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Krka National Park, Croatia
Krka National Park

Dalmatia, Croatia

Krka National Park

Krka National Park for UK travellers: the easier, near-coast waterfall park you can reach in an hour from Split or Zadar, whether you can still swim there, and how to dodge the midday tour crush.

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

In short

Krka National Park at a glance

Krka is the waterfall park most UK day-trippers actually want โ€” closer to the coast and far easier than Plitvice, an hour from Split, Zadar or ล ibenik. The headline is Skradinski Buk, a wide travertine cascade you reach on a boardwalk loop of about 1.5โ€“2km. Two practical things to know before you go: swimming directly at Skradinski Buk has been banned since 2021, so come for the scenery and the boardwalks rather than the old postcard of bathing under the falls; and the park is genuinely small, so you can comfortably see the main waterfall in half a day and pair it with the Roski Slap falls or the monastery island of Visovac if you want more.

Krka is the waterfall park people mean when they say they want Plitvice without the drive. It sits an hour or so back from the Dalmatian coast, so you can do it as a morning out of Split, Zadar or ล ibenik and be back on a beach by mid-afternoon โ€” whereas Plitvice swallows a whole day. The set-piece is Skradinski Buk, a broad travertine cascade you walk around on a boardwalk loop of a couple of kilometres, past old watermills and turquoise pools. It is smaller than first-timers expect, which is exactly why it works as a half-day: see the main falls, maybe add the boat to the Visovac monastery island, and youโ€™re done without feeling rushed.

The mistake almost everyone makes is twofold. First, arriving with the coaches: by mid-morning the narrow boardwalks at Skradinski Buk are a slow shuffle, so the single best thing you can do is be at the gate when it opens. Second, expecting to swim โ€” bathing under the falls was banned in 2021, and the romantic old postcard no longer applies, so come for the scenery rather than a dip. Decide your entrance before you set off, too: Lozovac is the quick car gate with a free shuttle down, while Skradin is the prettier arrival by park boat up the gorge.

Towns & places in Krka National Park

The route

Krka rewards an early start far more than a long stay โ€” the boardwalks at Skradinski Buk choke up once the mid-morning coaches from Split and Zadar arrive. This is a half-day sight you bolt onto a coastal base, not a destination you sleep at. Times below are typical drives from each base; the in-park times assume you walk the main Skradinski Buk loop.

  1. Morning

    Arrive early via Skradin or Lozovac

    From Split it's about 1h15 by car to either entrance; from Zadar about 1h, from ล ibenik 20โ€“30 minutes. Aim to be at the gate when it opens โ€” by 10am the boardwalks are shoulder-to-shoulder. Coming via Skradin, you ride a free park boat (in season) up the gorge to the falls; via Lozovac you take a free shuttle bus down to the same spot.

  2. Late morning

    Skradinski Buk boardwalk loop

    The main event: a roughly 1.5โ€“2km circular boardwalk over and around the travertine pools and the big cascade, plus the old watermills and an ethno-village. Allow 1.5โ€“2 hours at a relaxed pace with photo stops. Remember swimming is no longer allowed here.

  3. Afternoon

    Boat to Visovac or Roลกki Slap (optional)

    If you've made a full day of it, take the separately-ticketed in-park boat excursion up the lake to the island monastery of Visovac, or drive on to the quieter Roลกki Slap falls 30โ€“40 minutes north. Most UK day-trippers skip these and head back to the coast for the afternoon.

  4. Evening

    Back to your coastal base

    Drive back to Split, Zadar or ล ibenik for dinner. If you're without a car, the organised day-tour coaches typically return you to the harbour by early evening.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Split

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The most popular base for a Krka day trip: a real city with a Roman core, the densest choice of organised tours and the easiest car hire. The park is about 1h15 away by car or coach, so Split works whether or not you drive. Stay just outside Diocletian's Palace walls โ€” inside is atmospheric but noisy until the small hours.

Best for: First-timers pairing Krka with a city base and island ferries

Browse hotels ~1h15 from the park

ล ibenik

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The nearest city base โ€” a handsome, under-visited Dalmatian town with a UNESCO cathedral and fortresses, only 20โ€“30 minutes from the Lozovac gate. Far quieter and better value than Split, and the obvious choice if Krka is the main reason you're here rather than an add-on.

Best for: Closest base and a calmer, cheaper coastal town

Browse hotels 20โ€“30 min from the park

Skradin

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The small riverside town at the park's northern entrance, where the free park boat departs in season. Sleeping here lets you be first on the water at opening and gives you a pretty marina-side dinner away from the crowds โ€” but it's a village, not a resort, so don't expect coastal nightlife.

Best for: Being first into the park and a quiet riverside stay

Browse hotels At the Skradin entrance

Getting around Krka National Park

You don't need a car to see Krka, but it helps. By car it's about 1h15 from Split, 1h from Zadar and 20โ€“30 minutes from ล ibenik, all on the A1 motorway and a short local road; park at Lozovac and take the free shuttle bus down, or at Skradin and ride the seasonal park boat up the gorge. Without a car, the simplest option is an organised day tour from Split or Zadar (typically โ‚ฌ40โ€“โ‚ฌ70 including transport and park entry), which removes the parking and shuttle faff. Public buses run from ล ibenik to Skradin and to Lozovac but are infrequent and awkward for a day trip. Inside the park, the free shuttle (from Lozovac) and the seasonal entrance boat (from Skradin) are included in your ticket; the Visovac and Roลกki Slap boat excursions are extra. Drive on the right.

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Krka National Park FAQs

Can you still swim in Krka National Park?
No. Swimming at Skradinski Buk, the main waterfall, has been banned since 2021 to protect the travertine. Older guides and photos showing people bathing under the falls are out of date โ€” you now come for the boardwalks and the scenery, not a swim. If swimming near falls is your priority, the rules can change, so check the official park site before you go.
Is Krka better than Plitvice?
For a coastal day trip, usually yes. Krka is an hour or so from Split, Zadar and ล ibenik, has a single headline waterfall you can see in half a day, and is far less of a slog than Plitvice, which is 2.5โ€“3h inland and really needs a full day. Plitvice is bigger and more spectacular overall, but if you're based on the Dalmatian coast and want one easy waterfall day, Krka is the practical pick.
Which Krka entrance should I use โ€” Skradin or Lozovac?
Lozovac is the main car-and-coach gate, with a large car park and a free shuttle bus down to Skradinski Buk โ€” easiest if you're driving and want minimal fuss. Skradin is the prettier, slower option: you park or stay in the riverside town and ride a free park boat up the gorge to the falls in season. Both put you at the same waterfall; pick Skradin for atmosphere and an early start, Lozovac for speed.

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