REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Blue Cave | 5-Hour Morning Sea Safari
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Crystal clear water beats any postcard. This 5-hour morning sea safari is a fast, fun way to see Dubrovnik’s coastline from the best angle, then get up close to the Blue Cave glow and a run of green caves. You’ll also get time around Lokrum Island, with the option to hang there afterward and explore on your own.
I especially like that you don’t have to plan extra gear or meals in advance: snorkeling equipment, snacks, and drinks are included. The boat also keeps you close to the cave entrances, so you’re not doing a long swim just to reach the highlight. One possible drawback: the trip has a moderate physical fitness feel to it, and if you’re a hesitant swimmer, you’ll want to go in with realistic expectations about water time and waves.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Prioritize
- Speedboats, Morning Light, and Getting Close to Dubrovnik’s Coast
- The Blue Cave Swim: Why the Boat Stop Matters
- Three Green Caves: Variety Instead of One Big Show
- Kolocep Island and the Scenic Stops That Break Up the Swim Time
- Šunj Beach on Lopud: Time to Actually Relax
- Lokrum Island: Cliff Jumping, a Spectacular Finish, and the Lokrum Option
- Group Size, English-Friendly Guidance, and How the Crew Shapes the Day
- Price and Value: What $84.69 Buys You in Real Terms
- Who Should Book This Sea Safari (and Who Might Not)
- Should You Book Blue Cave | 5-Hour Morning Sea Safari?
- FAQ
- Where is the meeting point for the tour?
- What time does the 5-hour morning sea safari start?
- How long is the experience?
- Is snorkeling equipment included?
- What’s included besides snorkeling?
- Does the tour include Lokrum Island?
- What language is the tour offered in?
- How big are the groups?
- What if the weather is bad?
Key Things I’d Prioritize

- Small-group feel (up to 30): better chances for quick help and a less chaotic experience in the caves.
- Boat-close cave access: you can focus on seeing the light and formations, not on long swims.
- Snacks and drinks included: makes the stops feel more like a relaxed adventure than a barebones tour.
- Lokrum Island option: you’re not forced into one straight line—after the safari, you can explore on your own.
- Multiple cave styles: Blue Cave plus three Green Caves, each with a different mix of space and water behavior.
- Morning timing: you’re starting at 9:00 am, which often makes the water feel fresh and the day feel unhurried.
Speedboats, Morning Light, and Getting Close to Dubrovnik’s Coast

This is the kind of tour that works because it wastes very little time on the water parts. You meet near Dubrovnik’s Old Town at Ribarnica ul. 1 and head out by speedboat, which means you get movement, scenery, and sea air almost immediately.
The ride includes a panoramic loop around the Old Town coastline, with the city walls and waterline views turning into your warm-up act before the caves. It’s not just pretty scenery. From the boat, you get a clearer sense of where all the islands sit and why the cave light behaves the way it does.
A big practical win: your guide keeps the day structured around water access. Several crew members are described as high-energy and hands-on, including guides such as Mario, Petra, and Zoti, and they’re clearly used to helping people adjust to the rhythm of the boat stops.
If you get even a little seasick, know that motion happens in open water. One review described crew support when someone got seasick, which is reassuring: you’re not left on your own if your body objects to the waves.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Dubrovnik.
The Blue Cave Swim: Why the Boat Stop Matters

The Blue Cave is the star, but the real magic is how it’s staged. The boat takes you close enough that you don’t have to swim far to reach the cave entrance, and that changes the whole experience. It’s one thing to see glowing water from a distance; it’s another to be there when sunlight hits the cave interior.
Sunlight inside the cave is what creates that famous blue effect, and timing matters. A morning outing tends to give you brighter, steadier light conditions, which helps the color look strong and not washed out.
You’ll get snorkeling gear from the crew, and the cave swim comes with guidance. I like this setup because it lowers the friction for first-timers. You can focus on breathing and keeping your head in the water while the crew handles where to go and how to move safely.
If you’re not confident in open-water swimming, you can still enjoy a lot of the experience. Many cave swims are more about short, guided segments than marathon swimming. That said, the tour does include active water time, so if you’re terrified of the sea, this might be stressful.
Three Green Caves: Variety Instead of One Big Show

