Hvar
Croatie · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
One Day on the Adriatic — From Venetian Stone to a Sunset Over Pakleni
St. Stephen's Square (Trg Svetog Stjepana)
LandmarkFrom the catamaran dock, walk straight inland for 3 minutes — the narrow alley of Kroz Burak suddenly opens onto the largest medieval square in all of Dalmatia. Limestone paving polished smooth by five centuries of footsteps, the 16th-century bell tower of St. Stephen's Cathedral on one end, the old Venetian arsenal with its single-arch theatre loggia on the other. At this hour the café chairs are still being wiped down and the light hits the cathedral facade dead-on from the east — the square is practically yours.
Tip: Stand at the cathedral end facing west — the arsenal framed by the bell tower's shadow is the postcard shot. If you arrive after 11:00 a cruise tender dumps 200 people here in one go; the square is unrecognizable within minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Fortica Španjola (Spanish Fortress)
LandmarkExit the square's northwest corner and follow the yellow 'Fortica' signs up through Groda — a lattice of 15th-century stepped alleys shaded by fig trees and stone arches. After the last house the path turns into a pine-lined switchback zigzag; 20 minutes of steady climb and the whole Adriatic opens up. From the ramparts you see the full Pakleni archipelago scattered across turquoise water, Hvar town's red roofs below, and on a clear day the silhouette of Vis on the horizon. Do the climb now while the stone is still cool and your shirt is still dry.
Tip: Go around the back of the fortress keep to the northeast wall — far fewer people, and the angle over the old harbor with the cathedral in frame is the single best shot on the island. Skip the dungeon museum inside; it's five dusty rooms and costs extra.
Open in Google Maps →Nonica
FoodDescend the fortress path the same way you came up, cut through Groda for 8 minutes back toward the square, and one alley east you'll smell it before you see it — a tiny family bakery that locals have been using for three generations. Order the hvarska pogača (€4), a flaky savoury pastry stuffed with anchovy, capers and onion that is literally Hvar's edible coat of arms, plus a slab of burek sa sirom (€3.50) and a cold Jana water. Eat standing at the stone counter outside; lunch done in 20 minutes, fuel for the afternoon.
Tip: Ask for the pogača fresh from the oven — they bake in batches roughly every 40 minutes, and a just-pulled one versus a morning leftover is the difference between a revelation and a snack. Skip the sit-down tourist restaurants lining the main square; you'll pay €25 for a worse lunch.
Open in Google Maps →Franciscan Monastery of Hvar
ReligiousFrom the square, walk east along the Riva harbor promenade — 10 minutes with superyachts on your right and pastel shutters on your left — until the path dead-ends at a walled peninsula of cypress. The 15th-century Franciscan Monastery sits alone on the point, and behind its cloister stands a 300-year-old cypress tree so enormous it looks Photoshopped. The tiny garden courtyard, the bell tower against the sea, the refectory's 'Last Supper' canvas through the open door — it's the quiet counterpoint to the morning's adrenaline.
Tip: Walk past the entrance another 30 seconds to the seaward side of the monastery wall — there's an unmarked shelf of flat rocks where you can sit alone with the cypress above you and the open sea in front. This is where Hvar locals come to read; tourists never find it.
Open in Google Maps →Hula Hula Beach Bar (via Lungomare coastal path)
EntertainmentKeep going east from the monastery along the Lungomare — a narrow cliff path that hugs the rocks, pine needles underfoot, the sea splashing a meter below you. 20 minutes of postcard coastline and the wooden deck of Hula Hula appears carved into the shore. This is THE afternoon ritual of Hvar: a resident DJ, rosé cocktails, swimmers jumping straight from the bar into the Adriatic, and a west-facing deck angled precisely at the sunset behind Sveti Klement island. Order one Aperol and a plate of fried white bait and just stop moving for a while — you've earned it.
Tip: Arrive by 17:00 to grab a front-row lounger on the lower deck — after 18:00 the sunset crowd fills every inch and you're standing. The bar accepts cards but the ladder-jump into the sea is free; bring your swimsuit under your clothes or you'll regret watching everyone else do it.
Open in Google Maps →Dalmatino Hvar
FoodWalk back west along the Lungomare just as the sun drops behind the Pakleni — 25 minutes with the sky turning orange behind you and the cathedral bell tower lit gold ahead. Duck one block inland from the Riva into a narrow stone alley and you're at Dalmatino, a 28-seat konoba run by the same family for two decades and consistently ranked the best dinner in town. Order the slow-cooked octopus peka (€38, order 40 minutes ahead) or the black risotto with cuttlefish ink (€22), and a glass of local Plavac Mali from Sveta Nedjelja. This is the meal you tell people about later.
Tip: Reserve before you even land in Hvar — they turn away walk-ins every night of the season. Request a table on the upper covered terrace, not the ground-floor alley. Warning about the harbor strip right outside: the restaurants with menus in 8 languages and staff waving you in from the Riva (Kogo, Bounty, and the like) mark up 40–60% over the back-alley places; a 'mixed seafood grill for two' at €110 is the island's most reliable tourist trap.
