REVIEW · DUBROVNIK
Dubrovnik Ghosts and Mystery Walking Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Haunted Dubrovnik · Bookable on Viator
A cemetery walk at dusk feels seriously otherworldly. This small-group evening tour takes you beyond the usual Old Town loop, pairing Dubrovnik history with local ghost legends and a lantern-lit atmosphere.
I especially love the small-group setup (up to 6 per booking) and how the guide uses the city’s quieter corners to tell stories that actually fit the place, not a generic script. I also like that it’s built as a short, focused 1 hour 40 minutes rather than a marathon.
One possible drawback: there’s moderate walking on dark, uneven-looking streets and park paths at night, so comfortable shoes matter, and you’ll want decent weather for this one.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- Why Dubrovnik Ghost Stories Work Best After Dark
- Meeting at Ul. Između tri Crkve: Lovelocks, Sea Views, and Boninovo
- Gradac Park’s Dark Route: Executions, Quarantine, and a Quiet Kind of Horror
- Pile Gate and the Forts: From Prison History to a Myth-Filled Finale
- How the Lantern Guide Changes the Whole Experience
- Price and Time: Is $35.09 Worth It?
- Route Strategy: How It Helps You Bypass Crowds
- What to Wear and Bring for a Comfortable Night Walk
- Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Dubrovnik Ghosts and Mystery Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- What time does the Dubrovnik Ghosts and Mystery Walking Tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- Where do I meet, and where does the tour end?
- Is the tour in English?
- Do I need to pay admission fees at the stops?
- Is food or drinks included?
Key points to know before you go
- Small groups, real pacing: Max 6 per booking, with overall tour size limited to 10
- Outside the Old Town walls: You’ll see parts many visitors skip, especially in the evening
- Boninovo cemetery start: Lovelocks by the sea view, plus a reputation for a haunted 16th-century palace nearby
- Gradac Park storytelling: A dark route tied to executions, an old hospital, and former quarantine grounds
- Pile area finale: Forts tied to prison history and an end at Pile square by the fountain with a nymph and satyr
- No food included: Plan to eat before or after, and save the tour for the walk and the stories
Why Dubrovnik Ghost Stories Work Best After Dark

Dubrovnik has a way of looking like a movie set even in daylight. But at night, the city turns more personal and less polished. This tour leans into that. It’s designed for an evening walk when the crowds thin out and the mood does half the work for you.
You’re not stuck in the thick crush around the main sights. Instead, the route stays away from the postcard lines and focuses on quieter areas around Old Town. That shift matters because Dubrovnik’s history is still visible outside the biggest walls and gates, if you know where to look.
You’ll also spend your time hearing legends and ghost tales that match each location. The guide’s style comes through in the reviews: people remember the lantern effect, the black-clad atmosphere, and the way she connects the past to what’s around you.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Dubrovnik.
Meeting at Ul. Između tri Crkve: Lovelocks, Sea Views, and Boninovo

The tour starts at Ul. Između tri Crkve 4 at 6:00 pm. From the first minute, you get a strong visual anchor: the meeting spot near Boninovo where the padlocks of love are hanging and the open sea stretches out nearby.
Boninovo is also where the city’s main cemetery is located. That’s not a minor detail—it sets the tone in a practical way. You’ll understand why the stories are tied to this area before you even move on, because cemeteries pull people into the theme of memory, death, and myth whether you believe in ghosts or not.
Nearby, the tour points to an intriguing 16th-century palace that has a reputation for being haunted. The way the story is framed is the point. You’re not just looking at old buildings; you’re being guided to consider who lived there, how the city functioned historically, and why certain legends stick.
This stop is also listed as ticket-free for admission, and it’s built to be short—about 30 minutes—so you don’t lose your energy before the next stretch.
Gradac Park’s Dark Route: Executions, Quarantine, and a Quiet Kind of Horror

After the cemetery area, you’ll walk into Gradac Park, and the tour leans hard into its past. The park is described as infamous for executions in older times, and that reputation changes the way you read the space at night.
You’ll also see references to the old hospital and the location where quarantine used to be. This part is especially useful if you like your spooky stories tied to real social history. Quarantine isn’t just a dramatic word from a legend. It connects to what cities had to do when sickness struck, and how Dubrovnik handled public health long before modern medicine.
The timing works too. This is another about 30 minutes stop, so the tour stays punchy. You’re constantly moving, but not rushed. And the evening pace makes the park feel like its own separate chapter from the Old Town streets.
A practical note: it’s dark, and you’ll be walking in an atmosphere built for storytelling. That’s great for mood, but go in expecting uneven footing and low visibility. Your best friend here is comfortable shoes.
Pile Gate and the Forts: From Prison History to a Myth-Filled Finale

Near the end, you shift toward the Pile area, starting with Pile Gate and exploring the suburb of Pile. This is where the tour gives you a different angle on Dubrovnik’s defenses.
You’ll pass or view the forts of St. Lawrence and Bokar, both known to have served as prisons in the past. That detail lands well because Dubrovnik is famous for its walls and fortifications, but most visitors only see the brochure version. Here, you’re guided to think about what those walls meant for real people—especially those who were confined or punished.
Then you’ll end at Pile square. The finish point is Brsalje ulica (in front of the old town at Pile), and the tour specifically highlights the fountain with a nymph and a satyr. That finale matters because it pulls you out of the darkest themes and gives you something visual and symbol-heavy to close on.
This stop is also around 30 minutes, and you’ll still have enough energy to keep exploring afterward. In other words, it’s an end point that doesn’t leave you stuck on a far edge of town with nothing nearby.
How the Lantern Guide Changes the Whole Experience

