
Plitvice Lakes National Park Entry with Panoramic Train & Boat Ride
Plitvice Lakes National Park
From€34
36+ experiences in Split, official tickets and instant confirmation.
Iconic landmarks, museums and galleries - book entry tickets in advance to skip the line where supported.

Plitvice Lakes National Park
From€34

Krka National Park
From€24.50

Split
From€33.93

Jimmy bar
From€36

Krka
From€35

Split
From€110

Obala Hrvatskog narodnog preporoda 21
From€70

Dioklecijanova ulica 3
From€15
Guided walking tours, hop-on-hop-off buses and small-group experiences led by local guides.

Split
From€33.93

Split
From€110

Dioklecijanova ulica 3
From€15

Gray Line Croatia
From€50

Gray Line Croatia
From€31

Maruliceva 4
From€60

Gray Line
From€50

Gray Line Croatia
From€35
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Your guide to Split
Few cities in Europe wear their Roman past quite so literally. Split grew around a palace rather than the other way around: the retirement complex that the Emperor Diocletian completed around 305 AD became, over the following centuries, a city in its own right, its corridors and courtyards colonised by medieval families who simply moved into the imperial stonework. That layering of eras, Roman foundations beneath Venetian Gothic windows beneath laundry lines and cafe tables, is what gives Split its particular texture. It is a working city, Croatia's second largest, with a ferry port that connects the Dalmatian coast to the islands, and a population that has lived inside a UNESCO World Heritage Site long enough to treat it as entirely ordinary.
Diocletian's Palace is the obvious starting point for any visit, though the word palace undersells what it actually is. The complex covers roughly half of Split's old town and contains a cathedral, a baptistery, a peristyle square used for open-air concerts, and a network of underground cellars that have survived largely intact. Those cellars appear in the catalogue here as the setting for a wine tasting, which is a reasonable way to understand both the archaeology and the regional viticulture in a single sitting. Dalmatian wines, particularly the reds made from Plavac Mali grown on the Peljesac peninsula, are worth taking seriously, and tasting them beneath two-thousand-year-old vaulting adds a dimension that a conventional wine bar cannot replicate. The palace's association with the television production of Game of Thrones has also generated its own strand of guided visits, drawing on the cellars and surrounding streets as filming locations.
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Answers to the most common questions about booking experiences in Split.
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