Open in Google Maps →The White Marble Town Where Venice Still Breathes
St. Stephen's Cathedral
ReligiousEnter right at 9 AM when the bronze doors unlock — morning light slants through the rose window and the cathedral is empty. The 16th-century facade anchors Pjaca, the largest medieval square in Dalmatia, with a freestanding three-tiered bell tower that locals consider Hvar's most elegant silhouette. Fifteen minutes of silence here sets the tone for the whole weekend.
Tip: The cathedral closes 12:00-17:00 for siesta — miss this window and you're locked out until evening. The attached treasury (3€ extra) has a 15th-century Byzantine icon of the Madonna that every tour group walks past without noticing.
Open in Google Maps →Franciscan Monastery of Hvar
MuseumExit the square and walk south along the waterfront for 8 minutes — past the yacht harbor, past the cypress-lined cape — until the stone monastery appears alone on the headland. Inside hangs Matteo Ingoli's 'Last Supper,' an eight-meter Mannerist canvas darkened by three centuries of candle smoke, beside a courtyard cedar planted in 1725. The cloister is the coolest room in Hvar on a hot morning and the sea view from the refectory is the best-kept secret in town.
Tip: Skip the audio guide — it's recycled Wikipedia. Instead, ask the Franciscan brother at the desk for the 'Last Supper' leaflet and find the tiny crab at Judas's foot that Ingoli painted as his cryptic signature. Most visitors miss it entirely.
Open in Google Maps →Konoba Menego
FoodWalk back north along the coastal promenade, then climb the stone steps behind the cathedral for 10 minutes — the ascent looks intimidating but it's the shaded spine of the old town, lined with hanging laundry and prowling cats. Menego is a five-table family konoba serving what the owner's grandmother cooked: gregada (white fish stewed with potatoes and rosemary, €24) and soparnik (Swiss chard pie from nearby Poljica, €9). There is no phone, no website, no reservations — only walk-ins and candles.
Tip: Arrive at exactly 12:30 to claim the corner table with the harbor view through the cut-stone window. At the end of the meal, ask Dinko for the house rakija — an amber herbal distillate from 18 local herbs that is never on the menu and never charged for if you've finished your wine.
Open in Google Maps →Hvar Arsenal and Historic Theatre
LandmarkWalk 3 minutes back down the steps to Pjaca — the Arsenal occupies the entire south end of the square, its vast arch once sheltering Venetian galleys. Upstairs is the oldest public theatre in Europe (1612), where commoners and nobles sat in the same room for the first time in the Venetian Republic's history. The loggia overlooking the square catches a specific golden angle between 14:30 and 15:30 that gives you the single best architectural photo of Hvar.
Tip: The ticket also covers the attached Gallery Arsenal, which holds a superb collection of contemporary Croatian art that 90% of cruise-day visitors skip. Go upstairs first, photograph the theatre loggia, then drop into the gallery on your way out — the gallery stays empty all afternoon.
Open in Google Maps →Fortica Spanjola
LandmarkLeave the Arsenal, cross the square, and follow the steep cobbled path signposted 'Fortica' — 20 minutes uphill through Mediterranean pines, with stone benches every 50 meters for your lungs. Start at 17:00 so you crest the ramparts by 17:30 and have a full 90 minutes to watch the light slide from gold to rose across the Pakleni Islands scattered in the channel below. The fortress has defended Hvar since the 6th century, survived Ottoman raids, Venetian rebuilds, and the infamous 1571 lightning strike that detonated its gunpowder magazine.
Tip: Sun sets behind Pakleni at 19:15 in summer, 17:45 in shoulder season — time your arrival accordingly. If the €12 museum feels steep, the free terrace just outside the main gate has the identical sunset view. Come down before dark; the lower stretch has no lighting and the cobbles are slippery.
Open in Google Maps →Dalmatino Steak and Fish House
FoodWalk back down the Fortica path for 20 minutes — turn your phone flashlight on below the last switchback — and cut east through the alleys behind Pjaca for 3 more minutes. Dalmatino sits on a narrow stone lane and is fully booked every night of the summer; the peka lamb (slow-cooked under an iron bell with potatoes and rosemary, €32, two-person minimum, order 3 hours ahead) is the single best meal on the island. Owner Ivan personally pours the first glass of Plavac Mali at every table.
Tip: Reserve via Instagram DM (@dalmatino_hvar) 24 hours ahead — the website form often fails to deliver. Ask specifically for the upstairs balcony table, not the streetside bench. Pitfall: the restaurants facing Pjaca with laminated six-language menus and photos of each dish are tourist traps — their 'fresh' fish is frozen and portions cost 40% more than at Dalmatino three streets away.
