Driving in the Balkans 2026: An Operator's Honest Guide
You can drive in Croatia, Bosnia, and Montenegro with a standard licence from most Western countries (some need an IDP). Speed limits are uniform: 50 urban, 80 rural, 130 motorway. Croatia has the best roads (EU-funded motorways). Bosnia's main routes are paved but mountain roads are narrow. Montenegro's coast is scenic but the Kotor serpentine demands confident driving. The biggest trap is cross-border rental: most Croatian rentals cover Bosnia by default, but Montenegro needs a green card and €15–30/day surcharge. For the Dubrovnik–Mostar–Kotor circuit, a private driver handles borders, parking, mountain roads and the new EU EES biometric registration for less stress than renting — especially at 3–4 passengers where per-person cost rivals the bus.
Driving in the western Balkans is perfectly doable — main routes are paved, well-signed, scenic. But the roads are not Western Europe. Mountain passes are narrow, some rural roads are unpaved, and the cross-border rental car situation requires homework before you leave.
We’ve been running private transfers across Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro since 2018. Our drivers know which border crossing is fastest at 11am on a Saturday in July, why the Adriatic Highway backs up at Karasovići, and exactly how the Kotor Serpentine feels at sunset with a tour bus coming the other way. This is what we tell customers who ask “should we just rent a car?”
Driving licence requirements
| Country | Standard licence? | IDP needed? |
|---|---|---|
| Croatia | EU/EEA, US, UK, CA, AU — yes | Not for EU/EEA. IDP recommended for US, UK, CA, AU. |
| Bosnia | EU/EEA, US, UK, CA, AU — yes | IDP recommended but rarely asked for |
| Montenegro | EU/EEA, US, UK, CA, AU — yes | IDP recommended but rarely asked for |
International Driving Permit (IDP): technically recommended for non-EU drivers in all three countries, though in practice rarely checked. Carry one if you have it — €15–20 from your national auto club and prevents any theoretical issue.
Minimum age: 18 to drive in all three countries. Rental companies typically require age 21+ (sometimes 25+) with 1–2 years of licence history.
Speed limits
All three countries follow the same structure:
| Zone | Speed limit |
|---|---|
| Urban areas | 50 km/h |
| Rural / regional roads | 80 km/h |
| Motorways | 130 km/h |
Speed cameras are common on Croatian motorways. Bosnia and Montenegro use occasional police speed checks on main roads. Fines are payable on the spot and can be substantial — €70–200 for moderate excess.
Near-zero tolerance for drink-driving: the legal blood alcohol limit is 0.05% in Croatia and Bosnia, 0.03–0.05% in Montenegro (varies by driver category). In practice, treat it as zero — even one beer could put you over. Police checkpoints are common on Balkan main roads, especially on summer weekend nights along the Croatian coast.
Road conditions by country
Croatia — the best roads in the region
Croatia has EU-funded motorways connecting Zagreb, Split and Dubrovnik. The A1 motorway is modern, multi-lane, well-maintained. Coastal roads (the Adriatic Highway / Jadranska Magistrala) are scenic but two-lane and slow in summer traffic.
The Pelješac Bridge (opened 2022) finally bypasses the Neum corridor — meaning Dubrovnik to Split no longer requires crossing through Bosnia. Big change for self-drivers since you skip two passport checks each way. Worth knowing if you’re planning a Croatia coast road trip.
Tolls: Croatian motorways are tolled. Main A1 (Zagreb–Split–Dubrovnik direction) costs approximately €20–30 for a full-length run. Cash and card at toll plazas.
Fuel: widely available, standard European prices (~€1.50–1.70/litre).
Bosnia — main routes fine, mountain roads challenging
Bosnia’s main inter-city routes (Sarajevo–Mostar, the Dubrovnik–Mostar road) are paved and adequate. The A1 (Bosnia) motorway between Sarajevo and Mostar has significant sections open — modern, tolled, fast.
The catch: off the main routes, Bosnian roads can be:
- Narrow and winding through mountain valleys (the Neretva gorge road is spectacular but demanding)
- Poorly lit at night
- Unpaved or deteriorated in rural areas
- Slow — distances that look short on a map take longer than expected
Tolls: the Bosnian A1 motorway charges approximately €4–6 per 100 km. Cards accepted at some plazas but carry cash as a backup.
