The Pearl of the Adriatic
Dubrovnik — the walled "Pearl of the Adriatic" and Game of Thrones' King's Landing — is close enough to tempt anyone on the Budva Riviera, and a genuinely doable day trip from Bečići. But it is a cross-border run into Croatia, which means a passport, a summer border queue that can swallow hours, and a long day on the road each way. Done with realistic expectations it is a brilliant outing; done casually it can turn into more car than city.
The border — the part that matters most
Bečići to Dubrovnik crosses the Croatia–Montenegro frontier, usually at the 24-hour Karasovići–Debeli Brijeg crossing on the Adriatic Highway. You need a full passport — EU national ID cards are not valid to enter Montenegro. The EU's Entry/Exit System (EES), fully operational since April 2026, adds biometric registration for non-EU travellers on first crossing, which can slow the queue. Summer queues are the real cost: minutes off-season, but 2–3 hours at the July–August peak — so aim to be at the border by around 09:00. The Kamenari–Lepetane car ferry (~€4.50 per car, every 15–30 min) shortcuts across the bay and saves roughly 40 minutes. Because of the border and Dubrovnik's scarce parking, an organised tour is the easier call for many.
What a day in Dubrovnik gets you
The old town is compact and car-free, so a well-paced day covers the highlights on foot. Walk the City Walls — a roughly 2 km circuit atop the medieval fortifications with drop-dead views; the 2026 adult ticket is around €40 in high season (about €35 off-season, children €15) and also covers Lovrijenac Fortress. Stroll the polished-limestone Stradun, ride the cable car up Mount Srđ (€20 return) for the panorama, and finish with a harbour lunch or a swim at Banje Beach. Croatia adopted the euro in January 2023, so there is no currency change. Pick your two or three priorities and don't try to cram the lot between two long drives — for a shorter, easier outing, Kotor and Perast deliver walled-town magic far closer to home.