Open in Google Maps →Turquoise Coves, a Pine-Shaded Lunch, and Hvar's Legendary Sunset Applause
Palmizana Bay, Sveti Klement
ParkWalk 5 minutes from the main square down to Hvar Harbor — the wooden water-taxi stand opposite the Riva yacht berths is marked 'Palmizana.' Boats depart every 30 minutes, take 12 minutes across the channel, and cost €8 round trip; sit on the stern for the best view of the Fortica receding behind you. Palmizana is the largest cove in the Pakleni archipelago, ringed by aleppo pines and a century-old botanical garden planted in 1906 by the Meneghello family, who still own the land.
Tip: Buy your return ticket at the official booth, not from freelance boatmen on the dock — some unmarked boats charge €15 one-way and leave you stranded on the return. The 09:30 departure beats the 11:00 Split day-tripper flood by 90 minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Stipanska Cove, Marinkovac
ParkFrom Palmizana dock, hire a small water taxi for a 5-minute hop (€10) to Stipanska on neighboring Marinkovac island — the most photographed cove in the Pakleni chain, with water so clear you can count pebbles at ten meters' depth. The cove faces south, and the snorkeling around the cave at its eastern end is where the brightest underwater light filters through the whole archipelago. Two hours of swimming, floating, and drying on warm stone is the exact right dose.
Tip: Arrive before 11:30 — after that, yacht charters drop anchor directly in the swim zone and the water turns choppy with diesel sheen. The pebble beach is brutal on bare feet; grab the €5 rubber swim shoes from any Hvar souvenir shop the night before. Skip the beach taverna (€12 for an espresso) — eat back on Sveti Klement.
Open in Google Maps →Laganini Lounge Bar and Fish House
FoodWater-taxi back to Palmizana (5 minutes, free with your return ticket), then stroll 3 minutes along the coastal path to the eastern end of the bay — Laganini appears between the pines, all whitewashed wood and tiki daybeds built directly over the rocks. This is where yacht crews actually eat: a whole grilled orata (€38) or a carpaccio of local tuna (€24), served barefoot with your feet in the shallows. The long lunch here is the single most indulgent meal of the weekend.
Tip: Reserve the rock-platform table via Instagram DM (@laganini_palmizana) — they reply within the hour and the interior tables are a different restaurant altogether. Order the orata whole; the staff fillets it tableside. Lunch stretches painlessly to 16:00 — don't schedule anything back on Hvar before 17:00.
Open in Google Maps →Hula Hula Beach Bar
EntertainmentTake the return boat to Hvar Harbor (12 minutes), then walk east along the seaside path past the Amfora resort for 12 minutes — the route is shaded, flanked by three small swimming coves if you want one last dip. Hula Hula is carved into the rocks on Hvar's east cape, and its legendary 'sunset applause' at 19:15 is the most Hvar-specific ritual of the weekend: the entire terrace stands up and claps as the sun vanishes behind the Pakleni Islands. A negroni costs €14, a mojito €13, and the house DJ set builds perfectly toward the horizon.
Tip: Arrive by 17:30 to claim a lounger on the lower rock platform directly over the water — after 18:15 every spot is taken and you'll stand in the back for two hours. Don't eat here (burgers are mediocre and cost €28); save appetite for dinner. Keep €5 notes ready — the bar is slammed at sunset and card machines freeze.
Open in Google Maps →Giaxa Restaurant
FoodWalk back to town along the same coastal path in 15 minutes — at night the Fortica is floodlit above you and the whole walk is a postcard you didn't know you needed. Giaxa occupies a restored 15th-century Hvar aristocratic palace three streets behind Pjaca, and its five-course tasting menu (€89) built around the day's Adriatic catch is the most refined dining room on the island. The scampi risotto (€34) uses Adriatic langoustine pulled from traps off Pakleni that morning.
Tip: Request the inner courtyard specifically — the roof retracts to the stars and it runs 5°C cooler than the streetside terrace. Sommelier Luka's pairing flight (€49) of local Posip and Plavac Mali is better than any bottle you'd pick yourself. Book 2-3 days ahead in July and August; shoulder season is easier.
Open in Google Maps →Carpe Diem Bar
EntertainmentExit Giaxa and walk 4 minutes down the alley to Riva — Carpe Diem's mainland bar sits directly on the yacht quay, the crowd already thick with tanned regulars and a DJ warming up. Until midnight this is Hvar's polished pre-party; after midnight the music migrates by free shuttle boat to Carpe Diem Beach on Stipanska island and runs until 05:00. This is the stretch of coastline that earned Hvar its 'Croatian Ibiza' nickname a decade ago, and for exactly the reason you now feel walking in.
Tip: The island club charges €40 cover after 23:00; the Riva bar is free all night — choose based on whether you want to dance or just watch. Drinks on the island are €22+, so pre-game on the mainland. Pitfall: 'sunset cruise' touts along the Riva sell €30 tickets for the same Carpe Diem shuttle that is free if you buy one drink at the mainland bar — never buy a cruise ticket from a street vendor in Hvar.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around Hvar
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Hvar?
Most travelers enjoy Hvar in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Hvar?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Hvar?
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 Hvar?
A good first shortlist for Hvar includes St. Stephen's Square (Trg Svetog Stjepana), Fortica Španjola (Spanish Fortress).