

Tip: Reserve two days ahead by phone (+385 21 355 152) or walk in at 19:00 sharp when they open — by 19:30 every table is gone. Point at the fish you want from the ice tray at the door; they weigh it and price it in front of you, no surprises. Pitfall warning for the whole evening: do NOT sit at any restaurant with tables directly on the Riva waterfront — every single one is a tourist trap serving frozen fish at triple markup, and the giveaway is always the same (laminated menus with photos of the food, and a host standing outside with a clipboard). The real konobas are one street back in Varoš, Matejuška and Bačvice.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Split?

Most travelers enjoy Split in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Split?

The easiest season for most travelers is May-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Split?

A practical starting point is about €90 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Split?

A good first shortlist for Split includes Peristyle of Diocletian's Palace, Cathedral of Saint Domnius Bell Tower, Golden Gate and Grgur Ninski Statue.