REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Private City Wall tour of Dubrovnik
Book on Viator →Operated by ASTRA tours - Dubrovnik · Bookable on Viator
Dubrovnik’s walls give you a whole new angle. This private City Wall tour is all about panoramic views over the Adriatic and Old Town rooftops, plus clear stories about how the defenses worked—down to key forts like Minčeta and Lovrjenac. I also like that the guide doesn’t treat history like a museum label; you get context about daily life and the 1991 Homeland War that shaped modern Croatia.
The pacing is easy to manage, and the experience feels tailored because it’s private—your group only. You’ll get a licensed local guide who keeps the walk moving at a comfortable speed, with time for questions, photos, and a drink stop along the way.
One practical consideration: the wall entrance fee is not included (40€ adult), so your final cost is higher than the base price, and the tour depends on good weather.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About
- Why the Dubrovnik City Walls Tour Is More Than a Pretty Walk
- What the Route Teaches: Minčeta and Lovrjenac Fortress
- The Views: Adriatic Sea, Rooftops, and Why Timing Matters
- The 1991 Homeland War Context You Won’t Get From a Standard Tour
- Photo Time and the Drink Stop: Where This Tour Feels Easy
- Price and Real Cost: The $96.12 Starter Price Isn’t the Whole Number
- Meeting Point at Amerling Fountain, Ending on Stradun
- When to Go: Good Weather and Moderate Walking Fitness
- Who This Private City Wall Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This Private City Walls Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Private City Wall tour in Dubrovnik?
- What is included in the tour price?
- Is the City Wall entrance fee included?
- Where do we meet and where does the tour end?
- Is this tour private?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- What happens if the weather is bad?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

- Private, small-group feel: your group only, which makes it easier to go at your pace and ask real questions.
- Fortress-to-fortress viewpoints: you’ll be shown where Minčeta Fortress and Lovrjenac Fortress fit into the city’s defensive story.
- Photo time built in: you’ll stop long enough to take pictures from the best wall angles.
- Modern history included: the walk connects medieval defenses to the Homeland War in Croatia (1991).
- Practical comfort: the route is described as doable with moderate fitness, and there’s time for a drink stop.
Why the Dubrovnik City Walls Tour Is More Than a Pretty Walk
Dubrovnik’s Old Town is famous for postcard views. The City Walls take that idea and make it practical. From up top, you can actually see how the fortifications relate to the sea approach, the narrow streets below, and the way the city clings to the coastline.
I especially like that this tour mixes two things people often keep separate: defense history and viewing angles. The guide points out specific landmarks as you walk, so the scenery doesn’t feel like random sightseeing. It’s more like a guided map in motion.
This is also a good choice if you’ve already wandered Dubrovnik’s streets. Seeing the Old Town from above gives you quick orientation: you start to understand what you’ve been walking through, not just what you’ve passed by.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Dubrovnik
What the Route Teaches: Minčeta and Lovrjenac Fortress

The City Walls aren’t just one continuous wall. They’re a system, and this tour helps you spot that idea by focusing on major defensive points.
You’ll learn about Minčeta Fortress, and why it mattered for protection. You’ll also hear about Lovrjenac Fortress, which once protected Dubrovnik from invaders. Even if you don’t read a lot of military history, the guide’s explanations are tied directly to what you can see around you—where threats came from, and how the city planned to respond.
What you gain here is perspective. From the top walkways, you’ll notice that the fortifications were built for surveillance and pressure points, not for comfort. That changes how you interpret the walls once you’re on them: it stops being just stone and becomes a working defense concept.
The Views: Adriatic Sea, Rooftops, and Why Timing Matters

If you’re choosing a City Walls tour, you’re choosing the views. This one focuses on the big ones: the Adriatic Sea stretching out, Dubrovnik’s terracotta rooftops, and the greenery around the city.
Here’s the real value: viewpoints like these are never equally impressive at every hour. Even without obsessing over exact timing, plan for the fact that your best photos happen when the light and weather cooperate. Since the tour is described as requiring good weather, you’ll want to be flexible if conditions are iffy.
Also, the wall walk gives you perspective that street-level sightseeing can’t. You’ll see the rooftops like a pattern—then you’ll spot where the forts sit in relation to the sea. It clicks fast.
The 1991 Homeland War Context You Won’t Get From a Standard Tour

Many wall walks stick to medieval facts only. This tour adds a harder chapter: the Homeland War in Croatia (1991).
That matters because Dubrovnik’s story doesn’t end in the Middle Ages. The city’s defenses, identity, and sense of place were influenced by much more recent events too. With a private guide, you can ask the follow-up questions that pop up as you’re thinking about why the walls look the way they do—and what people later had to deal with.
You’ll probably notice a shift in your own understanding mid-walk. The walls stop feeling like background and start feeling like continuity: built to protect, and later shaped by the need to survive changing threats.
Photo Time and the Drink Stop: Where This Tour Feels Easy