After the Blue Cave, you go to the Three Green Caves, and this is where the tour earns its keep beyond the one famous highlight. Each cave stop has a different feel: spacious chambers, areas that feel more like a hidden canyon, and sections that add a bit more adventure.
That variety matters because it keeps you from doing the same thing three times. Even if you’ve seen cave photos before, being inside different cave shapes changes how the water moves, how light reflects, and how you experience the sound and air.
One thing I appreciate is how guides are described as taking people by the hand in the caves. For example, Petra is mentioned for bringing a flashlight and guiding into a more challenging cave segment. That kind of detail isn’t just nice—it helps you see what you paid for, instead of feeling lost at the edge of a dark opening.
Also, there’s often a spectrum of comfort within the same group. Reviews mention that some people chose not to do certain activities (like cliff jumping) and that it was fine. That’s a good sign for balancing the day: you can still participate in most of the cave and beach elements even if you skip the higher-adrenaline moments.
Kolocep Island and the Scenic Stops That Break Up the Swim Time

Kolocep Island fits into the early part of the outing, and it works like a buffer between the city-view cruise and the more intense cave swims. It’s a chance to reorient, catch your breath, and get used to boat-and-water timing.
Think of these islands as more than “transfers.” When boats move at speed, the key is what you do during the pauses—short swims, quick snorkel moments, and scenic resets. The crew keeps the flow moving from spot to spot, but it’s not nonstop chaos.
What I’d watch for is that the pace rewards people who can handle quick changes: boat on, boat stop, jump in (or step in), then back out and on the move again. If you need a super slow, laid-back itinerary, you might find the structure a bit energetic.
Šunj Beach on Lopud: Time to Actually Relax

The middle-to-late section of the safari gives you a beach reset at Šunj Beach, a sandy stop where you can swim, sunbathe, and take a breath. After caves, this is where the day becomes more vacation and less activity checklist.
Several notes from the experience describe lunch happening at beach-area spots, and one specific name comes up: Binko/Bindo on Lopud. There’s also mention of a Sea Safari-related discount at a restaurant connected with the beach. I’d treat that as a nice-to-have rather than a promise, but it’s a useful lead if you want a meal without searching from scratch.
One practical point: bring sunscreen and something to protect you between water time. Caves are cool and shaded; beach time is direct sun. Since drinks and snacks are included, you’re covered for basic hydration, but sunscreen is still on you.
This stop is also a good place for photos that don’t look like the inside of a travel brochure. Water, sand, cliff lines, and the island mood all show up here in a way caves can’t.
Lokrum Island: Cliff Jumping, a Spectacular Finish, and the Lokrum Option

Lokrum is the closer, and it’s the right kind of finale: scenery plus a bit of adrenaline. The safari wraps with a cruise around Lokrum, and at this stage you’ll see how the whole day builds toward one more burst of fun.
Cliff jumping is part of the mix at Lokrum, and descriptions include heights around 9 meters for some jump spots. The good news is that it’s optional. If you’re not into jumping, you can stay in the safer zones and still enjoy being there—boats can anchor close to the action, and the group doesn’t force one single behavior.
Lokrum is also where the “value” story gets clearer. You’re not only doing cave swimming; you’re seeing a real island with its own feel. And you have that extra perk: the option to stay on Lokrum after the tour and explore independently. That’s a rare add-on for a 5-hour excursion, and it can turn a half-day activity into a fuller island afternoon.
So if you like flexible travel, this is a strong fit. You can ride back with the group when you want to, or stay longer if you want to wander.
Group Size, English-Friendly Guidance, and How the Crew Shapes the Day

