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Zadar, Croatia
Zadar

Where to stay in Zadar

Two or three nights on the Poluotok peninsula keep the Sea Organ, the Roman Forum and the Kalelarga on foot; cross to Voštarnica for cheaper apartments or out to Borik if pebble-beach swimming matters more.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Zadar

For a first Zadar trip of two or three nights, stay on the old-town peninsula (Poluotok) so the Sea Organ, the Roman Forum and the Kalelarga café strip are on foot. Cross the footbridge to Voštarnica for cheaper apartments within a 15-minute walk, choose Borik if pebble-beach swimming and a pool matter more than evening strolls, and pick Diklo only if you have a hire car and want quiet self-catering near the national-park roads.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: the old-town peninsula (Poluotok).
  • Best value: Voštarnica, just across the footbridge.
  • Best atmosphere: the lanes around the Forum and Kalelarga inside the walls.
  • Best for the beach: Borik, with its pebble bays, pool hotels and family apartments.
  • Avoid filtering on Borik resort hotels if your trip is really about the old town and the Sea Organ.

Best areas to book

Old town – Poluotok (around the Forum and Kalelarga)

££ mid-range

The walled peninsula with the Roman Forum, St Donatus and the Sea Organ at the tip, and the Kalelarga (Široka ulica) café spine running its length. The cleanest first-timer pick for a two- or three-night trip on foot, but rooms cost more and the lanes off Stomorica fill with bar noise on summer nights.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, sunset at the Sea Organ

Browse hotels Old-town peninsula

Varoš (quiet old-town edge)

££ mid-range

The residential western corner of the peninsula behind the cathedral, away from the Stomorica bar lanes. You keep the on-foot access to the Forum and the waterfront but sleep on a calmer street, which suits couples and anyone arriving on an early national-park day.

Best for: Couples, light sleepers who still want to be inside the walls

Browse hotels Old-town peninsula, western end

Voštarnica

£ value

The workaday district straight across the footbridge from the old town, with cheaper apartments, local bakeries and the main bus station close by. A 10-to-15-minute walk to the Sea Organ and clearly better value than the peninsula, with easy onward buses to Krka and Plitvice.

Best for: Value, longer stays, early onward buses

Browse hotels 10-15 min walk to old town

Borik

££ mid-range

A green seaside pocket about 4km north with pebble bays, resort hotels with pools (Falkensteiner around the marina) and family apartments. The practical swimming-first base: take the Liburnija bus or a 30-minute walk to reach the old town, and accept that evenings are quieter and more resort than Dalmatian.

Best for: Beach-first stays, families, pool hotels

Browse hotels ~4km north, bus or 30-min walk

Diklo and Punta Bajlo

£ value

Further along the coast past Borik, all calm shallow water and self-catering apartments. Choose it for a slow, car-based trip built around Krka and Plitvice days rather than walking into town each evening; without a car you are tied to the bus timetable.

Best for: Self-catering, car hire, peace

Browse hotels ~6km north of the old town

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry for two or three nights, filter for the Poluotok peninsula first, then compare Voštarnica across the footbridge if old-town prices look steep. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the common trap: booking a Borik pool hotel because the photos look like a beach holiday, then spending the trip on the bus into town for the Sea Organ and Forum you actually came to see. Reverse it only if swimming, not sightseeing, is the point of the trip.

Compare Zadar old-town stays

Safety and noise

Croatia is one of Europe's safer holiday countries and GOV.UK notes crime levels are low and violent crime rare; the everyday risk is petty theft in the busiest tourist spots, so the real accommodation question in Zadar is noise. The lanes off Ulica Stomorica are the old town's bar cluster and stay loud past midnight in July and August, so book a room in Varoš or across in Voštarnica if you are a light sleeper or travelling with children, and check whether a peninsula apartment has double glazing before you commit.

Budget vs splurge

Zadar is noticeably cheaper than Split or Dubrovnik for the same Dalmatian coast, so the gap between bases is smaller here than the brochures suggest. A budget plan is a Voštarnica or Diklo apartment with the €5 Liburnija airport shuttle and self-catered breakfasts; the splurge is a boutique room or sea-view apartment inside the walls within a two-minute walk of the Forum, paying for the address and the sunset rather than the square footage. Either way you do not need a car inside the walkable old town, only for the national-park days.

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Where to stay in Zadar FAQs

Is it better to stay in Zadar old town or Borik?
Old town (Poluotok) for a first short trip, because the Sea Organ, Roman Forum and Kalelarga cafés are all on foot. Choose Borik, about 4km north, only if pebble-beach swimming and a pool hotel matter more than evening strolls, and you do not mind a bus or 30-minute walk into the centre each time.
Where is the cheapest area to stay in Zadar?
Voštarnica, the district just across the footbridge from the peninsula, has the best value: cheaper apartments and bakeries with the Sea Organ a 10-to-15-minute walk away and the main bus station close for Krka and Plitvice days. Diklo, further up the coast, is also cheap but really needs a hire car.
Do I need a car if I stay in Zadar old town?
No. The old town is a walkable peninsula and the €5 Liburnija shuttle covers the airport run. A hire car only earns its keep for the national parks — Krka about an hour away, Plitvice about 90 minutes — so collect one for those days rather than parking it by the walls for the whole trip.

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