Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops

From €220

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Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops private transfer in Croatia

Private Transfer · from 2 hours · Door-to-door private transfer

Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops

Private transfer from Zadar to Split from €220 per vehicle. Door-to-door pickup from your hotel or marina, English-speaking driver, optional stops at Ši...

FromZadar
ToSplit

Starting from

220

Private price per vehicle with pickup, luggage space and bottled water.

Private transfer overview

Private transfer story

Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops — comfort, timing and your route

Private Transfer from Zadar to Split: How It Works? Zadar and Split are the two main cities of northern and central Dalmatia separated by about 160 kilometres of coastline, a karst canyon with waterfalls, a medieval island city, and a UNESCO cathedral that most people on the highway drive past without realising it is there. On a bus, the route takes close to 3 hours with intermediate stops, departs from a terminal outside Zadar's old town, and delivers you to a bus station in Split that is a 20 minute walk or taxi ride from the ferry port and the palace. On a private transfer, your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, or marina in Zadar and drops you at your exact address in Split directly at the ferry terminal if you have an island connection waiting. The direct drive takes approximately 2 hours. But for travellers with a full day ahead of them, the route between Zadar and Split carries three stops that have almost nothing in common with each other and all of them worth the time. Šibenik is first a medieval Croatian city on a hillside above the channel, built without Roman foundations and centred on a UNESCO cathedral that required more than a hundred years and three architects to finish. Krka National Park comes next, where the river drops through a limestone canyon before spreading across a wide bowl of travertine waterfalls. Trogir is the final stop before Split a small UNESCO island city of Venetian stone architecture, 30 minutes from the ferry port, compact enough to see properly in under an hour. One stop or three the combination is confirmed at booking and managed entirely by your driver.

We give you

Time to actually experience the day

Door to door pickup in Zadar hotel, apartment, marina, or ferry port

Direct drop off in Split ferry port, palace gate, hotel, or marina

Optional stop at Šibenik halfway between the two cities, confirmed at booking

100% private vehicle, your group only, no shared rides ever

Departure time set by you not by a bus schedule

No border crossings on this route entirely within Croatia

VAT included in the price, no hidden fees

What you will experience

The story of the tour

Optional Stops on Your Way from Zadar to Split

The drive south from Zadar to Split passes through terrain that changes three times in two hours: the flat coastal plain around Zadar, the limestone hinterland rising toward the Krka canyon, and then the Dalmatian approach to Split with its white stone ridges and island views. Three stops sit along this route and each one earns its place for different reasons. Šibenik: The Only Major Dalmatian City Not Founded by Romans or Greeks Šibenik is the first significant city south of Zadar and the one that most travellers on the coastal highway overlook entirely. That is a consistent mistake. The city was founded in the early 11th century as a Croatian medieval settlement on a steep hillside above the Šibenik channel without the Roman grid that underlies Zadar, without the imperial palace that anchors Split. It grew organically, which gives it a texture that is harder to read at first glance and more interesting the longer you spend in it. The Cathedral of St James is what the city is known for and what justifies the stop completely. A UNESCO World Heritage Site constructed over more than a hundred years between 1431 and 1535, it was built using a technique with no real precedent in Croatian architecture: interlocking cut stone throughout, including the dome, assembled without brick, mortar, or supporting wooden framework. The dome panels were fitted using a method adapted from shipbuilding curved stone locked together by geometry alone. Three architects worked on it across three generations. From outside, the building looks inevitable. Once you know how it was made, it becomes something else. The 71 stone portrait faces carved around the exterior base are the detail that stays with most people longest individual faces from 15th-century Šibenik, each one different, each one specific enough to suggest a real person behind it. Above the cathedral, St Michael's Fortress has been carefully restored and offers views across the channel and the outer Kornati islands on clear days. The walk between the cathedral square and the fortress takes about 15 minutes through increasingly quiet lanes. The streets back down to the waterfront on the western side are narrow, lined with stone houses and small local restaurants, and largely free of the tourist density that fills equivalent spaces in Split or Dubrovnik. A stop in Šibenik adds approximately 90 minutes to your journey and works naturally as the first stop south of Zadar before continuing inland toward Krka. This stop can be added during the booking process. Krka Waterfalls: A Limestone Canyon, Travertine Cascades, and Wooden Boardwalks Above the River Krka National Park sits inland from Šibenik, where the Krka River carves through a karst canyon before reaching its most famous feature: Skradinski buk, a series of stepped travertine waterfalls spread across a wide natural basin. The travertine calcium carbonate deposited over thousands of years by the flowing water gives the falls their distinctive pale colour and their layered, almost architectural appearance. The river drops across seventeen distinct cascades before settling into the lower pools, and the wooden boardwalks that cross and circle the falls give you the water from above, beside, and below at various points on the walk. The park is accessible from the town of Skradin, where boats run upstream to the falls, or from the upper entrance above the canyon. Your driver will advise on the best access point based on the season, the queue situation, and how much time you have. The walk around the main waterfall area takes approximately 60 to 90 minutes at a relaxed pace. Swimming in the pools was permitted for many years and remains one of the park's most distinctive experiences when allowed the current rules vary by season and are confirmed when booking. Krka is unlike anything else on the coastal route south. After Šibenik's stone city and before Trogir's island architecture, the national park gives the day a completely different register: open sky, moving water, canyon walls, and the sound of the falls carrying across the basin. A stop at Krka waterfalls adds approximately 2 to 2.5 hours to your journey including travel to the park entrance and time inside. Entrance fees are paid at the park and are not included in the transfer price. This stop can be added during the booking process. Trogir: A Medieval Island City 30 Minutes from Split Trogir is the most compact and most immediately impressive stop on this route. The old town sits on a small island connected to the mainland by one bridge and to the island of Čiovo by another an island city of medieval Venetian stone where the streets are narrow enough that two people walking side by side have to turn to pass, and where almost every building between the 13th and 17th centuries has been preserved well enough to make the later centuries feel absent. The Cathedral of St Lawrence stands at the centre of the old town. The west portal carved by the sculptor Radovan in 1240 is among the finest pieces of Romanesque sculpture in the Adriatic, with saints and biblical scenes carved in multiple registers above the door and, at the base of the flanking columns, Adam and Eve standing on the backs of two stone lions. The detail is extraordinary at close range in a way that photographs consistently fail to capture. The Kamerlengo Fortress at the western tip of the island offers views across the channel to the mainland and the islands beyond. The waterfront promenade connecting the fortress to the main square is lined with restaurants and café terraces facing the water. In the morning, before the day trip boats arrive from Split, the old town is quiet enough to hear the sea between the buildings. A stop in Trogir adds approximately 60 to 90 minutes to your journey and works naturally as the final stop before Split close enough to the city that arriving after Trogir still leaves plenty of afternoon ahead. This stop can be added during the booking process.