This safari caps at 30 travelers, which matters more than it sounds. In caves and at water access points, crowding is the enemy. Smaller group sizes tend to mean quicker turnover at entrances and more chances for the guide to notice who needs extra reassurance.
The tour is offered in English, and that helps you actually understand the why behind the experience: where sunlight enters, how cave swim direction works, and what to do if you want to take it slow.
The crew vibe is one of the most praised pieces of the overall experience. Names show up repeatedly—Petra, Mario, Oliver, Marin, Romana, Ema, Laurent, Christian, Dorean, Yelena, Thomas, Nino, and others—suggesting a consistent approach. In practical terms, that’s what you care about: guides who keep people safe and moving, not just guides who stand at the front.
If you’re traveling with teens or family members, that’s also a plus. Multiple reviews describe the trip working well for teenagers, and one person highlighted that their non-swimmer still enjoyed the day by staying engaged with the boat, caves, and scenery.
Price and Value: What $84.69 Buys You in Real Terms

At $84.69 per person for about 5 hours, the price looks reasonable once you translate what’s included.
You get:
- a speedboat experience from Dubrovnik’s Old Town area
- close cave access (so you don’t spend your energy just reaching the sights)
- snorkeling gear
- snacks and drinks
When drinks and snacks are included, the time between stops doesn’t feel like a constant decision about where to buy things. That’s real value in a place like Dubrovnik where quick shore purchases can add up.
Also, the itinerary covers multiple distinct environments: city-wall coastline views, a cave circuit, a sandy beach pause, and a Lokrum finish. One “big attraction” tour can be worth it, but the best value tours give you variety inside the same half day. This one aims for that.
Planning note: this tour averages booking about 34 days in advance, which suggests demand is steady. If you’re going in high season, I’d treat it as something to reserve earlier rather than waiting for the last minute.
Who Should Book This Sea Safari (and Who Might Not)
This safari is a strong match if you want:
- to see Dubrovnik from the water without spending all day on a boat
- a cave experience with guided snorkel help
- beach time and island time in the same morning block
- a group size that doesn’t feel like a floating bus
You’ll do best if you have moderate physical fitness, since there’s getting in and out of the water and the day moves between stops. If you’re a beginner swimmer, you can still enjoy it, but you should be honest with yourself about comfort in moving water and steps into the sea.
If you hate water completely, the tour probably won’t work. This isn’t a sit-on-the-boat-and-watch-only cruise. The appeal is active sea time.
For families: older kids and teens can handle it well. One description specifically called out teenagers and that the day included swimming and cliff jumping options. For younger kids, the buoyant, adventurous vibe might be less predictable, so you’ll want to think carefully.
For solo travelers: a small-group sea safari is often a great way to feel social without feeling trapped. A solo experience note highlighted feeling welcome and supported, which is the right atmosphere for a water outing.
Should You Book Blue Cave | 5-Hour Morning Sea Safari?
If you want a morning plan that feels like real Mediterranean life—boat ride, cave light, sandy break, and a dramatic island finish—this is a great bet. The biggest reason to book is the combination of included snorkeling gear plus snacks and drinks, which keeps you focused on the sights instead of logistics. The second reason is the structure: the boat gets you close, guides are hands-on, and the pacing gives you both action and downtime.
I’d only skip it if you know you’re uncomfortable in open water or you want a fully calm, low-effort outing. If you’re okay with a bit of splashy adventure and you can handle a moderate physical day, you’ll likely come away thinking this was money well spent.
FAQ
Where is the meeting point for the tour?
The tour meets at Ribarnica ul. 1, 20000, Dubrovnik, Croatia.
What time does the 5-hour morning sea safari start?
The start time is 9:00 am.
How long is the experience?
It runs for approximately 5 hours.
Is snorkeling equipment included?
Yes. Snorkeling equipment is included.
What’s included besides snorkeling?
Snacks and drinks are included.
Does the tour include Lokrum Island?
Yes. You’ll have a ride around Lokrum Island, and you also have the option to stay on Lokrum after the tour.
What language is the tour offered in?
The tour is offered in English.
How big are the groups?
The tour/activity has a maximum of 30 travelers.
What if the weather is bad?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. Free cancellation is also available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























