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Kotor Fortress Hike 2026: The Complete San Giovanni Guide (1,350 Steps)

Planning Your Trip By Armel Sukovic 11 min read Published April 16, 2026
Quick answer

The San Giovanni Fortress hike in Kotor is 1,350 stone steps climbing 280 metres above the old town. It takes 45–60 minutes up and 30 minutes down. Entry is €15 cash only in 2026 (children under 12 free). Start at 8 am when the gate opens — the upper two-thirds have zero shade and by 10 am in summer the path is dangerously hot. The view from the top is the single photograph that represents Montenegro: the entire Bay of Kotor spread out below, cruise ships looking tiny, Perast visible in the distance, and the Adriatic beyond the bay's mouth. An alternative free route — the Ladder of Kotor — climbs 72 switchbacks on a gravel path outside the walls, but it's a longer and harder hike (940m elevation, 3–6 hours return). If you can't or don't want to climb, the new Kotor cable car (opened 2025, €20 return) reaches the same altitude in 11 minutes.

The hike to San Giovanni Fortress is the #1 thing to do in Kotor and one of the best viewpoints in the Balkans. The ruined Venetian fortress sits at 280 metres above the old town, connected by a path of 1,350 stone steps that zigzags up the mountainside following the old defensive walls. The view from the top — the entire Bay of Kotor spread out below you, the old town shrunk to a stone model, the mountains framing everything — is the single image most people associate with Montenegro.

It’s also the hike that sends the most unprepared tourists to the hospital every summer. The upper two-thirds have zero shade, the stone steps reflect heat like an oven, and the path is genuinely dangerous after 10 am in July and August. The difference between a magical experience and a miserable one is entirely about when you start. This guide covers the path, the timing, the alternatives, and everything you need to make the right call.

The essential facts

DetailInfo
Steps1,350 stone steps
Elevation gain280 metres
Time up45–60 minutes
Time down25–30 minutes
Total with photo stops90 minutes to 2 hours
Entry fee (2026)€15 cash only
ChildrenUnder 12 free
Gate opens8:00 am (peak season)
DifficultyModerate — manageable for most reasonably fit adults
Best time8:00 am or after 4:00 pm
Water needed1 litre minimum per person

The path — what to expect step by step

The main entrance is inside Kotor old town, near the main square (Trg od Oružja) — signs point the way. You pay €15 at the gate in cash (euros, no cards accepted), and the path begins immediately.

The lower section (0–20 minutes)

The steepest part. The path climbs through and alongside the old city walls, with the first good views of the old town’s rooftops appearing within a few minutes. In early morning, this section still has some shade from the walls on the left side. The steps are wide, uneven, and polished from centuries of foot traffic.

Tip: pace yourself here. The temptation is to rush the first section while you’re fresh, but the steepness will catch you. Slow and steady — you have the whole morning.

The Chapel of Our Lady of Health (20–30 minutes)

About halfway up, a small 16th-century chapel sits on a plateau to the right of the path. This is the standard rest stop — a flat area with a view back over the old town and the inner bay. The chapel itself is usually closed but the exterior and the view justify the stop.

This is where most people decide whether to continue. If you’re comfortable at this point, the rest is easier than the section you just climbed. If you’re struggling, consider turning back — the view from here is already better than 90% of what visitors to Kotor see.

The upper section (30–50 minutes)

Above the chapel, the path opens out onto the mountainside and the shade disappears completely. This is the exposed section. The zigzag walls are magnificent — some of the best Venetian fortification architecture in the Adriatic, climbing the cliff face in geometric precision — but the sun hits the stones directly and the reflected heat can exceed air temperature by 10°C+.

The views get dramatically better with each switchback. The bay opens out in both directions, Perast and its two islands become visible in the distance, and the cruise ships in the harbour look progressively smaller.

The top (45–60 minutes)

The fortress ruins at the summit are from the Venetian and Austro-Hungarian periods, built on much older Byzantine foundations. There’s not much to see in terms of buildings — it’s mostly ruined walls and platforms. The view is the entire point.

