A village frozen in the baroque
Perast sits deeper into the Bay of Kotor than Kotor town, roughly 45 minutes to an hour up the coast from Bečići. In the 17th and 18th centuries it was a wealthy seafaring town under Venetian rule, and it spent that money on stone: palaces, churches and a single elegant waterfront that has barely changed since. There are no cars — you leave them at the edges and walk — and the whole village is one long, photogenic promenade beneath the campanile of St. Nicholas' Church, which you can climb for a view over the red roofs and the two islands offshore. It takes 15–20 minutes to walk end to end, so Perast isn't about ticking off sights; it's about a slow coffee with a bay view.
Our Lady of the Rocks
Just offshore sit two islands. The one you visit is Our Lady of the Rocks (Gospa od Škrpjela) — a man-made island, the only one in the Adriatic, built up over five centuries on a reef by local sailors who dropped a stone here on returning safely from each voyage. A 17th-century blue-domed church sits at its centre, hung with silver votive plaques, alongside a small museum; 20–30 minutes covers it. The stone-dropping vow survives as the Fašinada, every 22 July at sunset, when a convoy of boats rows out to widen the island — now listed as Montenegrin intangible cultural heritage.
The boat out, and getting there
Small boats shuttle from the waterfront: reckon on around €5 per person return bought directly from a boatman on the quay, plus about €1–2 for the church and museum. There is no fixed timetable — boats go when they fill, which in summer is more or less constantly. Bring cash for both. Because Perast is car-free, you park in the lots at either end (about €8/day in summer) and walk in, or take the Blue Line bus from Kotor (around €2–2.50, roughly hourly). Perast needs so little time it is almost always paired with Kotor, 12 km back down the bay.

