Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik Stops

From €480

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Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik Stops private transfer in Croatia

Private Transfer · from 4 hours · Door-to-door private transfer

Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik Stops

Private transfer from Split to Zagreb from €480 per vehicle. Door to door pickup from your hotel or ferry port, English-speaking driver, optional stops...

FromSplit
ToZagreb

Starting from

480

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

Private transfer overview

Private transfer story

Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik Stops — comfort, timing and your route

Private Transfer from Split to Zagreb: How It Works? The drive from Split to Zagreb is the longest single journey most travellers make within Croatia around 480 kilometres from the Adriatic coast to the continental capital. On a direct route, it takes approximately 4 to 4.5 hours. On a private transfer with stops, it becomes the most comprehensive travel day Croatia can offer: the coast, the karst, the waterfalls, the canyon, and finally the green hills and baroque architecture of Zagreb waiting at the end. Your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, or ferry port in Split. If you are arriving from an island that morning, pickup can be timed directly to your ferry arrival. Luggage goes into the vehicle. Departure time is yours to set. The route north carries four stops that most travellers who make this journey only once in their life will want to consider. Šibenik comes first a medieval Croatian city built on a hillside above the channel, with a UNESCO cathedral that most people on the motorway drive past without realising it is there. Zadar follows the most layered city on the northern Adriatic coast, with a Roman forum still open in the city centre and a waterfront that faces the open sea. Then the route turns inland toward the karst highlands, where Rastoke sits at the confluence of two rivers with watermills and wooden houses built directly on top of cascading waterfalls. And finally, Plitvice Lakes Croatia's most visited national park, where sixteen terraced lakes descend through a forested canyon connected by travertine waterfalls and wooden boardwalks. This is the route between coastal Croatia and the capital. On a private transfer, it is also, optionally, one of the best days of the entire trip.

We give you

Time to actually experience the day

Pickup from your hotel, ferry port, marina, or apartment in Split

Optional stops at Šibenik, Zadar, Rastoke, or Plitvice Lakes any combination, confirmed at booking

Direct drop off at your hotel, apartment, or Zagreb Airport

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

Departure time set around your schedule ferry arrival, hotel checkout, or island connection