The panorama: Kotor’s red-roofed old town directly below. The Bay of Kotor stretching northwest toward Perast and Risan. The mountains of Lovćen rising directly behind you. The narrow mouth of the bay where it opens to the open Adriatic. On a clear day you can see the sea beyond. This is the photograph that appears on every Montenegro tourism brochure, every Instagram reel, every “places to visit in Europe” list. Standing here at 9 am with the bay still lit gold is worth every one of the 1,350 steps.

Spend 15–30 minutes at the top. There are flat rocks to sit on, enough room to spread out even on busy days, and the wind at the top is cooler than the path. Take photos, catch your breath, and appreciate that this is genuinely one of the best views in Europe.

The descent (25–30 minutes)

Same path down. Faster than the ascent but harder on the knees and more dangerous for slips — the polished stone steps are treacherous, especially if wet or dusty. Take your time. Most injuries on this path happen on the way down when people are tired, hot, and rushing.

When to go — the timing that matters

8:00 am — the only sensible start in summer

The gate opens at 8:00 am in peak season. Be standing at the gate when it opens. At this hour:

Late afternoon (after 4:00 pm) — the second-best window

Starting after 4 pm means the sun is lower, the worst heat is past, and if you time it right you can be at the top for sunset. The catch: you must descend before full dark. There is no lighting on the path and the uneven steps are genuinely dangerous in low light.

Bring a head torch or phone flashlight if you’re doing a late-afternoon climb. Sunset is beautiful from the top but the descent needs at least 30 minutes of usable light.

Midday (10 am – 3 pm in summer) — do not

This is not a recommendation to avoid; it’s a genuine safety warning. In July and August, Kotor regularly hits 35°C+, the fortress path has zero shade on the upper sections, and the stone steps absorb and radiate heat. Dehydration, heat exhaustion, and falls on the descent are common enough that local medical services know the fortress as a regular source of summer casualties. Don’t do it at midday. No photograph is worth a hospital visit.

Off-season and shoulder months

In April, May, September, and October, the timing is more flexible. Midday is possible when temperatures are in the mid-20s — still warm on the climb but not dangerous. The fortress fee may be reduced or the path may be accessible outside fee-collection hours. Verify at the entrance.

In winter (November–March), the path is often accessible for free and the old town is empty. But the steps can be wet, icy, or covered in debris — check conditions before climbing.

What to bring — the non-negotiable list

Do NOT bring: heavy camera gear you’ll regret carrying, excessive luggage, babies in non-secure carriers (the path is steep and uneven), or a determination to “just quickly do it” at midday.

The Ladder of Kotor — the free alternative

The Ladder of Kotor (Scala di Cattaro) is a historic Austro-Hungarian trade route that climbs the mountain outside the city walls. It’s a separate path from the fortress steps — longer, higher, and free.

Key facts:

The trail: 72 switchbacks on a rocky gravel path, marked with red and white blazes. The views of the Bay of Kotor appear within the first 10 minutes and get progressively more dramatic. About 30–45 minutes in, a secondary trail branches toward the fortress — but the connection between the Ladder trail and the fortress interior changes periodically — the hole in the wall has been alternately blocked and reopened over the years. Check locally for the current access situation before counting on it.

Who is the Ladder for? Fit hikers who want a serious trail, not just a viewpoint. The fortress path is a tourist attraction. The Ladder is a proper mountain hike. If you want the view without the crowds and the €15 fee, and you have 4+ hours and the fitness for it, the Ladder delivers.

Who should skip the Ladder? Cruise passengers (not enough time), anyone doing Kotor in a single day (too long), families with small children, anyone not comfortable on rocky mountain terrain.

The cable car — the easy option

The Kotor cable car opened in 2025 and offers the bay views without any climbing.

Practical details:

The cable car is NOT a substitute for the fortress hike. The hike is a physical experience — the effort, the walls, the incremental views, the sense of earning the panorama. The cable car is convenient transport to a viewpoint with a bar attached. Both have their place:

Difficulty — an honest assessment

The fortress hike is moderately difficult. It’s not a mountain trek — it’s 1,350 stone steps on a well-defined path. There’s no scrambling, no exposed edges, no technical climbing. A reasonably fit adult who walks regularly will manage it in 45–60 minutes with rest stops.

