Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops

From €295

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Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops private transfer in Croatia

Private Transfer · 3 hours · Door-to-door private transfer

Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops

Private transfer from Plitvice Lakes to Split from €290 per vehicle. Door to door pickup from your hotel or park entrance, English speaking driver, opti...

FromPlitvice Lakes
ToSplit

Starting from

295

Private price per vehicle with pickup, luggage space and bottled water.

Private transfer overview

Private transfer story

Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops — comfort, timing and your route

Private Transfer from Plitvice Lakes to Split: How It Works? Most people who visit Plitvice Lakes arrive by tour bus and leave the same way back to Zagreb or down to Split on a fixed schedule, with no say in the timing and no chance to stop anywhere that was not already on the itinerary. A private transfer changes that entirely. Your driver meets you directly at your hotel, guesthouse, or the national park entrance. After a morning in the canyon among the waterfalls, the turquoise lakes, and the wooden walkways that wind through the forest, you leave when you are ready not when a bus timetable says you should. The drive from Plitvice Lakes to Split takes approximately 3 hours on the direct route. But the road south passes close to two cities that are genuinely worth stopping for. Zadar sits on a narrow Adriatic peninsula with Roman ruins, a medieval old town, and a waterfront that faces the open sea. Šibenik stands halfway between Zadar and Split, built around a UNESCO cathedral that is one of the most technically remarkable buildings on the entire Dalmatian coast. With a private transfer, both are stops you make today not destinations you add to a future trip because this one did not leave time for them.

We give you

Time to actually experience the day

Pickup directly from your hotel or the national park entrance

Optional stops at Zadar or Šibenik confirmed at booking

100% private vehicle, your group only, no shared rides

You choose the departure time not the other way around

English speaking driver with local knowledge of every stop

VAT included, no hidden fees

What you will experience

The story of the tour

Optional Stops on Your Way from Plitvice Lakes to Split

Leaving Plitvice, the landscape shifts. The dense beech and fir forests of the Lika plateau gradually open up, the terrain flattens, and then the road turns south toward the coast. Two cities sit between the national park and Split — and both of them are the kind of place that travellers who stop tend to talk about long after the trip is over. Zadar: Roman Stones, the Sea Organ, and Your First View of the Open Adriatic Zadar is where the route meets the sea, and it is one of the most quietly impressive cities on the Croatian coast. The old town sits on a narrow peninsula surrounded by water on three sides, with a layout that has barely changed since the Romans built a forum here two thousand years ago. The forum stones are still there, open to the sky in the centre of the city a column at one end, a medieval church built directly onto the ancient foundation at the other. The streets between the forum and the waterfront are narrow, mostly pedestrian, and lined with Venetian facades, Romanesque churches, and the kind of everyday city life a bakery, a fishmonger, a café with three tables on the pavement that makes Zadar feel like a real place rather than a preserved attraction. The Riva waterfront is where the city becomes something else entirely. The Sea Organ, designed by architect Nikola Bašić, uses wave energy channelled through pipes beneath the stone steps to produce a continuous, shifting sound that changes with the rhythm of the sea. Next to it, the Sun Salutation a circular solar installation set flush into the pavement collects energy during the day and releases it as a light display after dark. Alfred Hitchcock once called the Zadar sunset the most beautiful in the world. Stand on the Riva in the late afternoon and it becomes easy to understand why. A stop in Zadar adds approximately 90 minutes to your journey and works best as the first stop after leaving Plitvice arriving at the coast in the middle of the day before continuing south to Split. Šibenik: A Medieval City Defined by a Cathedral That Defies Explanation Šibenik sits almost exactly halfway between Zadar and Split and is, by some distance, the most underestimated city on the Dalmatian coast. It was not founded by Romans or Greeks it grew from a Croatian medieval settlement on a hillside above the channel, organically and slowly, without the grand imperial planning that shaped other coastal cities. That origin gives Šibenik a texture that the more famous stops sometimes lack. The Cathedral of St James is what most people come for, and it justifies every minute of the stop. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the cathedral was built entirely from interlocking cut stone no brick, no mortar in the main structure. The dome was assembled using a technique borrowed from shipbuilding, with curved stone panels fitted together without any supporting framework beneath. The project took over a hundred years and three architects to complete. The result is a building that looks, from the outside, as if it grew rather than was built. The 71 stone portrait faces carved around the exterior base are the cathedral's most memorable detail each one different, each one a real face from 15th-century Šibenik society. Above the old town, St Michael's Fortress offers panoramic views across the rooftops, the Šibenik channel, and the scattered islands of the Kornati archipelago. The streets between the fortress and the waterfront are quiet, narrow, and almost entirely free of the souvenir shops that fill similar spaces in bigger coastal cities. A stop in Šibenik adds approximately 90 minutes to your journey and works naturally as the second stop deeper into the coast, closer to Split, and a strong contrast to the Adriatic openness of Zadar. The two stops work naturally in sequence: Zadar as your first encounter with the sea after the national park, Šibenik as a slower, more intimate introduction to Dalmatian history before arriving in Split. Your driver knows the timing and can suggest the best combination based on your departure from Plitvice.