Fuel: slightly cheaper than Croatia. Stations are common on main routes but sparse in rural areas — don’t let the tank drop below quarter in the mountains.
Operator note: the M-17 between Sarajevo and Mostar runs along the Neretva river through a deep gorge. Beautiful, but the section between Konjic and Jablanica has heavy truck traffic and limited overtaking. Plan 30–45 minutes longer than Google Maps suggests in summer.
Montenegro — spectacular and demanding
Montenegro has some of Europe’s most scenic driving — the Bay of Kotor road, the serpentine above Kotor (25 hairpin turns), the coastal road to Budva. It’s beautiful. It’s also demanding.
The Kotor Serpentine climbs the mountainside in 25 numbered hairpin turns. Narrow, steep, limited guardrails, used by tour buses, rental cars and local drivers simultaneously. Confident drivers enjoy it. Nervous drivers white-knuckle it. It’s the road most often cited by our customers as the reason they switched from self-drive to a hired driver for their next trip.
Vrmac Tunnel: connects Tivat to Kotor (alternative to the bay road). Toll €2.50. The Sozina Tunnel on the Podgorica–Bar route is also €2.50.
Fuel: similar to Croatian prices. Stations available in all towns.
Rental car cross-border rules — the critical detail
This is where most tourists run into problems. Renting in Croatia and driving to Bosnia or Montenegro requires specific insurance and permissions.
Croatia → Bosnia
Most major Croatian rental companies allow Bosnia by default or for a small fee. However:
- Confirm explicitly with the rental desk that Bosnia is covered
- Get the green card — printed proof of insurance valid in Bosnia. The rental company provides it.
- Some budget companies and local renters don’t cover Bosnia at all — ask before you book
Croatia → Montenegro
More restrictive. Montenegro is not automatically covered by most Croatian rentals.
- Insurance surcharge: €15–30 per day, plus a deposit or higher excess
- Green card required — must specifically list Montenegro
- Some companies refuse Montenegro entirely — especially for one-way rentals
- Ask before booking — not after you’ve paid
One-way rentals
Renting in Croatia and dropping in Bosnia or Montenegro (or vice versa) is possible but:
- Significantly more expensive than round-trip
- Not all companies offer it
- Drop-off fee can be €100–300+
- Cross-border one-way is the hardest to arrange
Common rental failure modes
Things that go wrong for self-drivers in this region:
- Refused at the border. A budget rental contract may not cover Montenegro. Drive up to Karasovići without the right paperwork and you can be turned back — a day lost.
- Slow roadside assistance across borders. A Bosnian flat tyre on a Croatian rental can take hours to resolve. Cross-border tow service is rarely included.
- Speed camera fines weeks later. Croatian motorways photograph everything. Fines plus rental admin fees often arrive at home well after the trip.
- Late returns. Out-of-hours drop-off can mean a closed office, unclear key drop and an extra night charged.
Most rental headaches are avoidable with research. None of them happen with a private driver.
EU EES at the border — what’s new in 2026
Since April 10, 2026 the EU Entry/Exit System requires biometric registration for non-EU travellers entering the Schengen Area (Croatia and Slovenia in this region). First entry adds 5–15 minutes for a fingerprint scan and photo. Subsequent entries are faster — biometrics are stored.
If you’re driving and crossing into Croatia from Bosnia or Montenegro, factor this into your timing. On summer weekends, even the faster lanes back up. See our border crossings guide for full details and the timing tricks.
Parking
| City | Situation | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Dubrovnik | Extremely limited and expensive | €5–10/hour in old town area |
| Mostar | Manageable | €1–2/hour, free in some areas |
| Sarajevo | Moderate | €1–2/hour, parking garages available |
| Kotor | Difficult in summer | €2–5/hour, lots fill by mid-morning |
| Budva | Difficult in summer | €2–5/hour |
| Perast | Two small lots | €8/day (summer), free off-season |
All old towns (Dubrovnik, Kotor, Mostar, Budva) are car-free. You park outside the walls and walk in. In peak summer, parking is a genuine source of stress — arriving early (before 10 am) helps.
