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Pula, Croatia
Pula

Istria

Pula

A world-class 1st-century Roman arena anchors this good-value Istrian short break: give it two days, sleep in the old town for ruins or on Verudela for beaches, and hire a car to reach Rovinj and Cape Kamenjak.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights, or longer as an Istria base

Airport

Pula (PUY), ~6km northeast of the centre

Airport to centre

Shuttle bus ~โ‚ฌ6 / 20 min; taxi ~โ‚ฌ20 / 10 min

Best base

Old town for sights; Verudela for beaches

In short

Pula at a glance

Pula is a short, good-value city break with a genuinely world-class Roman arena at its core: base yourself in the old town for the ruins or on the Verudela peninsula for beaches, give the city two days, and hire a car to turn it into a wider Istria trip taking in Rovinj, Brijuni and Cape Kamenjak.

The short version

  • The Arena is the headline and it lives up to it: a near-complete 1st-century amphitheatre you can walk inside for about โ‚ฌ10, not just photograph from outside.
  • Stay in the old town if the Roman sights and walkable dinners are the point; choose Verudela or Stoja if you want a beach base with a hotel pool.
  • Pula Airport is tiny and only ~6km out, so transfers are cheap and quick: a โ‚ฌ6 shuttle or a roughly โ‚ฌ20 taxi gets you in fast.
  • Two days covers the Arena, the Forum and Temple of Augustus, the Arch of the Sergii and a beach afternoon; beyond that you want day trips.
  • Hire a car: Rovinj is ~40 minutes, Brijuni's ferry port at Fazana ~15 minutes, and Cape Kamenjak ~25 minutes south, and none are easy without one.

Pulaโ€™s pitch is unusually simple for a Croatian city break: a 1st-century Roman amphitheatre, near-complete and big enough to seat 20,000, sitting right at the edge of the old town. You walk inside it, not past it, and down into the underground passages where thereโ€™s an exhibition on Roman olive-oil and wine production. The rest of the centre fills in the picture โ€” the Forum square, the columned Temple of Augustus, the Arch of the Sergii โ€” and all of it packs into a few walkable streets, so the sightseeing core is genuinely a half-day rather than a marathon.

That compactness is why Pula works best as a two- to three-night trip rather than a week parked in one hotel. Stay in the old town if the ruins and walkable dinners are the point; move out to the Verudela or Stoja peninsulas if youโ€™d rather wake up by a beach and a pool. The airport is tiny and only about 6km out, so arrivals are quick and cheap whichever you choose.

The bigger decision is whether to treat Pula as the destination or the doorway. Istriaโ€™s best bits โ€” Rovinjโ€™s old harbour about 40 minutes away, the car-free Brijuni islands reached by ferry from Fazana, the wild swimming coves of Cape Kamenjak to the south โ€” are all close but awkward without your own wheels. Hire a car and Pula becomes a base for one of the most rewarding corners of the Adriatic. The structured planning below โ€” where to stay, what the Arena actually costs, how to get in from the airport, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Pula trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Pula

Pula Arena

One of the six best-preserved Roman amphitheatres anywhere, and the only one that keeps its full outer wall and all four towers โ€” built under Augustus and finished in the 1st century AD for around 23,000 spectators. The โ‚ฌ10 adult ticket gets you onto the arena floor, up into the stands, and down into the underground galleries that once held the gladiators and now show a small exhibition on Roman Istrian wine and olive oil. Allow 45 minutes to an hour. You can see the outside for free from the street, but going in is the only way to stand on the floor and read the four towers from inside.

45 min โ‚ฌ10

Forum, Temple of Augustus and the old town

Pula's Roman core packs into a few walkable streets: the Forum, the open square that has been the city's centre for two thousand years; the columned Temple of Augustus, now a small lapidarium; and the Arch of the Sergii a short stroll away. The square itself is free to wander; the temple charges a few euros to step inside. Best done as one slow morning loop, ideally before the day-trippers and cruise crowds arrive.

