
Plitvice Lakes National Park
Plitvice Lakes National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage site of 16 terraced turquoise lakes linked by waterfalls and wooden boardwalks, is Croatia's single best inland attraction and worth a full day. Entry costs roughly $28–43 (€26–40) depending on season (highest in summer, lowest in winter), and there are several marked routes ranging from 2–3 hours to a full 6–8 hour day. It's about 2 hours from Zagreb or 3+ hours from Split or Zadar by car.
If Dubrovnik's walls are Croatia's coastal icon, Plitvice is its inland one — a genuinely otherworldly cluster of lakes so clear and so turquoise that early photos of it look photoshopped. It isn't.
What makes Plitvice special
Sixteen lakes, connected by waterfalls and separated by natural travertine dams that are still actively forming, sit inside a forested national park with wooden boardwalks running directly over and alongside the water — fish visible below your feet in places. It was one of the first sites added to UNESCO's World Heritage list back in 1979 and remains Croatia's most-visited national park by a wide margin.
Choosing a route
| Route | Duration | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Route A | 2–3 hours | Shorter visits, covers the Lower Lakes |
| Route B | 3–4 hours | A good balance of Upper and Lower Lakes |
| Route C or K | 6–8 hours | A full day covering both lake systems and more of the trail network |
The park uses a boat and a small train to move visitors between sections, both included in the entry ticket — check the current route map at the entrance, since paths occasionally close for maintenance or seasonal reasons.
What it costs by season
| Season | Adult entry (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Peak (July–August) | $40–43 / €37–40 |
| Shoulder (April–June, September–October) | $28–33 / €26–30 |
| Winter (November–March) | $11–13 / €10–12 |
Book your entry ticket online in advance and choose the earliest available time slot — the park caps daily visitor numbers, and peak-season slots (especially midday in July–August) sell out days ahead. Arriving right at opening also means far fewer people on the boardwalks for photos.
Getting there
About 2 hours by car or bus from Zagreb, making it an easy day trip or a stop on the way to the coast. From Split or Zadar it's 3+ hours each way, which makes an overnight near the park (there are hotels and guesthouses right by the entrances) a better plan than a rushed round-trip day.
When to visit
Each season looks genuinely different here: spring and early summer bring the fullest waterfalls from snowmelt; autumn brings striking foliage color around the lakes; winter can bring frozen waterfalls and far fewer visitors, though some trails close if there's ice or snow.












