Suggested itinerary

Your day, your way

Step 1

Plitvice Lakes: Your driver meets you at your hotel, guesthouse, or the national park entrance at the agreed time. If you are finishing a morning walk in the park, pickup can be timed to match your exit from the trails just let us know your plans when you book. Luggage is loaded and you leave when you are ready.

Step 2

Optional stop Zadar: Roman forum, the world's only sea organ, and your first proper view of the open Adriatic. Allow 90 minutes to walk the old town and reach the waterfront. Works best in the middle of the day.

Step 3

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and a medieval old town that most people drive past without stopping. Allow 90 minutes. A natural second stop between Zadar and Split.

Step 4

Split: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina. For addresses inside Diocletian's Palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate and can advise on the short walking route to your accommodation and any onward ferry connections to the islands.

Transfer map

Approximate route

Approximate private transfer route from Plitvice Lakes to Split.

Final pickup point depends on access restrictions, traffic and luggage needs.

Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops private transfer route background
1

Plitvice Lakes: Your driver meets you at your hotel, guesthouse, or the national park entrance at the agreed time. If you are finishing a morning walk in the park, pickup can be timed to match your exit from the trails just let us know your plans when you book. Luggage is loaded and you leave when you are ready.

2

Optional stop Zadar: Roman forum, the world's only sea organ, and your first proper view of the open Adriatic. Allow 90 minutes to walk the old town and reach the waterfront. Works best in the middle of the day.

3

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and a medieval old town that most people drive past without stopping. Allow 90 minutes. A natural second stop between Zadar and Split.

4

Split: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina. For addresses inside Diocletian's Palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate and can advise on the short walking route to your accommodation and any onward ferry connections to the islands.

Transfer comfort

What is included

Private transfer essentials for airport, city-to-city and national park routes.

English speaking driver: Local knowledge from the national park all the way to the coast. Your driver knows Plitvice pickup logistics, the best sequence for stops, and Split drop off options near the palace.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Door-to-door pickup: Pickup at your hotel, guesthouse, or national park entrance in Plitvice. Drop off at your exact address in Split hotel lobby, apartment entrance, ferry port, or marina.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Transportation and fuel All costs related to the vehicle, route, fuel, and motorway tolls are included in the price shown. Nothing to pay on arrival.

Included as part of your private transfer.

A/C vehicle Sedan for 1–3 passengers or van for 1–8 passengers, both fully air conditioned. Vehicle type is selected during booking.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Route options

Good to know

Details that make private transfers easier than shared transport.

Pickup directly from your hotel or the national park entrance

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Optional stops at Zadar or Šibenik confirmed at booking

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

100% private vehicle, your group only, no shared rides

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

You choose the departure time not the other way around

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

English speaking driver with local knowledge of every stop

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

VAT included, no hidden fees

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Choose your preferred date

Add a guide if you want a deeper experience

Enjoy flexible booking options

Get fast confirmation

FAQ

Where exactly will the driver pick me up at Plitvice Lakes?