A slow morning looโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Old town and centre

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The best first-timer base: you wake up among the Roman sights, the morning market and the restaurants, and the Arena is a short walk. It is not a beach area, so factor in a taxi or drive to swim.

Best for: First-timers, short city breaks, sightseeing

Verudela

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

A resort peninsula about 5km south where most of Pula's larger hotels, the aquarium and several beaches sit. Choose it if you want a pool, a sea view and an easy beach day over walking to the ruins.

Best for: Beach-first trips, families, hotel stays

Browse hotels ~5km / 10-15 min by car or bus

Stoja

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A quieter coastal residential peninsula ~3km out with a big campsite, apartments and a calmer beach feel than Verudela. Good value for families who want sea access without the resort bustle.

Best for: Families, self-catering, value beach stays

Browse hotels ~3km / 10 min by car

Fazana (for Brijuni)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A small fishing village ~15 minutes north and the ferry port for Brijuni. Stay here only if the islands and a slower harbour pace are your priority rather than Pula's sights and nightlife.

Best for: Brijuni-focused stays, quiet harbours

Browse hotels ~8km / 15 min by car

Airport to city centre

Pula airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Airport shuttle bus to Pula bus station ~20 min about โ‚ฌ6 Departs after flight arrivals; pay onboard
Taxi to the centre ~10 min usually about โ‚ฌ16-โ‚ฌ20 Metered; easy with luggage
Pre-booked private transfer ~10-15 min from about โ‚ฌ20-โ‚ฌ30 Worth it for late arrivals or onward Rovinj transfers
Hire car from the terminal ~10 min drive in from about ยฃ25-ยฃ40/day Best if you plan Istria day trips
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June, September and early October are the sweet spot: warm enough to swim by late spring and into early autumn, comfortable for walking the ruins, and well short of the July-August crowds and prices. May is the single best all-round month.

July and August are hot (often 25-30C) and busy, with Arena concerts filling the summer calendar and beach-peninsula rooms at their priciest. Winter is quiet and cheap but Pula is a seasonal flight destination, so direct UK routes thin out from November to March and many resort hotels close.

What it costs

UK return flights to Pula run roughly ยฃ40-ยฃ120 in the May-October season when booked ahead; Jet2 and Ryanair fly direct from several UK airports (Stansted, Manchester, Birmingham, Gatwick and more) in about 2h10. Pula is seasonal, so winter flights are scarce and you may route via Zagreb or Venice instead.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Pula break for one person is roughly ยฃ350-ยฃ520 before shopping: ยฃ60-ยฃ140 flights, ยฃ150-ยฃ260 hotel share, ยฃ70-ยฃ100 food and local transport, and ยฃ30-ยฃ50 for the Arena, the temple and a Brijuni or Kamenjak trip.

Pula is noticeably cheaper than Dubrovnik or Split for both food and rooms, but it is not the bargain it was a decade ago. The biggest variable is summer accommodation on the beach peninsulas, which can double in July-August.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Croatia

See the full Croatia guide

Pula FAQs

How many days do you need in Pula?
Two nights covers the city itself: the Arena, the Forum and Temple of Augustus, the Arch of the Sergii and a beach afternoon. Add a third or fourth night if you want day trips to Rovinj, Brijuni or Cape Kamenjak, which is when a hire car earns its keep.
Do you need to book Pula Arena tickets in advance?
Not usually for general admission, which is about โ‚ฌ10 on the door and rarely sells out. Book ahead only if you want a specific summer concert, as the Arena hosts a busy events programme from June to August that closes parts of the amphitheatre to day visitors.
Is Pula a good base for exploring Istria?
Yes, with a car. Rovinj is about 40 minutes by road, the Brijuni ferry port at Fazana is 15 minutes, and Cape Kamenjak is around 25 minutes south. Public transport between Istrian towns is limited, so most UK visitors hire a car for anything beyond Pula's own old town and beaches.

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