English speaking driver with local knowledge of every stop on the route

VAT included, no hidden fees

What you will experience

The story of the tour

Optional Stops on Your Way from Split to Zagreb

The route from Split to Zagreb is not a straight line through blank countryside. It passes through the full sequence of Croatian landscapes the white stone coast, the limestone hinterland, the forested karst plateau, and the river valleys of central Croatia and each of the four optional stops on this route sits at a transition point between one landscape and the next. Šibenik: The City Most People Drive Past Šibenik is the first city north of Split and the one that most travellers on the coastal highway miss entirely. It was founded in the early 11th century as a Croatian medieval settlement on a hillside above the Šibenik channel no Roman grid underneath it, no imperial palace as its foundation. It grew organically, and that origin gives it a character that feels different from the first street you walk down. The Cathedral of St James stands at the centre of the old town and is one of the most technically remarkable buildings in the Adriatic. A UNESCO World Heritage Site built over more than a hundred years between 1431 and 1535, it was constructed entirely from interlocking cut stone no brick, no mortar in the main structure. The dome was assembled using a technique borrowed from shipbuilding, with curved stone panels locked together without any wooden framework supporting them from below. The result is a building that does not look engineered. It looks grown. The 71 stone portrait faces carved around the exterior base individual portraits of real 15th-century Šibenik residents, each one different are the detail that stays with most visitors longest. Above the cathedral, St Michael's Fortress offers views across the channel and the Kornati islands. The streets between them are narrow, quiet, and unaffected by the tourist volume that fills equivalent spaces in Split or Dubrovnik. A stop in Šibenik adds approximately 90 minutes and works best as the first stop after leaving Split, before the route moves away from the coast. This stop can be added during the booking process. Zadar: A Roman Forum in the Middle of a Living City Zadar is the last major coastal city before the route turns inland, and it is one of the most underestimated in Croatia. The old town sits on a narrow peninsula with water on three sides, following a Roman grid that has been in continuous use for two thousand years. The forum stones are still there open to the sky in the city centre, not behind glass, not at the edge of town. A Roman column stands at one end. A 9th-century church built directly on the ancient foundation stands at the other. The Sea Organ on the Riva waterfront uses wave energy channelled through underwater pipes to produce a continuous, shifting sound that changes with the movement of the sea one of those things that sounds like a tourist installation until you hear it, and then becomes difficult to walk away from. The surrounding waterfront faces the open Adriatic and the chain of islands stretching north toward Zadar's archipelago, and it is one of the best places in Croatia to sit for twenty minutes and understand why people have been building cities on this coast for three thousand years. A stop in Zadar adds approximately 90 minutes and works well as the second stop after Šibenik, before the route leaves the coast and climbs inland. This stop can be added during the booking process. Rastoke: Watermills, Wooden Houses, and Waterfalls You Can Stand On Top Of Rastoke is the stop that most travellers on this route have never heard of before their driver mentions it, and the one they remember most clearly afterwards. The village sits at the confluence of the Slunjčica and Korana rivers in the hills above Karlovac, where the Slunjčica drops over a series of travertine waterfalls before joining the larger river below. The watermills and wooden houses that the village was built around over several centuries sit directly on top of these falls some of them cantilevered over the water, some with the river running visibly beneath the floorboards. The falls here are smaller and more intimate than Plitvice or Krka, and that intimacy is exactly what makes Rastoke different. You walk across bridges a metre above the cascades. You look through gaps in the stone at the water falling away beneath you. You can hear the mills working. The village is still inhabited, and the combination of working watermill machinery, wooden architecture, and continuous falling water gives Rastoke a quality that photographs almost never capture and that a 45 minute stop almost always exceeds expectations for. Rastoke sits directly on the road between the Plitvice area and Zagreb, which makes it a natural final stop before the capital or a bridge between Plitvice and the motorway north. A stop at Rastoke adds approximately 60 minutes. An entrance fee applies and is not included in the transfer price. This stop can be added during the booking process. Plitvice Lakes: Croatia's Most Famous National Park, on the Road Between the Coast and the Capital Plitvice Lakes National Park is the most visited natural attraction in Croatia and, for many travellers, the image they carry home most clearly from the entire trip. Sixteen terraced lakes descend through a forested limestone canyon, connected by waterfalls that range from narrow threads of water dropping between mossy walls to broad curtains of white water falling thirty metres into the pools below. Wooden boardwalks follow the water at lake level, crossing and recrossing the falls, running along the edges of the upper lakes through dense beech and fir forest, and occasionally passing behind the falling water close enough to feel the spray. The colour of the lakes an improbable range of turquoise, green, and blue depending on the season, the time of day, and the angle of the light comes from the mineral content of the water and the way it interacts with the limestone and the algae in the shallow areas. In spring, the snowmelt fills the upper lakes and the falls run at full volume. In summer, the forest is dense enough to keep the canyon cool even on the hottest days. In autumn, the beech trees turn the canyon walls orange and red above the same turquoise water. In winter, the falls freeze into columns of ice that hang between the rocks. A stop at Plitvice Lakes adds approximately 2 to 3 hours to your journey depending on which trails you walk. The upper lakes are broader and more open; the lower lakes are more dramatic and more photographed. A full circuit of both takes 3 to 4 hours and is better suited to a dedicated visit with an overnight stay nearby. For a transfer stop, the lower lakes circuit takes approximately 90 minutes and covers the most rewarding section of the park. Entrance fees are paid at the park and vary by season. They are not included in the transfer price. This stop can be added during the booking process. Most travellers who drive from Split to Zagreb in a single day choose one or two stops. Your driver knows the route, the timing, and the best sequence based on your departure from Split and your planned arrival in Zagreb.

Suggested itinerary

Your day, your way

Step 1

Split: Your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina at the agreed time. If you are arriving from an island that morning, pickup is timed to your ferry arrival. For addresses inside Diocletian's Palace, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance. Luggage is loaded and you depart north along the coast.

Step 2

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and an old town built on a hillside without Roman foundations. The most rewarding 60 minute stop on the northern stretch of the coast, and the one most travellers on the motorway drive past without stopping.

Step 3

Optional stop Zadar: A Roman forum still open in the city centre, a waterfront Sea Organ, and the last proper view of the open Adriatic before the route turns inland. Allow 90 minutes.

