Travel
7 Unforgettable Things to Do in Montenegro
A country the size of Connecticut manages to pack in fjord-like bays, a 1,700-year-old olive tree, and mountain villages where shepherds still make cheese by hand. Montenegro rewards travelers who move slowly and pay attention to the details. Here are seven experiences that stand out from a visit, whether you have three days or three weeks.
Sail Into the Bay of Kotor
The Bay of Kotor curves through limestone cliffs so steeply that some describe it as Europe’s southernmost fjord, though it’s technically a submerged river canyon. Boats leave regularly from Kotor town for trips to Our Lady of the Rocks, a manmade islet with a 15th-century church built by local sailors who dropped stones into the water for generations. The water here shifts between deep blue and jade green depending on the light.
Stop in Perast along the way, a town with just one main street and a row of baroque palaces facing the water. Climb the bell tower of St. Nicholas Church for a view over the entire bay. Late afternoon light works best for photos, when the sun catches the mountains behind the water.
Walk the Old Town Walls in Kotor
Kotor’s fortified walls climb nearly 900 meters up the hillside above the old town, ending at the Fortress of St. John. The full walk takes about an hour and a half round trip and involves roughly 1,350 steps, so bring water and start early to avoid the midday heat. The reward is a view stretching across the entire bay and the terracotta rooftops of the old town below.
Inside the walls, the old town itself is a maze of stone alleys, cat-filled squares, and small churches dating back to the 12th century. Kotor’s cats have their own small museum, a quirky nod to how many strays call the town home. Wandering without a map for an hour is often the best way to see it.
Hike Durmitor National Park
Durmitor covers roughly 39,000 hectares of the northern mountains, including 18 glacial lakes and Bobotov Kuk, a peak that tops out at 2,523 meters. Black Lake, just a short walk from the town of Žabljak, offers an easy circular trail around its shoreline that takes about two hours and works for most fitness levels.
More ambitious hikers can tackle the trail to Bobotov Kuk itself, a full-day trek with serious elevation gain. The Tara River Canyon, which cuts through the park’s edge, is the deepest canyon in Europe at over 1,300 meters in some sections. Rafting trips through the canyon run from April through October and combine whitewater sections with calm stretches where the canyon walls rise dramatically overhead.
Explore the Walled City of Budva
Budva’s old town sits on a small peninsula ringed by stone walls, with a history stretching back 2,500 years to Greek settlement. The streets inside are narrow and largely car-free, lined with seafood restaurants, small galleries, and the Church of the Holy Trinity with its striped stone facade. Budva gets busy in July and August, so visiting in late spring or early fall means quieter streets and cooler temperatures.
Just outside the old town, Mogren Beach offers a smaller, rockier alternative to Budva’s main beach strip. A short cliffside path connects Mogren I and Mogren II, two coves separated by a rock outcropping.
Taste Wine in the Crmnica Valley
Montenegro’s wine region south of Lake Skadar produces vranac, a robust red grape variety that thrives in the region’s rocky soil and Mediterranean climate. Small family wineries around Virpazar welcome visitors for tastings, often paired with cheese and prosciutto made on the same property. Many of these operations have been passed down for three or four generations.
Lake Skadar itself, the largest lake in the Balkans, borders the vineyards and adds pelican and cormorant sightings to the visit if timing works out. Boat tours across the lake pass through narrow channels lined with water lilies during the summer months.
Visit the Ostrog Monastery
Carved directly into a vertical cliff face nearly 900 meters above the valley floor, Ostrog Monastery draws Orthodox pilgrims from across the region. The upper monastery, built in the 17th century, houses the relics of Saint Basil of Ostrog and can be reached by a winding mountain road or a footpath from the lower monastery. Modest dress is expected, and scarves are available at the entrance for those who need them.
The setting alone justifies the visit. Standing at the monastery entrance and looking out over the valley below gives a sense of scale that photographs rarely capture.
Join a Local Guided Tour of the Interior
Montenegro’s interior towns and mountain villages are harder to reach independently, since public transportation thins out considerably away from the coast. Montenegro guided tours through the north often include stops in villages like Njeguši, known for smoked ham and cheese production, along with viewpoints over Kotor Bay accessible only by winding mountain roads. Local guides also tend to know which back roads offer the best light for photos and which family-run restaurants serve the most authentic food.
For travelers short on time, this kind of structured trip covers more ground than a self-driven itinerary typically allows in the same number of days.
Montenegro fits an unusual amount of variety into a small footprint. Planning even a five-day trip around two or three of these stops, rather than trying to check off all seven, leaves room to slow down and actually experience each place rather than rushing between them.