
Blue Cave Tour from Split: An Honest Review (Is It Really Worth It?)
Thinking about booking a Blue Cave tour from Split? Before you spend €100+ and an entire day, here's what the tour is actually like — the incredible highs, the brutal lows, and why many travelers wish they'd chosen differently.
Admin
5 April 2026
The Blue Cave: Stunning, But There's a Catch
Let's get one thing out of the way: the Blue Cave is genuinely beautiful. When sunlight hits the underwater opening and fills the cave with that otherworldly blue glow, it's one of the most remarkable natural phenomena in the Mediterranean. We won't pretend otherwise.
But here's what the glossy Instagram photos don't tell you: getting there and back is a very different experience from the 10 minutes you spend inside. And for many travelers, the reality of the Blue Cave tour doesn't match the expectation.
We wrote this guide because we believe you deserve honest information before spending a full day and €100+ of your vacation budget. After reading this, you'll know exactly what you're signing up for — and whether the alternatives might actually give you a better day.
What the Blue Cave Tour Actually Looks Like
Here's a typical Blue Cave speedboat tour from Split, hour by hour:
7:00 AM — Early Wake-Up
Most Blue Cave tours depart between 7:00 and 8:00 AM. You need to be at the harbor before 7. If you're on vacation, that means setting an alarm, skipping a leisurely breakfast, and rushing to the port.
7:30 - 9:30 AM — The Speedboat Ride to Vis (2+ Hours)
This is where the reality sets in. The Blue Cave is on Biševo Island, near Vis — the farthest inhabited island from Split. You're looking at roughly 2 to 2.5 hours on a speedboat across open sea.
And here's the part nobody puts in the brochure:
Speedboats are rough. These aren't luxury yachts — they're fast, open RIBs. Every wave hits hard. If there's any chop (and there usually is on the open Adriatic), you're bouncing, getting splashed, and holding on. Many passengers feel seasick.
There are no bathrooms. You're on a rigid inflatable boat for over 2 hours with no toilet. For families with children, this is a real problem.
You're exposed to the elements. Sun, wind, spray. By the time you arrive, you're windburned, salty, and already tired.
9:30 - 12:00 PM — Waiting in Line at the Blue Cave
This is the part that surprises people most. The Blue Cave has a tiny entrance — only small boats (10 people max) can enter, one at a time. During peak season, there can be 50 to 100 boats waiting.
Your wait time? Anywhere from 45 minutes to 3 hours. You're sitting on the speedboat, bobbing in the waves, waiting for your turn. There's no shade, no facilities, nowhere to go. Just... waiting.
The Blue Cave Itself — 10 Minutes
When you finally enter, you get approximately 10 minutes inside the cave. The blue light is beautiful — truly spectacular. You'll take photos, marvel at the glow, and then you're ushered out for the next group.
Ten minutes. After 2+ hours of travel and up to 3 hours of waiting.
The Entry Fee — €40 Per Person
On top of the tour price (typically €80-120 per person), the Blue Cave charges a separate entry fee of approximately €40 per adult. This isn't always made clear when booking. For a family of four, that's an extra €120-160 you weren't expecting.
12:00 - 5:00 PM — Island Stops and the Return
After the cave, most tours make stops at Vis Island, Stiniva Beach, or the Green Cave. These stops are genuinely enjoyable — swimming in beautiful coves and exploring Vis Town. But you're doing all of this while tired from the morning, and facing another 2+ hour speedboat ride back to Split.
You arrive back around 5:00-6:00 PM, sunburned, exhausted, and with most of your vacation day gone.
The Math Doesn't Add Up
Let's break down what you're actually paying for:
Total time: 10-11 hours
Time on a bumpy speedboat: 4-5 hours
Time waiting in line: 1-3 hours
Time inside the Blue Cave: 10 minutes
Time actually swimming/enjoying: 2-3 hours
Total cost: €120-160 per person (tour + entry fee)
That's roughly €12-16 per minute inside the cave, plus a full day of discomfort.
Who Should Still Go
To be fair, the Blue Cave tour IS worth it for some people:
Bucket-listers who specifically came to Croatia to see the Blue Cave
Strong stomachs — people who don't get seasick and enjoy rough boat rides
Photographers who want that specific shot
Shoulder season visitors (May or September) when wait times are shorter and seas calmer
What We Recommend Instead
Most of our guests who've done both the Blue Cave tour and our Blue Lagoon & Nečujam tour tell us the same thing: "We wish we'd done the Blue Lagoon first."
Here's why:
Blue Lagoon & Nečujam Full Day Tour
Calm, comfortable ride: Šolta Island is close to Split — 30-45 minutes on calm water, no open-sea pounding
Traditional wooden boat: Not a bumpy speedboat. Real seats, shade, and yes — a bathroom
No lines, no waiting: You arrive, you swim. The lagoon is yours.
3+ hours of actual swimming time in crystal-clear turquoise water
Homemade Dalmatian lunch included
Half the price: Everything included, no surprise entry fees
Back by 5 PM with energy left to enjoy your evening in Split
The Blue Lagoon's water is arguably just as visually stunning as the Blue Cave — incredible turquoise colors, sandy bottom, warm and calm. And you can actually swim in it for hours, not just look at it for 10 minutes.
Comparison: Blue Cave vs Blue Lagoon Tour
Blue Cave TourBlue Lagoon TourTravel time4-5 hours on speedboat30-45 min calm rideComfortRough, bouncy, no bathroomWooden boat, shade, bathroomWait time45 min - 3 hoursNoneMain attraction10 min in the cave5+ hours swimmingEntry fees~€40/person extraNoneFoodBring your own or buyHomemade lunch includedPrice€120-160/person totalHalf the price, all-inclusiveSuitable forAdventurous adultsEveryone, families, childrenHow you feel afterExhausted, sunburnedRelaxed, happy, energized
What Our Guests Say
We hear this constantly from guests who did the Blue Cave tour with another operator before trying our Blue Lagoon tour:
"We spent €500 as a family on the Blue Cave and honestly regretted it. The kids were miserable on the speedboat, we waited 2 hours in the sun, and the cave was beautiful but over in minutes. The next day we did the Blue Lagoon tour and it was the highlight of our entire trip."
The Bottom Line
The Blue Cave is a natural wonder and a beautiful sight. We're not telling you it isn't. But when you factor in the cost, the comfort, the time, and the overall experience, most travelers — especially families, couples, and anyone who values relaxation — will have a significantly better day on a Blue Lagoon tour.
Your vacation days are limited. Spend them swimming in paradise, not sitting on a bouncing speedboat waiting in line.
Still Want to See the Blue Cave?
If your heart is set on the Blue Cave, here are our honest tips to make it better:
Go in May or September — shorter lines, calmer seas
Take seasickness medication the night before AND morning of
Bring cash for the entry fee (not always advertised)
Wear layers — mornings are cold on the speedboat
Lower your expectations for the cave itself — it's beautiful but brief
Book the earliest departure to minimize wait times
And when you get back? Book a trully hedonistic Blue Lagoon tour for the next day. You'll see the difference immediately.
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