Step 4

Optional stop Plitvice Lakes: Sixteen terraced lakes, travertine waterfalls, and wooden boardwalks through a forested canyon. Croatia's most visited national park, directly on the road between the coast and Zagreb. Allow 2 to 3 hours. Entrance fee paid at the park.

Step 5

Optional stop Rastoke: A village of watermills and wooden houses built directly on top of cascading waterfalls at the confluence of two rivers. Intimate, unexpected, and almost always the stop that exceeds expectations. Allow 60 minutes. Entrance fee paid at the village.

Step 6

Zagreb: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, or Zagreb Airport. Your driver knows the city and can advise on drop off logistics for addresses in the historic upper town or the lower city centre. Airport drop off is available with timing arranged at booking.

Transfer map

Approximate route

Approximate private transfer route from Split to Zagreb.

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

Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik Stops private transfer route background
1

Split: Your driver meets you at your hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina at the agreed time. If you are arriving from an island that morning, pickup is timed to your ferry arrival. For addresses inside Diocletian's Palace, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance. Luggage is loaded and you depart north along the coast.

2

Optional stop Šibenik: The Cathedral of St James, St Michael's Fortress, and an old town built on a hillside without Roman foundations. The most rewarding 60 minute stop on the northern stretch of the coast, and the one most travellers on the motorway drive past without stopping.

3

Optional stop Zadar: A Roman forum still open in the city centre, a waterfront Sea Organ, and the last proper view of the open Adriatic before the route turns inland. Allow 90 minutes.

4

Optional stop Plitvice Lakes: Sixteen terraced lakes, travertine waterfalls, and wooden boardwalks through a forested canyon. Croatia's most visited national park, directly on the road between the coast and Zagreb. Allow 2 to 3 hours. Entrance fee paid at the park.

5

Optional stop Rastoke: A village of watermills and wooden houses built directly on top of cascading waterfalls at the confluence of two rivers. Intimate, unexpected, and almost always the stop that exceeds expectations. Allow 60 minutes. Entrance fee paid at the village.

6

Zagreb: Drop off at your hotel, apartment, or Zagreb Airport. Your driver knows the city and can advise on drop off logistics for addresses in the historic upper town or the lower city centre. Airport drop off is available with timing arranged at booking.

Transfer comfort

What is included

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

English speaking driver: Knows Split's ferry port and palace gate pickup logistics, the best seasonal entrance for Plitvice, the walking approach to Šibenik's cathedral, and Zagreb's drop off options including the airport. Route knowledge across the full length of Croatia.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Door to door pickup: Pickup at your exact address in Split hotel, apartment, ferry port, or marina. Drop-off at your exact address in Zagreb, including Zagreb Airport and hotel addresses in both the upper and lower city.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Transportation and fuel: All vehicle costs, fuel, and motorway tolls for the full Split to Zagreb route are included. The journey runs entirely within Croatia. National park entrance fees at Plitvice and Rastoke are paid at the site and are not part of the transfer price.

Included as part of your private transfer.

A/C vehicle: Sedan for 1–3 passengers or van for 1–8 passengers. Both are fully air conditioned important on a long distance summer transfer that crosses from the coast to the continental interior. Vehicle type selected at booking.

Included as part of your private transfer.

Route options

Good to know

Details that make private transfers easier than shared transport.

Pickup from your hotel, ferry port, marina, or apartment in Split

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Optional stops at Šibenik, Zadar, Rastoke, or Plitvice Lakes any combination, confirmed at booking

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Direct drop off at your hotel, apartment, or Zagreb Airport

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

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

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

Departure time set around your schedule ferry arrival, hotel checkout, or island connection

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

English speaking driver with local knowledge of every stop on the route

This option can be clarified before transfer confirmation.

VAT included, 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 Split to Zagreb take?

The direct private transfer from Split to Zagreb takes approximately 4 to 4.5 hours, covering around 480 kilometres. Adding stops extends the journey: Šibenik adds approximately 90 minutes, Zadar adds 90 minutes, Plitvice Lakes adds 2 to 3 hours depending on which trails you walk, and Rastoke adds approximately 60 minutes. With all four stops, plan for a full travel day of 10 to 12 hours. An early departure from Split between 6 and 8 in the morning is recommended for days with multiple stops.

