The long sandy beach of Bečići with resort hotels along Montenegro's Budva Riviera
Planning

Is Bečići & Montenegro Safe to Visit in 2026?

·3 min read·By Becici.net Editorial

Montenegro is one of the safer, easier corners of the Balkans to travel, and Bečići — a resort strip on the well-trodden Budva Riviera — is about as relaxed as a beach holiday gets. Violent crime is rare, the country is a stable NATO member that uses the euro, and the real hazards of a trip here are practical: the dramatic mountain roads, the summer sun and the Adriatic itself. Plan around those and it's a genuinely low-stress destination.

The short answer

Yes — Bečići and Montenegro are safe to visit in 2026. The thing most likely to test you is the driving, not the people. Here's how the genuine risks actually rank.

Risk How real What to do
Mountain & coast roads The #1 real hazard Drive defensively, slow for bends, avoid night mountain driving
Sun & heat High Jun–Sep Water, shade, hat, midday breaks
Sea (few lifeguards, boats) Moderate Swim within your depth; take care on boat trips
Summer crowds & petty theft Low Normal precautions in busy spots
Crime Very low Sensible night-out habits

Crime: low, and the coast is well-touristed

Montenegro records low levels of violent crime, and along the tourism-driven Budva Riviera serious crime against visitors is uncommon. What exists is mostly opportunistic petty theft in the summer crush — busy beaches, the Budva old-town lanes, nightlife crowds. Keep valuables secure and you'll almost certainly have no trouble. The country is a NATO member (since 2017) and EU candidate, politically stable, with a coast geared entirely around welcoming visitors. Solo and female travellers generally find it comfortable and easy, day and night.

One quiet advantage: Montenegro uses the euro, despite not being in the EU or eurozone. For most European travellers that removes the usual currency friction — no exchange, familiar prices, cards accepted across Bečići and Budva.

The real risk: the roads

If a Montenegro trip has a genuine danger, it is the roads. The scenery is unmissable — but reaching it means narrow, steep, serpentine mountain routes: the famous Kotor–Lovćen hairpins, the climb to Ostrog Monastery, the long haul to Durmitor, and a coast road that clogs and tempts bold overtaking in July and August.

None of it should deter you — but respect it: slow right down for blind bends, keep your distance, park carefully on the narrow lanes, and avoid the mountain sections after dark. If you'd rather not drive, the coast is well served by buses and taxis, and most Riviera sights can be done by organised tour. See our best day trips from Bečići for how the sights string together.

Sun, sea and practicalities

  • The sun. June to September is strong; carry water, wear sunscreen and a hat, and take shade at midday.
  • The sea. The Adriatic off Bečići is usually calm and swimmable, but not every beach has lifeguards — swim within your depth, and take normal care on the popular Bay of Kotor boat trips and around rocky coves.
  • Cash and cards. Cards work across Bečići and Budva, but carry euros for small tavernas, beach kiosks, parking and rural stops.
  • Hiking. If you head into the mountains at Lovćen or Durmitor, tell someone your plan, take water and layers, and note the mountain-rescue number below.

Emergency numbers

  • 112 — the general emergency number (police, ambulance or fire, in English).
  • 122 — police · 124 — ambulance · 123 — fire.
  • 195 — mountain rescue (useful for Lovćen and Durmitor hikers).
  • Travel insurance is strongly recommended, especially if you plan to drive or hike.

For whether the resort itself suits you, see is Bečići worth visiting; for getting there, see our guide to reaching Bečići.

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