This tour’s power isn’t just the locations—it’s the delivery. In the feedback, the guide named Marija comes up again and again for storytelling. People describe her as entertaining, engaging, and clearly invested in bringing the atmosphere to life.
A few details stand out from the reviews in a way that helps you decide what to expect:
- She often appears in black and uses a flickering lantern, which boosts the spooky effect when you’re walking dark side streets.
- She’s described as doing extensive research and connecting the legend to the place you’re standing in, not just tossing scary-sounding lines.
- With a small group, you’re more likely to feel included rather than rushed through like a crowd herded from one photo spot to the next.
I think that’s the best argument for a tour like this: Dubrovnik’s history is everywhere, but it can feel like facts stacked on facts unless someone helps you link it to the city’s mood. The lantern-style storytelling does that work for you.
If you’re after a night stroll that’s more than entertainment and actually helps you “read” Dubrovnik, this guide style fits perfectly.
Price and Time: Is $35.09 Worth It?

At $35.09 per person for roughly 1 hour 40 minutes, this isn’t the cheapest thing on a Dubrovnik menu. But it also isn’t trying to be one of the big, all-day sightseeing productions.
Here’s why it can feel good value for the right person:
- You get a small-group experience rather than a giant bus-tour feeling.
- You’re seeing different parts of Dubrovnik—cemetery grounds, Gradac Park, and the Pile suburb area—areas that don’t naturally slot into the standard Old Town walking flow.
- The tour includes a local guide and a professional guide, and the stops themselves list free admission.
If your goal is to add variety to your Dubrovnik trip—especially if you’ve already done the main wall-and-stone-and-church route—this is a smart way to spend an evening. It turns downtime into a story-driven walk without requiring extra tickets or complicated logistics.
The main reason it might not be worth it for some people: if you dislike ghost stories and myths, the core value may feel mismatched. This tour is designed for legend-lovers as much as history-lovers.
Route Strategy: How It Helps You Bypass Crowds

One of the quiet advantages here is the simple fact that it’s an evening walk. Dubrovnik’s Old Town can feel packed, and your time gets eaten by crowd movement. This tour avoids that by focusing on places outside the main crush.
In practice, that means you’ll have:
- fewer stop-and-go moments
- more time to listen to stories
- a different look at the city’s edges and suburbs
The tour also has a clear structure: three major story stops, each around 30 minutes, which keeps you oriented. You’re not guessing where you’re going next, and that helps your whole experience feel smoother, especially at night.
What to Wear and Bring for a Comfortable Night Walk

This is a moderate walking tour. The best thing you can do is set yourself up for a night where you can focus on the guide, not your feet.
Wear comfortable shoes, and assume you’ll be outside after dark for long enough that your footing and path visibility matter. Since the activity requires good weather, check the forecast and plan for the fact that rain or rough conditions can change the evening.
Food and drinks are not included, so don’t count on the tour to solve your dinner plan. If you want the full effect of the night mood, you’ll probably be happiest with a meal before you meet.
Also note the language is English, and there’s a mobile ticket involved—so have your phone ready.
Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who Might Skip It)

This tour fits best if you want:
- a night activity that’s not just sitting in a bar
- ghost stories tied to specific places
- a route that shows you Dubrovnik beyond the main Old Town grid
- a small-group vibe where you can hear the guide clearly
It’s also a good choice if you like your history with human scale. Executions, quarantine, prisons—those are heavy topics, but they give context to why Dubrovnik’s buildings and fortifications exist in the first place.
You might skip it if you:
- dislike myths/ghost tales and want strictly factual sightseeing
- prefer bright daytime walking and easy-to-navigate routes
- need a mostly flat, fully accessible path (the tour only says moderate walking, not full accessibility)
For families, the tour does note that children must be accompanied by an adult, and some reviews mention kids enjoying the stories. If you’re bringing children, consider their comfort level with spooky themes and dark walking.
Should You Book the Dubrovnik Ghosts and Mystery Walking Tour?
I’d book this if you want your Dubrovnik trip to feel more like a story than a checklist. The route covers the cemetery area near Boninovo, the dark-history pockets of Gradac Park, and the prison-linked forts around Pile—then ends at Pile square with a myth-heavy fountain. That combination is exactly what makes a ghost tour worthwhile: it changes how you see a place, not just how you feel.
Choose it when you’re:
- ready for a short evening walk
- comfortable with nighttime streets and moderate walking
- into local legends and atmosphere
Skip it if you’re chasing purely classic monuments or you want a daytime plan that’s more straightforward. Otherwise, this is a fun, focused way to experience a different side of Dubrovnik—one that stays out of the biggest crowds.
FAQ
What time does the Dubrovnik Ghosts and Mystery Walking Tour start?
It starts at 6:00 pm.
How long is the tour?
The tour is about 1 hour 40 minutes.
Where do I meet, and where does the tour end?
You meet at Ul. Između tri Crkve 4, 20000 Dubrovnik, Croatia, and the tour ends near the old town at Pile (Brsalje ulica).
Is the tour in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
Do I need to pay admission fees at the stops?
Admission tickets are listed as free for the stops described on the tour.
Is food or drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.

