Suggested itinerary

Your day, your way

Step 1

Zadar: Your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, marina, or ferry port at the agreed time. For addresses inside Zadar's pedestrianised old town, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance typically the Foša marina gate or the land gate entrance on the eastern side of the peninsula. Luggage is loaded and you depart south at your chosen time.

Step 2

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and an old town built by Croatians rather than Romans or Greeks. Allow 90 minutes to walk from the cathedral to the fortress and back through the streets to the waterfront. Halfway between Zadar and Split, and worth every minute of the stop.

Step 3

Optional stop Krka waterfalls: Skradinski buk and the travertine canyon of Krka National Park. Wooden boardwalks, stepped cascades, and canyon walls. Allow 2 to 2.5 hours including travel to the park entrance. Entrance fee paid at the park.

Step 4

Optional stop Trogir: A UNESCO medieval island city 30 minutes from Split. Radovan's portal on the Cathedral of St Lawrence, the Kamerlengo Fortress, and a waterfront at its best before the day-trip boats arrive. Allow 60 minutes.

Step 5

Split: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina. For addresses inside or near Diocletian's Palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate and can advise on the walking route to your accommodation and any onward ferry connections to Hvar, Brač, or the outer islands.

Transfer map

Approximate route

Approximate private transfer route from Zadar to Split.

Final pickup point depends on access restrictions, traffic and luggage needs.

Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops private transfer route background
1

Zadar: Your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, marina, or ferry port at the agreed time. For addresses inside Zadar's pedestrianised old town, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance typically the Foša marina gate or the land gate entrance on the eastern side of the peninsula. Luggage is loaded and you depart south at your chosen time.

2

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and an old town built by Croatians rather than Romans or Greeks. Allow 90 minutes to walk from the cathedral to the fortress and back through the streets to the waterfront. Halfway between Zadar and Split, and worth every minute of the stop.

3

Optional stop Krka waterfalls: Skradinski buk and the travertine canyon of Krka National Park. Wooden boardwalks, stepped cascades, and canyon walls. Allow 2 to 2.5 hours including travel to the park entrance. Entrance fee paid at the park.

4

Optional stop Trogir: A UNESCO medieval island city 30 minutes from Split. Radovan's portal on the Cathedral of St Lawrence, the Kamerlengo Fortress, and a waterfront at its best before the day-trip boats arrive. Allow 60 minutes.

5

Split: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina. For addresses inside or near Diocletian's Palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate and can advise on the walking route to your accommodation and any onward ferry connections to Hvar, Brač, or the outer islands.

Transfer comfort

What is included

Private transfer essentials for airport, city-to-city and national park routes.

