REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Sunset Tour–A Sunset That Isn’t Stuck in Front of the Old Town
Book on Viator →Operated by Sea Fun Dubrovnik Boat Tours and Rentals · Bookable on Viator
Dubrovnik sunset looks better when you sail. I love seeing the city walls from the water and toasting with an included glass of local wine or Champagne. The one thing to think about: your departure time shifts with sundown, so double-check it when booking.
This is a private cruise built for small groups, usually couples who want the sunset without juggling crowds. At about 2 hours, you’re back on land with time to keep your evening going in Old Town.
You also get a real break from the harbor area with a stop at Lokrum Island, including time to enjoy the view. Just note that the Lokrum admission ticket is listed as not included, so plan for that if it applies.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Book This For
- Why This Dubrovnik Sunset Tour Starts at the Old Town Port
- Sailing Past Bokar and Lovrjenac: The Fortress Route That Changes the View
- Boninovo Bay: A Short Stretch With Big Relevance
- Lokrum Island: Island of Love Sunset and the Included Toast
- What You Might Get On Board: Music, Towels, and Photo Extras
- Price and Value: What $421.44 Covers for Up to 4
- Timing Tips: Start Time Shifts With Sundown
- Who This Private Cruise Is Best For
- Should You Book This Lokrum Sunset Cruise?
- FAQ
- How long is the Dubrovnik sunset cruise?
- What’s the meeting point for the tour?
- Is this tour private?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
- What time does the tour start?
- Is admission to Lokrum Island included?
- What happens if weather is poor?
Key Things I’d Book This For

- Dubrovnik’s walls, viewed from sea level: less angle, more drama, and way better photos than the promenade.
- A Lokrum Island stop timed for sunset: you’re aiming for the light, not just sitting on the water.
- Included toast (local wine or Champagne): it turns a scenic ride into a proper moment.
- Fort-and-church pass-by route: Bokar, Lovrjenac, and the Franciscan sisters bells add story as you sail.
- Captain-led stops and personality: names like Joseph, Dado, Antonio, and Josko come up for friendly, attentive guidance.
Why This Dubrovnik Sunset Tour Starts at the Old Town Port

The tour kicks off from the Old City port, which matters more than it sounds. You’re not commuting across town or wasting daylight in transit. You’re already in the right place for golden-hour timing, and you can walk to the meeting point without turning it into a whole production.
Old Town at night is the payoff. This cruise is timed to get you back on land fast, so you can transition from sea views straight into dinner, cocktails, or just wandering the streets when the light changes. If your plan is Dubrovnik by day and Dubrovnik by night, this helps you do both.
You’ll also have a simple start: a mobile ticket is part of the setup, and the tour is offered in English. Service animals are allowed, and the tour notes that most travelers can participate, so it’s not pitched as extreme activity. That said, it is still a boat—so bring a layer, and expect a bit of motion on open water.
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Dubrovnik
Sailing Past Bokar and Lovrjenac: The Fortress Route That Changes the View

Leaving the Old Town area by boat immediately changes how Dubrovnik hits you. From land, the walls are mostly a backdrop. From the sea, you see their height and thickness, and the forts make more sense in context—especially the ones perched on prominent rocks.
The cruise route passes by Fort Bokar and then by Fort Lovrjenac, described as a fortification built on a rock about 37 meters high. Seeing that kind of elevation from the water makes the engineering feel real, not just postcard material.
You also sail by the votive church and monastery of Saint Mary of Dance. This part is easy to overlook when you’re sightseeing on foot, but from the boat it becomes a moving waypoint. The tradition matters too: the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Conception greet sailors by ringing church bells, welcoming them with the idea of a peaceful sea and a safe return.
Practical upside: this “story while you sail” style keeps the cruise from feeling like dead time. You’re always traveling between points with something to notice—architecture, shoreline shapes, and how the coast curves around the harbor.
Boninovo Bay: A Short Stretch With Big Relevance
After circling past the forts and key landmarks, the route reaches Boninovo bay. The itinerary doesn’t position this as a long stop, but it’s part of the arc that gets you from Dubrovnik’s core defenses toward Lokrum Island.
In plain terms, this stretch is where the cruise starts feeling less like sightseeing and more like a ride. The water gives you room to breathe, and the shoreline starts to loosen up into island scenery. If you’re pairing this with a busy day on foot, this is the moment where you finally switch gears.
This is also where timing becomes your friend. The tour is built around sunset, so even short sailing segments are part of the “arrive at the right light” plan. If the weather is good, the water can look glassy enough to make the walls shimmer and the shoreline glow.
A small consideration: since the itinerary is sunset-driven, conditions matter. On breezy days, you’ll feel it. Bring the layer and keep your phone secure—boat decks are not the place for careless handling.
Lokrum Island: Island of Love Sunset and the Included Toast

Lokrum Island is the main event once you turn toward it. The cruise route heads there after sailing from Boninovo bay, and the highlight is a stop at one of the best spots to enjoy the sunset. That’s the heart of why this tour works: you’re not stuck watching sunset from a single, crowded angle on land.
Lokrum also earns its nickname The Island of Love, and the stop is specifically framed around soaking up the atmosphere there. You’ll have time to enjoy the views and the mood, rather than just passing by.
Here’s what’s useful for planning: the itinerary includes about 30 minutes connected with Lokrum Island, and it notes that admission ticket is not included. That doesn’t mean you can’t go—it just means the boat portion and island access don’t automatically bundle everything. If you want the smoothest experience, check your booking details for whether you’ll pay anything on arrival.
The included drink turns the stop into an event. You’ll have a glass of local wine or Champagne at sunset, which is exactly what many people want but rarely get without adding extra reservations. Also, being out on the water while the light drops means the city walls don’t just look dramatic—they become part of the changing scene.
If you’re the kind of couple that likes moments, this is where it lands. If you’re more practical, it still delivers because you’re getting views you can’t replicate from the main streets.
What You Might Get On Board: Music, Towels, and Photo Extras

