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Brač Island, Croatia
Brač Island

Central Dalmatia (Adriatic islands)

Brač Island

The closest big island to Split, decoded for UK travellers: the Zlatni Rat beach that everyone photographs, where to actually base yourself, the real ferry options, and what a beach week costs in euros.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Brač Island at a glance

Brač is the nearest of the big Dalmatian islands to Split and the easiest island week a UK first-timer can do: a 50-minute car ferry from Split lands at Supetar, and the island's headline sight, the Zlatni Rat shingle spit at Bol, is one of the most photographed beaches in Croatia. The mistake people make is treating Brač as a day trip from Split — you arrive at Supetar, find Zlatni Rat is an hour's drive south at Bol, and spend the day on buses. Base in Bol for the beaches, or Supetar if you want the simplest ferry in and out, and give it three or four nights rather than a rushed afternoon.

Brač is the island most Split day-trippers half-see and never quite enjoy. It’s the closest of the big Dalmatian islands to the city, and the easiest one to reach — but the famous beach, the curling Zlatni Rat spit, is right down at Bol on the south coast, while the car ferry from Split lands at Supetar in the north. People arrive, realise the postcard is an hour’s drive away, and burn the day on buses and the return crossing. The fix is simple: stop treating it as an outing and stay the night.

Base yourself in Bol if you’re here for the beaches and the windsurfing, or in Supetar if you just want the path of least resistance on and off the island. Either way, give it three or four nights. Walk out to Zlatni Rat early, before the maestral wind and the boat crowds arrive; pack water shoes, because the whole coast is shingle and rock rather than sand; and if you’ve a car, climb Vidova Gora for the view back down over that golden horn of pebbles. Done slowly, Brač is the gentlest island week in Dalmatia — done as a day trip, it’s mostly ferries.

The route

Brač pairs naturally with Split: spend a few days in the city using it as your ferry hub, then cross to the island and stay put rather than day-tripping. These are real ferry and drive times — the catch on Brač is that the ferry port and the famous beach are at opposite ends of the island.

  1. Days 1–2

    Split first

    Use Split as the launchpad: wander Diocletian's Palace and book your onward crossing. If you're taking a car across, the Split–Supetar car ferry needs to be reserved or queued for in peak summer, as foot passengers always get on but cars can be left behind.

  2. Day 2–3

    Cross to Brač and settle in Bol

    Take the direct Krilo/Jadrolinija catamaran to Bol (about 1 hour) if you're on foot, or the car ferry to Supetar (about 50 minutes) then drive the 40km south to Bol (around an hour). Bol's old harbour is the nicest base on the island.

  3. Days 3–4

    Zlatni Rat and the coast

    Walk or take the little beach train the 2km west from Bol to Zlatni Rat in the morning before the wind and crowds build. Hire a kayak or a small boat to reach the quieter coves towards Murvica, away from the main spit.

  4. Days 4–5

    Inland and the north

    If you have a car, drive up to Vidova Gora (778m, the highest point on any Adriatic island) for the view down over Zlatni Rat, then loop through the stone-carving village of Pučišća and old Škrip before catching the ferry home from Supetar.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Bol

££ mid-range

The beach base and the reason most people come — a pretty stone harbour town with Zlatni Rat a short walk or beach-train ride to the west. It's the liveliest and priciest spot on the island, and the afternoon wind makes it a windsurf hub, so light sleepers should pick a room back from the seafront bars. Book ahead for July and August.

Best for: Beach days, watersports and walkable harbour evenings

Browse hotels ~40km / 1h south of Supetar ferry port

Supetar

£ value

The northern ferry-and-supermarket town where the Split car ferry docks — practical, cheaper than Bol and handy for a short stay or arrival night, with a decent town beach of its own. Less postcard-pretty than Bol but the easiest place to get in and out of the island, especially with a car.

Best for: Easy ferry access, families and budget-conscious stays

Browse hotels Split car-ferry arrival point

Milna

££ mid-range

A sheltered yachting harbour on the west coast, quieter than both Bol and Supetar and a favourite with sailors for its protected bay. A calmer, more local base if you want a working fishing village over a resort feel — but you'll want a car here, as bus links are thin.

Best for: Sailors and travellers wanting a quiet, local base

Browse hotels ~20km / 30min west of Supetar

Getting around Brač Island

Brač runs on two ferries and a thin bus network. The Jadrolinija car ferry from Split to Supetar (about 50 minutes, roughly €5–6 per foot passenger and more for a car) is the workhorse and runs hourly-ish in high summer; the Krilo and Jadrolinija passenger catamarans go straight to Bol in about an hour but take no cars. Once on the island, local buses link Supetar with Bol and Milna but run only a handful of times a day and are timed loosely around the ferries, so a beach week in Bol works fine on foot but exploring inland really wants a hire car. Roads are good but narrow and twisty over the central ridge, and the climb to Vidova Gora is a steep single-track lane. Drive on the right.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

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Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo
See the full Croatia guide

Brač Island FAQs

How do you get from Split to Brač?
Two ways. The Jadrolinija car ferry from Split to Supetar takes about 50 minutes, runs roughly hourly in summer and carries cars (reserve or queue early in peak season). If you're on foot and heading for the beaches, the Krilo or Jadrolinija passenger catamaran goes straight to Bol in about an hour. Foot passengers always get on; cars can be left behind on a busy summer crossing.
Is Zlatni Rat a sandy beach?
No — Zlatni Rat is fine white shingle and pebbles, not sand, like almost every Brač beach. Its famous tail-shaped spit shifts and curves with the wind and current, which is why it photographs so well. Bring water shoes for getting in and out over the pebbles, and a windbreak or beach mat, as the afternoon maestral wind picks up and the loungers and parasols cost extra.
How long should you stay on Brač?
Three to four nights is the sweet spot — long enough to enjoy Bol and Zlatni Rat without rushing, see Vidova Gora and the inland villages, and slow down once the day-trip boats leave. A single day trip from Split is the common mistake: you lose hours crossing and shuttling between the Supetar ferry and the Bol beach at the far end of the island.

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