Pickup is door to door from the closest accessible point to your address your hotel, guesthouse, or private accommodation near the national park. If you are finishing a walk inside the park and want to be picked up at one of the park entrance gates, this can be arranged and confirmed during booking. Plitvice Lakes National Park has two main entrances

your driver will agree the exact meeting point with you in advance so there is no confusion on the morning of departure.

How long does the Plitvice Lakes to Split transfer take?

The direct drive from Plitvice Lakes to Split takes approximately 3 hours. Adding a stop at Zadar adds approximately 90 minutes. Adding Šibenik adds a further 90 minutes. Combining both stops makes for a full and rewarding travel day of around 6 hours total, depending on how long you spend in each city. A departure from Plitvice between 9 and 11 in the morning works well for travellers who want to include both.

What is the best time to leave Plitvice for Split?

It depends on what you want from the day. If you are visiting the national park in the morning and then continuing south, a departure between 11 and 13 gives you a full morning in the park and still leaves time for one stop along the coast. For both Zadar and Šibenik, aim to leave Plitvice by 9 or 10. If you want to arrive in Split in the early afternoon with no stops, any departure before noon works comfortably on the direct 3 hour route.

Is Zadar or Šibenik a better stop on this route?

They offer genuinely different experiences. Zadar is the first Adriatic city you reach heading south open, Roman, waterfront-facing, with the sea organ and a sunset that people come back for. Šibenik is smaller, quieter, and built around one of the most extraordinary cathedrals in Europe. If you have time for both, they work well together as a sequence. If you can only do one and this is your first time in Croatia, Zadar. If you have seen the main coastal cities before and want something less expected, Šibenik.

Is Šibenik worth stopping at if I am already spending time in Split?

Yes, because they are very different cities. Split is defined by Diocletian's Palace a Roman emperor's retirement complex turned living neighbourhood. Šibenik has none of that Roman foundation. It is a medieval Croatian city with a cathedral that was built stone by stone over a hundred years, and an old town that feels unhurried in a way that Split, in summer, often does not. Stopping in Šibenik adds something to the trip that Split cannot replicate.

How much does a private transfer from Plitvice Lakes to Split cost?

A private transfer from Plitvice Lakes to Split starts from €295 per vehicle not per person. The price includes door-to-door pickup from your hotel or the national park entrance, an English-speaking driver, fuel, motorway tolls, and VAT. There are no hidden fees. Up to 3 passengers travel in a sedan and up to 8 in a van. For a group of three or more, the per person cost is often comparable to individual bus connections, without the fixed timetable or the luggage stress.

Does the route from Plitvice to Split pass through any border crossings?

No. The entire route from Plitvice Lakes to Split runs within Croatia. No passport or ID card is needed at any point on this transfer, and there are no border queues to factor into your timing.

Where does the driver drop me off in Split?

Drop off is door to door at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina in Split. The area around Diocletian's Palace has pedestrian zones and access restrictions for vehicles, so for addresses inside or directly adjacent to the palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate typically the Golden Gate on the north side or the Bronze Gate near the waterfront and can advise on the short walking route to your accommodation. Ferry port and marina drop-off is also available with no additional steps.

Can I do this transfer in reverse Split to Plitvice Lakes?

Yes. The same route and the same optional stops Šibenik and Zadar are available in the reverse direction, Split to Plitvice Lakes. This is a popular option for travellers heading north toward Zagreb or Slovenia after the coast. Contact the team or use the booking form to arrange the return journey or a two way transfer at once.

What is the cancellation policy?

Cancellation is free up to 24 hours before your scheduled departure. All passengers are fully insured during the journey. For special requests, larger groups, or custom timing, contact the team directly via WhatsApp before booking.

Ready when you are

Reserve Plitvice Lakes to Split Private Transfer | From €290 | Zadar & Šibenik Stops with flexible booking and fast confirmation.

Free cancellation up to 24 hours before departure. For special requests, larger groups or custom timing, contact us on WhatsApp.

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