What makes it hard:

What doesn’t make it hard:

Who should not attempt it:

Who will find it easy: regular hikers, runners, anyone who walks hills or stairs regularly. If you can walk up 20 flights of stairs without stopping, you’ll handle this.

Combining the fortress with the rest of your day

The fortress hike fits naturally at the start of your day in Kotor. Here’s how it connects:

Fortress → Old Town → Perast (full day):

See the full one day in Kotor itinerary for the hour-by-hour version.

Fortress → Rest of Montenegro (private driver): Do the fortress at 8 am, meet your private driver at 10:30, and spend the rest of the day at Perast, Budva, Lovćen, or the serpentine viewpoint without worrying about transport or parking.

Fortress from a cruise ship: Be at the gate within 30 minutes of disembarking. The fortress is the single best use of cruise port time in Kotor — 2 hours total, back at the ship with plenty of time for Perast or the old town. See the full Kotor cruise port guide.

Frequently asked questions

How many steps is the San Giovanni Fortress hike in Kotor? 1,350 stone steps, climbing 280 metres above the old town. The path follows the old Venetian defensive walls up the mountainside.

How long does the Kotor fortress hike take? 45–60 minutes up, 25–30 minutes down. With photo stops and time at the top, budget 90 minutes to 2 hours total.

How much does it cost to hike the Kotor fortress? €15 per person in 2026, cash only at the gate. Cards are not accepted. Children under 12 are free. Off-season hours and pricing may be reduced.

Is the Kotor fortress hike hard? Moderately hard. The 1,350 steps are steep but the path is well-defined with no technical climbing. Most reasonably fit adults can manage it. The main difficulty is summer heat — the upper sections have zero shade.

Can you climb the Kotor fortress for free? The main gated path costs €15. The Ladder of Kotor is a separate free trail outside the walls that climbs higher (940m) but is significantly longer and harder (3–6 hours return). Off-season, the fortress path may be accessible outside fee-collection hours.

What is the best time to hike the Kotor fortress? 8:00 am when the gate opens. The morning light is golden, the path is coolest, and the crowds are minimal. Late afternoon after 4 pm is the second-best option — bring a torch for the descent.

Can you do the fortress hike from a cruise ship? Yes — it’s the single best use of your port time. The fortress gate is about 5 minutes’ walk from the cruise pier. Budget 2 hours total (up, photos, down). Start as soon as your ship allows disembarkation.

Is the Kotor fortress hike safe? The path itself is safe — well-defined steps, no exposed edges. The danger is heat (no shade, stone radiates heat, dehydration) and slipping (polished steps, especially on the descent). Start early, bring water, wear proper shoes, and the hike is safe for most adults.

What’s the Ladder of Kotor? An alternative hiking trail outside the city walls — a historic Austro-Hungarian road with 72 switchbacks climbing to 940m. It’s free, longer, harder, and less crowded than the fortress path. Best for fit hikers with 4+ hours to spare.

Is there a cable car to the top in Kotor? Yes — the Kotor cable car opened in 2025. It reaches a viewpoint at a similar altitude in 11 minutes. €20 return, children free. Operates seasonally (late April to early October). Not a replacement for the hike experience, but a good alternative if you can’t or don’t want to climb.

What should I bring for the Kotor fortress hike? Water (at least 1 litre), shoes with grip (no sandals), sun hat, sunscreen, cash (€15 for the gate), and a small daypack. Leave heavy gear behind.

Can I hike the fortress in the rain? Not recommended. The polished stone steps become dangerously slippery when wet. The view at the top will be obscured. Wait for a clear day if you have the flexibility.


Ready to hike?

The fortress hike is best combined with the rest of Kotor — old town, Perast, the serpentine viewpoint — and a private driver handles the non-hiking parts so you can focus on the climb.

Plan your Kotor day:

Get to Kotor:

Need a driver for the day? Hire a private driver by the hour — do the fortress in the morning, then have a driver take you to Perast, the serpentine viewpoint, or Budva without the logistics.

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