This tour specifically includes time for photos. That sounds basic until you realize a lot of walking tours rush you through the best angles. Here, you get actual stopping points on the wall—enough to capture the sweeping views without doing the whole thing through a half-open door of your smartphone camera.
There’s also time for a drink stop. It’s not just a perk. It helps you keep the pace comfortable, especially if you’re traveling with different walking speeds or you want breaks for photos and questions.
From the review-style feedback, the walk also runs at a comfortable pace (around two to two and a half hours for many groups). That lines up with the tour’s stated duration of about 1 to 2 hours, and suggests you shouldn’t feel like you’re being pushed through a tight script.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Dubrovnik
Price and Real Cost: The $96.12 Starter Price Isn’t the Whole Number

The base price is $96.12 per person, and that’s for a private tour with a professional licensed local guide, in English, typically lasting about 1 to 2 hours.
But here’s the math you should plan around: the City Wall entrance fee is not included. It’s listed as 40€ adult. You can buy a Dubrovnik Pass online, or you can pay at the entrance.
So the value question becomes: do you want a guide-led experience with stories and viewpoints, or do you just want the walls on your own time? If you’re going once, want history plus modern context, and like photo breaks without rushing, the guide component is usually worth it. If you’re watching costs closely, the entrance fee makes it an extra line item you’ll feel.
One more point: the info lists an air-conditioned vehicle drop off as not included. Since the tour ends on the main street Stradun (or potentially on the City Walls), you may want to plan your return on foot or by public transport.
Meeting Point at Amerling Fountain, Ending on Stradun

You start at Amerling Fountain, Ul. Svetog Đurđa, 20000, Dubrovnik. The tour ends on Stradun, 20000, which is the main street in Dubrovnik’s Old Town. The tour can also end on the City Walls, depending on how it’s arranged.
This matters because it affects your next move. If you finish on Stradun, you’ll be right in the thick of Old Town walking—easy for lunch, coffee, and more wandering. If you finish higher up on the walls, you’ll have a simpler path to keep exploring from that elevation, but you’ll want to think about getting down comfortably.
The meeting point is also described as near public transportation, so you shouldn’t feel boxed in if you’re arriving from elsewhere in town.
When to Go: Good Weather and Moderate Walking Fitness

The tour requires good weather. If poor weather cancels it, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
That’s not just small talk. City Walls are outdoors, and visibility affects the whole experience. If the day is cloudy or rainy, you’ll lose some of the panoramic impact. If you can choose between days, aim for when you expect clearer skies.
Fitness-wise, it’s listed for travelers with moderate physical fitness. You don’t need to be an athlete, but you should be comfortable with a sustained walk and uneven stone surfaces typical of historic areas.
Who This Private City Wall Tour Is Best For
This is the kind of tour that works well when you want both education and scenery, without a chaotic crowd.
It’s a strong match for:
- Couples or friends who want a private pace and photo time.
- Travelers who enjoy history but want it explained in plain language, tied to what you’re seeing.
- People who want more than medieval facts, thanks to the inclusion of 1991 Homeland War context.
- Anyone who’s already seen Dubrovnik’s Old Town streets and wants that big-picture view from above.
It may feel less ideal if you only want a quick self-guided ticket and don’t care about the guide’s stories. It also isn’t a great pick if you’re dealing with major mobility limits, since it’s still a walking experience on historic terrain.
Should You Book This Private City Walls Tour?
Yes, if you want Dubrovnik’s walls with real explanation, not just views. The combination of fortress landmarks (Minčeta and Lovrjenac), strong perspective over the Adriatic and terracotta rooftops, and the guide’s inclusion of the 1991 Homeland War context makes this a more meaningful use of time than a simple ticket-only visit.
I’d book it especially if:
- you care about photo opportunities with time to stop,
- you prefer a private format so your questions don’t get squeezed,
- you’re okay planning for the 40€ entrance fee on top of the $96.12 guide price.
If you’re cost-first, double-check whether you already have a Dubrovnik Pass, because the entrance fee is where your total will rise quickly.
FAQ
How long is the Private City Wall tour in Dubrovnik?
It lasts about 1 to 2 hours, and it’s described as a comfortable paced walk. Time for photos and a drink stop is included in the experience flow.
What is included in the tour price?
The tour includes a professional licensed local tour guide.
Is the City Wall entrance fee included?
No. The City Wall entrance fee is not included and is listed as 40€ for an adult. You can also buy a Dubrovnik Pass online or pay at the entrance.
Where do we meet and where does the tour end?
You meet at Amerling Fountain (Ul. Svetog Đurđa, 20000, Dubrovnik) and the tour ends on Stradun (20000). It can also end on the City Walls.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity, and only your group participates.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
What happens if the weather is bad?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.


