English speaking driver: Knows Zadar's old town pickup points, the best parking near Šibenik's cathedral square, and Split's ferry port and palace gate drop-off logistics. Local knowledge at both ends and the stop in between.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Door-to-door pickup: Pickup at your exact address in Zadar hotel, apartment, marina, or ferry port. Drop-off at your exact address in Split, including the ferry terminal for island connections and addresses near Diocletian's Palace.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Transportation and fuel: All vehicle costs, route fuel, and any motorway tolls between Zadar and Split are included in the price.

Included as part of your private transfer.

A/C vehicle:Sedan for 1–3 passengers or van for 1–8 passengers, both fully air-conditioned. Comfortable for the 2 to 3.5 hour journey depending on stops. Vehicle type is selected at booking.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Route options

Good to know

Details that make private transfers easier than shared transport.

Door to door pickup in Zadar hotel, apartment, marina, or ferry port

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Direct drop off in Split ferry port, palace gate, hotel, or marina

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Optional stop at Šibenik halfway between the two cities, confirmed at booking

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

100% private vehicle, your group only, no shared rides ever

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Departure time set by you not by a bus schedule

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

No border crossings on this route entirely within Croatia

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

VAT included in the price, no hidden fees

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Choose your preferred date

Add a guide if you want a deeper experience

Enjoy flexible booking options

Get fast confirmation

FAQ

How long does the drive from Zadar to Split take?

The direct private transfer from Zadar to Split takes approximately 2 hours. Adding stops extends the journey: Šibenik adds approximately 90 minutes, Krka waterfalls add approximately 2 to 2.5 hours including travel to the park entrance, and Trogir adds 60 to 90 minutes. With all three stops, plan for a full travel day of 7 to 8 hours. A departure from Zadar between 7 and 9 in the morning is recommended for days with multiple stops.

How much does a private transfer from Zadar to Split cost?

A private transfer from Zadar to Split starts from €220 per vehicle not per person. The price includes door to door pickup, an English speaking driver, fuel, motorway tolls, and VAT. Krka National Park entrance fees are paid separately at the park. Up to 3 passengers travel in a sedan and up to 8 in a van, both at the same base price.

Is the Krka waterfalls stop worth adding to the Zadar to Split transfer?

Yes, particularly for travellers who have not visited Krka before and who have a full morning or afternoon available. Skradinski buk is one of the most visually unusual natural landscapes in Croatia: stepped travertine cascades in a wide limestone basin, accessible on wooden boardwalks that cross the river at multiple points. The combination of Šibenik before Krka and Trogir after it makes for a travel day that covers three completely different types of destination. Allow at least 90 minutes inside the park plus travel time to the entrance.

Can I visit Krka and Trogir on the same Zadar to Split transfer?

Yes. Krka works as the longer mid-journey stop and Trogir as the shorter final stop before Split. Together they add approximately 3.5 to 4 hours to the base journey. A departure from Zadar by 8 in the morning handles both stops comfortably and delivers you to Split before early evening. Adding Šibenik at the beginning makes for a full day that covers three genuinely different destinations before arriving in Split.

Is Trogir worth stopping at before Split?

Yes, and it is the stop that surprises most travellers who add it without strong expectations. Trogir is a small medieval island city where the built environment has barely changed since the 15th century. The streets are narrow, the stone is old, and the Cathedral of St Lawrence contains one of the finest Romanesque portals in the Adriatic. At 30 minutes from Split, it adds 60 to 90 minutes to the journey and delivers something that the larger city, for all its scale, cannot replicate.

Does the Zadar to Split route cross into Bosnia?

No. The route from Zadar to Split runs entirely within Croatia. No passport or ID card is required at any point on this transfer.

Where does the driver pick me up in Zadar?

Pickup is door to door from the closest accessible point to your address. For addresses inside Zadar's pedestrianised old town, which sits on a narrow peninsula, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance typically the Foša marina gate on the northwest side or the land gate on the eastern approach. For hotels outside the old town, pickup is directly at the entrance. All arranged during booking.

Where does the driver drop me off in Split?

Drop off is door to door at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina in Split. For addresses inside or adjacent to Diocletian's Palace, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible gate typically the Golden Gate on the north side or the Bronze Gate near the waterfront and advises on the walking route to your accommodation. Ferry terminal drop-off is available directly at the Split port for travellers continuing to the islands.

Can I do this transfer in reverse Split to Zadar?

Yes. The same route and the same optional stops Trogir, Krka waterfalls, and Šibenik are available in the reverse direction, Split to Zadar, at the same price. Contact the team or use the booking form to arrange the return journey or a two-way transfer at once.

What is the cancellation policy?

Cancellation is free up to 24 hours before your scheduled departure. All passengers are fully insured during the journey. For special requests, larger groups, or custom timing, contact the team directly via WhatsApp before booking.

Ready when you are

Reserve Zadar to Split Private Transfer | From €220 | Šibenik, Krka Waterfalls & Trogir Stops with flexible booking and fast confirmation.

Free cancellation up to 24 hours before departure. For special requests, larger groups or custom timing, contact us on WhatsApp.

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