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

A private transfer from Split to Zagreb starts from €480 per vehicle not per person. The price includes door to door pickup from your hotel, ferry port, or apartment in Split, an English speaking driver, fuel, motorway tolls, and VAT. National park entrance fees at Plitvice and Rastoke are paid at the site and are not included. Up to 3 passengers travel in a sedan and up to 8 in a van, both at the same base price. For a group of three or more, the per person cost is often lower than individual bus tickets combined with separate entrance and tour bookings.

Is a private transfer from Split to Zagreb better than the bus or train?

For most travellers, yes. The bus from Split to Zagreb takes 5 to 6 hours on a direct service, departs from a terminal outside the city centre, and arrives at the Zagreb bus station rather than your accommodation. The train is slower and less direct. Neither allows stops. A private transfer takes 4 to 4.5 hours door to door, picks you up at your exact address, handles ferry port arrivals, and allows stops at Šibenik, Zadar, Plitvice, or Rastoke without requiring separate bookings, separate vehicles, or extra days.

Is Plitvice Lakes worth stopping at on the Split to Zagreb transfer?

Yes, and for many travellers who include it as a transfer stop, Plitvice becomes one of the strongest memories of the entire trip. The lower lakes circuit takes approximately 90 minutes and covers the most dramatic section of the park: the large lower waterfall, the boardwalks crossing the cascades, and the views up the canyon from the lake level. For a longer visit with the upper lakes included, a dedicated stop of 3 to 4 hours is recommended or an overnight stay near the park before continuing to Zagreb. Both can be arranged as part of a private transfer.

What is Rastoke and is it worth stopping at?,

Rastoke is a small village at the confluence of the Slunjčica and Korana rivers, about 30 minutes south of Karlovac, where watermills and wooden houses have been built directly on top of a series of travertine waterfalls. The falls are smaller and more intimate than Plitvice or Krka you walk across bridges a metre above the water, look down through gaps in the stone at the cascades below, and hear the mills working. It sits directly on the road between Plitvice and Zagreb, adds approximately 60 minutes, and consistently exceeds the expectations of travellers who stop without strong expectations. An entrance fee applies and is paid at the village.

Can I combine Plitvice Lakes and Rastoke on the same transfer?

Yes, and it is a natural combination both are in the same inland highland area and Rastoke sits directly on the road between Plitvice and Zagreb. Visiting Plitvice first for the lower lakes circuit and then stopping at Rastoke adds approximately 3 to 4 hours to the journey. A departure from Split by 6 or 7 in the morning with Plitvice and Rastoke, without coast stops, gets you into Zagreb by early evening. Adding Šibenik or Zadar to the same day requires a very early start and is best discussed with the team before booking.

Can I stop at Zadar and Šibenik on the way to Zagreb?

Yes. Both are on the coastal section of the route before it turns inland. Šibenik adds 90 minutes as a first stop after Split, followed by Zadar for a further 90 minutes. Together they cover the two most historically rich cities on the northern Dalmatian coast before the route leaves the sea behind. Adding coast stops to inland stops on the same day requires a departure from Split between 6 and 8 in the morning. Your driver will advise on the best combination based on your available time.

Where does the driver pick me up in Split?

Pickup is door to door from the closest accessible point to your address. For addresses inside or adjacent to Diocletian's Palace, where pedestrian zones restrict vehicle access, your driver confirms the nearest accessible meeting point in advance typically at one of the main palace gates or on the Riva waterfront. For the ferry terminal, pickup is directly at the port. All agreed during booking.

Where does the driver drop me off in Zagreb?

Drop off is door to door at your hotel, apartment, or Zagreb Airport. Zagreb's upper town Gornji Grad has some access restrictions for vehicles, so for addresses in the historic hilltop area, your driver drops you at the nearest accessible point and advises on the short walking route. For airport drop off, timing is arranged based on your flight departure confirmed at booking.

Can I do this transfer in reverse Zagreb to Split?

Yes. The same route and the same optional stops Rastoke, Plitvice Lakes, Zadar, and Šibenik are available in the reverse direction, Zagreb to Split, at the same price. This is a popular option for travellers arriving into Zagreb by flight and heading south to the coast. 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 Split to Zagreb Private Transfer | From €480 | Plitvice Lakes, Rastoke, Zadar & Šibenik 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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