This cruise is designed to feel like a private, personalized experience—not a rigid checklist. The tour notes included wine or Champagne and a short duration, but some of the best value comes from how the captain runs the time.
In the reviews connected with this operator, captains such as Dado, Joseph, Antonio, and Josko are repeatedly praised by name for being friendly and attentive. I like that you’re not just purchasing transportation; you’re buying someone to handle the “where to look” moments—especially for a sunset that’s all about angle.
A few small extras show up in reviews: people describe added touches like towels and photo help, with mentions of a GoPro being part of the experience. Music also comes up, including Bluetooth or even a boombox setup. You shouldn’t assume all add-ons are guaranteed, but if you care about that party-on-the-water feel, it’s smart to ask when you confirm.
One more perk that feels very Dubrovnik: the boat experience can feel flexible. Some reviews mention captains letting passengers drive the boat briefly, which is the kind of memory that sticks. Again, treat that as a depends-on-the-day bonus, not a promise.
Price and Value: What $421.44 Covers for Up to 4

The price listed is $421.44 per group for up to 4 people, for about 2 hours. That turns the math into something simple: you’re paying for privacy and access to a sunset view from the sea.
If you split it between two people, it can look steep compared to a standard group tour. But privacy changes the whole experience. You’re not waiting for slow walkers, and you’re not scanning for your spot in a crowded lineup. When you’re paying for a sunset, small differences in timing and positioning matter—and privacy helps.
For a group of four, the per-person cost drops quickly, and suddenly this feels like strong value. Even for two people, you’re buying something you can’t easily recreate: city-wall views from the water plus a Lokrum stop timed for sunset, plus an included toast.
Also factor in time value. You’re not spending half a day on logistics. You sail, you watch sunset, you return to Old Town fast enough to keep your evening plan intact. That “back on land quickly” feature is part of the value, not just convenience.
My practical take: if you’re celebrating something (or you just want Dubrovnik to feel a bit more special), this price is easier to justify. If you only care about a quick scenic view and you’re fine with crowds, a cheaper public option might satisfy you.
Timing Tips: Start Time Shifts With Sundown

The itinerary lists a start time of 5:00 pm, but it also warns that departure times vary based on sundown. That’s normal for sunset tours, but it’s important for your schedule.
Plan your afternoon so you’re not rushing. Dubrovnik can throw curveballs—lines, bus timing, and just the fact that you’ll want to keep wandering Old Town. Build a cushion between your hotel plans and your boat time.
Also, when the company says it’s set out from the Old City port, that’s a hint: arrive early enough to get oriented and relaxed. Sunset viewing needs calm. If you show up stressed, it will show in your photos.
Once you finish, the tour ends back at the meeting point. That means your evening plans don’t require a whole new transport plan. You can basically step out of the boat experience and into the city nightlife while the day’s momentum is still going.
Who This Private Cruise Is Best For

This is especially good for couples. The tour’s tone is intimate: a short, private sailing plan that’s built around sunset timing, Lokrum atmosphere, and an included toast. If you’re traveling as two and want something romantic that still feels easy, this fits.
It can work for small friend groups too, since the group size can go up to four. The private format matters here: your group controls the vibe. You’re not competing with strangers for the best viewing angle.
If you love history and architecture, the route gives you more than just scenery. Forts like Bokar and Lovrjenac and the tradition of the Saint Mary of Dance bells add context as you pass. You get the wow from the sea, and you get explanations that help the shapes make sense.
If you’re on a tight schedule, the short duration is a big plus. You’ll still have energy for Old Town dinner after the cruise, instead of ending your day at the waterline and calling it early.
Should You Book This Lokrum Sunset Cruise?
I’d book it if you want Dubrovnik without the usual sunset crowd problem. The combination of wall views from the sea, a Lokrum Island stop, and an included wine or Champagne toast gives you a complete sunset package in just about 2 hours.
Skip it—or consider alternatives—if you hate schedule uncertainty. The departure time varies with sundown, and the experience requires good weather. If weather is iffy and you dislike last-minute changes, you might prefer a plan that’s less dependent on conditions.
Also think about what matters most to you: if it’s the view, this is strong. If it’s a long island exploration, the Lokrum time is short (about 30 minutes), so you may want a separate day trip later.
If you do book, send one message in advance with what you care about most: best photo angle, music preferences, and whether you should plan for any Lokrum admission ticket. That one bit of prep turns a great sunset into a smooth one.
FAQ
How long is the Dubrovnik sunset cruise?
The tour is listed as about 2 hours.
What’s the meeting point for the tour?
The start (and end) is the Old Town, 20000, Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s described as a private tour/activity, with only your group participating.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes. The tour includes a mobile ticket.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is listed as 5:00 pm, but departure times vary according to sundown, so you should confirm the exact time when booking.
Is admission to Lokrum Island included?
The itinerary notes admission ticket is not included.
What happens if weather is poor?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’re offered a different date or a full refund.





