When to drive yourself vs hire a private driver
Drive yourself when:
- You’re spending 4+ days in one country with a fixed base
- You want total independence and are comfortable with mountain roads
- You’re a confident driver who enjoys driving as part of the experience
- You’re staying outside major old towns where parking isn’t an issue
Hire a private driver when:
- You’re doing a multi-country circuit (Dubrovnik → Mostar → Kotor) — the cross-border rental headache alone justifies a driver
- You want scenic stops (Počitelj, Kravica Waterfalls, the serpentine viewpoint) without navigation stress
- You’re 3–4 passengers — the per-person cost of a private transfer rivals rental + fuel + tolls + parking + insurance, and the driver knows the roads
- You want border crossings handled — the driver has documents ready and knows which crossing is fastest
- You’re arriving from a cruise ship with limited time
- You’re tired after a day of sightseeing — driving the serpentine at sunset after climbing the Kotor fortress requires focus you may not have
The cost comparison
Dubrovnik → Mostar → Kotor → Dubrovnik (3-day circuit):
| Option | Cost (2 people) | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Rental car (3 days) | Self-navigation, border paperwork, parking stress, mountain driving | |
| Private transfers | €230 (DBV→Mostar) + €230 (Mostar→Kotor via scenic route) + €180 (Kotor→DBV) = ~€640 | Door-to-door, scenic stops, borders handled, local knowledge |
| Bus | Fixed schedule, no stops, border queues, no flexibility |
The rental car looks cheaper on paper, but factor in cross-border insurance complications, parking in three difficult cities, and the stress of the serpentine — the private driver’s value becomes clear, especially at 3–4 passengers where per-person cost drops to €160–215 each for the entire circuit.
Frequently asked questions
Can I drive a rental car from Croatia to Bosnia? Yes, if the rental contract covers Bosnia and you have a green card. Most major Croatian rentals allow Bosnia — confirm at the desk before driving off.
Can I drive a rental car from Croatia to Montenegro? Possible but more restrictive. Requires additional insurance (€15–30/day) and a green card listing Montenegro. Some companies refuse. Always confirm before booking.
Do I need an International Driving Permit? Recommended for non-EU drivers but rarely checked. Carry one if you have it.
Are the roads in Bosnia safe? Main routes (Sarajevo–Mostar, Dubrovnik–Mostar) are paved and well-used. Mountain and rural roads can be narrow, winding, poorly lit. Don’t drive rural Bosnian roads at night unless you know the route.
Is the Kotor serpentine road scary? It’s 25 hairpin turns climbing a steep mountainside with limited guardrails. Confident drivers enjoy the views. If mountain roads stress you, let a private driver handle it.
How much are tolls in Croatia? The A1 motorway costs roughly €20–30 for a full-length run. Cash and cards accepted at toll plazas.
Where can I park in Kotor? Outside the old town walls — the old town is car-free. Main lots cost €2–5/hour and fill by mid-morning in summer. Arrive early.
Is fuel expensive in the Balkans? Similar to Western European prices: €1.50–1.70/litre. Bosnia is slightly cheaper than Croatia.
Does the new EU EES affect my drive across the border? Yes, on first entry into Croatia or Slovenia from a non-Schengen country (Bosnia, Montenegro, Serbia). Adds 5–15 minutes for biometric registration. Once registered, subsequent entries are faster.
Is the Pelješac Bridge tolled? No — the Pelješac Bridge is free. Big change from when Croatia–Croatia traffic had to cross through the Bosnian Neum corridor with two passport checks each way.
Do I need winter tyres? Required by law in Croatia from November 15 to April 15 on roads with winter conditions. Bosnia requires them on mountain roads in winter. Montenegro recommends them. Most rental companies fit them automatically in winter.
What’s the most dangerous road I’d encounter? The Kotor Serpentine has the worst reputation but is short. The Neretva gorge road (Sarajevo–Mostar M-17) is more genuinely demanding for distance. Rural Bosnian mountain roads at night are the highest actual risk — avoid if possible.
Skip the rental — book a driver
A private driver handles borders, parking, mountain roads and local knowledge so you can watch the scenery instead of the road.
Popular routes:
- Dubrovnik to Mostar private transfer — 1 border, scenic stops included
- Dubrovnik to Kotor private transfer — one Croatia–Montenegro border, Perast stop
- Split to Mostar private transfer
- Hire a private driver by the hour — flexible day trips
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